We Are Marshall

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Critics' Reviews

Metascore
®
53
Mixed or Average Reviews
out of 100
'Marshall' Has Its Moments
By John Hartl, Film critic, MSNBC

Sports movies have become so formulaic that "We Are Marshall" stands out just because — for much of its two-hour-plus length — it doesn't line up the usual locker-room clichés.

The first-time screenwriter, Jamie Linden, dramatizes the true story of a 1970 plane crash that took the lives of most of the members of the Marshall University football team in Huntiington, West Virginia. The surviving players, backed by their new head coach, worked together to rebuild the team for the following year.

The scenes before the crash are most effective. As the players flirt, joke around, listen to their ultra-competitive coach (Robert Patrick) and board the plane — not knowing what the audience knows — every exchange between them carries an extra weight. The separations are hardest to take: we know these people, however connected they may be, won't be connecting again.

Unfortunately, the script then heads off in so many directions that it loses the tense focus of those early scenes. By the time the filmmakers have reached the final stretch (relying heavily on songs by Cat Stevens and Gordon Lightfoot to capture the period and the mood), they can't help retreating to the comfort of gridiron stereotypes.

For awhile, Linden does seem to have settled on a theme: survivors' guilt. The assistant coach, Red Dawson (Matthew Fox), personally recruited each of the players who died, and he's devastated by the fact that he wasn't on the plane with them. Equally grief-stricken are a waitress (Kate Mara) mourning her boyfriend, the boy's depressed father (Ian McShane) and a surviving player (Anthony Mackie) who won't give up on the idea of reviving the team.

Fox and Mara have the most moving scenes, emphasizing his rage (as well as his resistance to returning to work) and her sense of helplessness (as well as her need to return to work). As the school's uncertain president, who is reluctant to put the team back together until he senses how much the community wants it, David Straithairn suggests indecision as only he can.

Matthew McConaughey, cast as the new coach, Jack Lengyel, will strike you as either an inspired icebreaker or a hole in the center of the movie. He plays this outsider as a folksy fraternity boy who pats Strathairn on the rump, thrives on trite pep talks and tells dim jokes that usually have to be explained. The filmmakers only encourage this approach by throwing in a couple of Disney-cute family scenes with Lengyel's adorable baby son.

Lengyel's wife is a non-entity, but that's true of most of the women in the film (the waitress is the only female who doesn't seem like an accessory). The most intense hugging is left to men in the locker room and on the field.

"We Are Marshall" was directed by McG, who made the disposable "Charlie's Angels" movies. It's an odd choice, to say the least. His attention span can seem as limited as that of the script, but he does demonstrate a commanding use of the wide-screen frame. And he allows Fox and Mara to have their moments.

More movies on MSNBC 

Sports movies have become so formulaic that "We Are Marshall" stands out just because — for much of its two-hour-plus length — it doesn't line up the usual locker-room clichés.

The first-time screenwriter, Jamie Linden, dramatizes the true story of a 1970 plane crash that took the lives of most of the members of the Marshall University football team in Huntiington, West Virginia. The surviving players, backed by their new head coach, worked together to rebuild the team for the following year.

The scenes before the crash are most effective. As the players flirt, joke around, listen to their ultra-competitive coach (Robert Patrick) and board the plane — not knowing what the audience knows — every exchange between them carries an extra weight. The separations are hardest to take: we know these people, however connected they may be, won't be connecting again.

Unfortunately, the script then heads off in so many directions that it loses the tense focus of those early scenes. By the time the filmmakers have reached the final stretch (relying heavily on songs by Cat Stevens and Gordon Lightfoot to capture the period and the mood), they can't help retreating to the comfort of gridiron stereotypes.

For awhile, Linden does seem to have settled on a theme: survivors' guilt. The assistant coach, Red Dawson (Matthew Fox), personally recruited each of the players who died, and he's devastated by the fact that he wasn't on the plane with them. Equally grief-stricken are a waitress (Kate Mara) mourning her boyfriend, the boy's depressed father (Ian McShane) and a surviving player (Anthony Mackie) who won't give up on the idea of reviving the team.

Fox and Mara have the most moving scenes, emphasizing his rage (as well as his resistance to returning to work) and her sense of helplessness (as well as her need to return to work). As the school's uncertain president, who is reluctant to put the team back together until he senses how much the community wants it, David Straithairn suggests indecision as only he can.

Matthew McConaughey, cast as the new coach, Jack Lengyel, will strike you as either an inspired icebreaker or a hole in the center of the movie. He plays this outsider as a folksy fraternity boy who pats Strathairn on the rump, thrives on trite pep talks and tells dim jokes that usually have to be explained. The filmmakers only encourage this approach by throwing in a couple of Disney-cute family scenes with Lengyel's adorable baby son.

Lengyel's wife is a non-entity, but that's true of most of the women in the film (the waitress is the only female who doesn't seem like an accessory). The most intense hugging is left to men in the locker room and on the field.

"We Are Marshall" was directed by McG, who made the disposable "Charlie's Angels" movies. It's an odd choice, to say the least. His attention span can seem as limited as that of the script, but he does demonstrate a commanding use of the wide-screen frame. And he allows Fox and Mara to have their moments.

More movies on MSNBC 

75
Boston Globe: Wesley Morris
The actor's (McConaughey) lovable exuberance is exactly what this heartsick movie needs.Read Full Review »
75
ReelViews: James Berardinelli
We Are Marshall is precisely what one expects from a true sports story: it's uplifting and inspiring.Read Full Review »
70
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Kevin Crust
The film is injected with a refreshing energy whenever McConaughey is on-screen, balancing some of the inherent sadness of the story.Read Full Review »
70
Washington Post: Stephen Hunter
"Lost" star Matthew Fox pitches in with a strong performance as a coach who, by the laws of whimsy, didn't take the final flight home and had to struggle with survivor's guilt.Read Full Review »
63
Philadelphia Inquirer: Carrie Rickey
McConaughey tucks into the role like a hungry man gobbling a ham sandwich.Read Full Review »
58
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Owen Gleiberman
We Are Marshall has little of the bone-crunchingsincerity of the recent pigskin rouser "Invincible." This one is more like Unconvincing.Read Full Review »
50
Village Voice: Rob Nelson
Even by the low standards of the young-jocks-as-good-clean-soldiers movie, there's little at stake here, unless you count the kids' hunger to win one for the Gipper.Read Full Review »
40
Salon.com: Stephanie Zacharek
There are so many emotions in We Are Marshall that there's hardly any room for football -- and when we finally get some, even THAT'S clogged with excess feeling.Read Full Review »
38
USA Today: Claudia Puig
Its use of trite "Win one for the Gipper" dialogue, overbearing soaring music and conventional plot devices makes it far too formulaic to truly move us.Read Full Review »
30
The New York Times: Stephen Holden
A movie like We Are Marshall stands or falls on its ability to make you feel the pain and loss of individuals in a place where community pride and football are one and the same. As the film, directed by McG (the "Charlie's Angels" movies) from a wooden screenplay by Jamie Linden, follows a handful of Huntington residents during the months after the accident, not one of them comes fully to life.Read Full Review »
See all We Are Marshall reviews at metacritic.com »