A rougher version of George Roy Hill's pet theme of men as overaged adolescents, SLAP SHOT stars Paul Newman as Reggie Dunlop, the venerable player-coach of the Charlestown Chiefs, a fifth-rate minor league hockey team. When their blue-collar town falls prey to Rust Belt ills of the 1970s, attendance drops, and the greedy owner .. Read more
| Starring | Paul Newman, Strother Martin, Jennifer Warren, Michael Ontkean |
|---|---|
| Director | George Roy Hill |
| Genres | Comedy |
loading...
A rougher version of George Roy Hill's pet theme of men as overaged adolescents, SLAP SHOT stars Paul Newman as Reggie Dunlop, the venerable player-coach of the Charlestown Chiefs, a fifth-rate minor league hockey team. When their blue-collar town falls prey to Rust Belt ills of the 1970s, attendance drops, and the greedy owner starts looking for a buyer, anxious to cash out. Dunlop is informed that the players need to crank up the box office to keep their jobs in what will likely be their last season. To the coach's dismay, general manager Joe McGrath (Strother Martin) imports the Hanson brothers, a hockey Three Stooges who like to assault soda machines and play with toys. But once Dunlop turns them loose, they're a Panzer division on ice, and the team starts winning by adopting their bone-crushing style. Although the team is on the upswing, Dunlop's wife, Francine (Jennifer Warren), seems to be through with him, and the isolated wives of the other players aren't much happier with their fate. This sidesplitting, profanity saturated film is one of the funniest ever made about any sport. While writer Nancy Dowd intended to probe darker issues--such as the greed of ownership, the blood lust of fans, and the childishness of the players--Hill submerges them in raucous laughter. Newman is near his peak as the romantic, manipulative, womanizing, hard-drinking coach, and the high-sticking Hanson brothers achieve comic immortality in their only film appearance.
| Starring | Paul Newman, Strother Martin, Jennifer Warren, Michael Ontkean, Lindsay Crouse, Jerry Houser, Steve Carlson, Andrew Duncan, Allan Nicholls |
|---|---|
| Director | George Roy Hill |
| Studio | UNIVERSAL PICTURES UK |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 59 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Comedy |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Released | DVD: 07 Oct 2002 Production year: 1977 |
| Format | DVD |
Paul Newman is reunited with his Butch Cassidy director George Roy Hill for this sharp, satirical look at unethical tactics in professional ice hockey. Fashioned as a series of deliberately crude epithets by scriptwriter Nancy Dowd, the film follows the fortunes of a minor-league team that is encouraged to play dirty to win by ambitious coach Newman. Unfortunately, the relentless violence and profanity that provide the film with its great strength are usually toned down in TV versions, with much of the locker-room language removed.
While Newman's ice hockey manager struggles to revive his ailing team's fortunes with a trio of recruits who specialise... read more on Time Out
Go on, treat yourself to this classic Paul Newman movie that is all 1970s. It is fairly foul-mouthed and violent enough for the censors to ban certain parts on its original release. The great thing is that even today it can more than hold it's own. The soundtrack to this tale of a down on its luck ice hockey team is great. The Hanson brothers are a treat to watch...you will have to see it to find out. It is meant to be an adult comedy and Newman shines in his role as the desperate and unorthodox coach. I think it is fair to say I loved it...so will you.hopefully.
Great stuff. Newman himself admitted that he could not stop swearing for months after filming and indeed the language is certainly industrial. If a film is American and 70's then you can't go too far wrong in my book. A good ensemble cast provide great back up to the main story and the Hanson brothers are like a dim-witted Ramones tribute band on ice skates. Watch this.
One of Hollywood’s most popular and admired stars for 50 years, Paul Newman died Friday from cancer. He was 83. Newman was the kind of actor who gave celebrity a good name. An activist who worked to support environmental causes and sick and disadvantaged kids, he launched his own brand of salad dressing in 1982, promising to donate all the profits to charities; more than $200 million to date. The images come flooding back. There are the obvious ones, like riding a cycle in Butch Cassidy... Read more