This completely absorbing three-hour documentary follows the lives of two inner-city African American teenage basketball prodigies as they move through high school with long-shot dreams of the NBA, superstardom and an escape from the ghetto. Taking cues from such works as Michael Apted's 35 Up, director Steve James and .. Read more
| Starring | Frederick Marx, Peter Gilbert, Arthur Agee, William Gates |
|---|---|
| Director | Steve James |
| Genres | Drama |
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This completely absorbing three-hour documentary follows the lives of two inner-city African American teenage basketball prodigies as they move through high school with long-shot dreams of the NBA, superstardom and an escape from the ghetto. Taking cues from such works as Michael Apted's 35 Up, director Steve James and associates shot more than 250 hours of footage, spanning more than six years, and their completed work actually moves like an edge-of-the-seat drama, so brimming with tension, plot twists, successes and tragedies that its length--170 minutes--is never an issue. Yet, what makes the film more impressive is how James moves his scope beyond a competitive sports drama (although the movie has plenty of terrific, nail-biting basketball footage) and addresses complex social issues, creating a scathing social commentary about class privilege and racial division. The film opens by introducing William Gates and Arthur Agee, two Chicago hopefuls, as they are being courted and recruited by various high schools to play ball, and continues until the pair are college freshmen. James allows the audience the experience of not only watching their journeys and daily routines (it's a sobering portrait of inner-city life), but also witnessing their maturation. Each takes a separate path along the way, stumbling over several obstacles (William suffers injuries, Arthur fails to meet his coach's high expectations); but James takes particular care to stress the importance and strong commitment of each character's family along the way, giving the film a essential centre. The parents and siblings emerge with as much depth and complexity as the two main "characters", and turn Hoop Dreams into an unforgettable film experience. --Dave McCoy
| Starring | Frederick Marx, Peter Gilbert, Arthur Agee, William Gates |
|---|---|
| Director | Steve James |
| Studio | CINEMA CLUB |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 40 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Released | DVD: not available Production year: 1994 |
| Format | DVD |
American basketball films may be a turn-off for the average British viewer. However, this three-hour documentary, cut down from 250 hours of footage, that follows the fortunes of two African-American teenagers in Chicago whose only way out of the inner-city poverty trap is through basketball, packs an enormous emotional punch. Film-maker Steve James not only displays an impassioned commitment to these central characters and their desires but also lays them bare so that our empathy is fully engaged. An unforgettable and thoroughly engrossing movie that's certainly not just for fans of basketball.
A documentary that makes redundant all the recent fictional accounts of basketball heroics; here is the real thing, a brilliant documentary of the conjunction and conflict of the American Dream and the realities of life, following its two protagonists and
Criminally overlooked at the Oscars.
Whether you are into sports or not; a fascinating and comprehensive insight into two poor black boys/familes aspirations, sucesses and troubles.
If you haven't seen Hoop dreams you are missing one hell of a documentary film.
It has the lot and proves that real life is always better than fiction.
A dream of a flick