Diana Saenger's Review Express
Find Reviews...

Film
New Releases
Older Releases
Features
DVD and Video
Released
Coming Soon
Books

Interviews

Kids Reviews
5 and under
6 to 12
Teen

Search by title, director or cast
Release year

Glory Road Cast Interviews

©Disney Enterprises, Inc. and Jerry Bruckheimer, Inc. All Rights Reserved
Interviews By Justin Pleiss
Genre: - Our Rating:
Review by
Glory Road, the true story of the 1966 Texas Western Miners basketball team, the first college team to win the NCAA championship with an all-black starting lineup, is an inspiring story directed by James Gartner and produced by Jerry Bruckheimer. I sat down with Bruckheimer and some of the stars to talk about this great family film.
 
Question: We heard Lucas was as tough a coach as Haskins. How hard was it to get into shape for this movie?
 
Mehcad Brooks: Wow man, we had a rigorous basketball camp. We nicknamed it WD-40 Camp, because we were all rusty. He (Al Shearer) nicknamed himself the Tin Man.
 
 
Mehcad Brooks
 
Al Shearer: I hadn’t played ball in 12 years. This hand was constipated, this hand was in a coma, and my vertical leap was like a millimeter high. All in all my shooting skills were gone. Two days before we started shooting the movie I broke my foot, so I had to play with a broken foot for four months.
 
 
Al Shearer
 
Josh Lucas: I played basketball for one season when I was a sophomore in high school, and I was ridiculously bad. The tough thing about making this movie was I had to learn basketball. I had to be able to coach in a sense, be on the sidelines screaming. I really had to understand the game, coaching, and more than anything I had to understand the eccentric or unique way that Haskins coached because he was so rare.
 
Question: What’s so special about this film?
 
Jerry Bruckheimer: I think this is an especially important story to tell today because a lot of kids no longer realize how hard the players and coaches in the ‘60s had to fight to bring them the incredible opportunities that exist now.
 
 
 
Al Shearer: It’s just a tremendous story that I wanted to be a part of recreating. James Gartner did a phenomenal job directing the movie. You feel so much like part of the game, that you want to stand on your feet, clap and cheer. The movie is funny, it’s sad, it’s motivational, it’s everything.
 
Mehcad Brooks: I enjoyed the introduction to all the players because you get to know these guys and their personalities. The most exiting 10-15 minutes of the movie for me is the championship game. You really feel like you’re watching the game, you’re cheering along.
 
Derek Luke: My story is kind of a Glory Road, similar story. I worked at a gift shop, but I had a dream which in some ways had obstacles, because people were saying, “you know you can be everything except an actor.” Then Denzel Washington comes into the gift shop where I’m working and says, “Well I just hired you.” (for Antoine Fisher). What’s so special to me was the game. In talking to the real players, they said it was never about basketball, it was about being excellent. Coach Haskins demanded they focus on excellence. They turned around and racism was in front of them, but as they pursued excellence, they passed it in the race, so it was about so much more then those difficulties. Compared to what I’ve been complaining about, this (story) puts things in perspective.
 
Derek Luke
 
Josh Lucas: There’s a scene where I walk into my house and have a conversation with my wife and walk in and lay down with my son. The reason why it’s a memorable scene is because you realize what this guy was risking. He dealt with circumstances that are so difficult; like that he cared so much about what this team was capable of doing, that he couldn’t spend much time with his children.
 
 
Coach Don Haskins and Josh Lucas
 
Question: Did the diversity of that 1966 team bring the cast closer together?
 
Josh Lucas: It did two things. It did something similar to what happens in the movie. It tore them apart, and also brought them together. We went through some difficult times in the making of this movie, and it’s like any great relationship where it’s not an even road. There are highs and lows, and when you start to survive these, you start to understand that there are going to be good times and bad times and the more you get through them, the more you end up at a higher respect for each other. That’s what these guys went through, not necessarily just the ‘66 team, but in the making of this movie as well.
 
Jerry Bruckheimer: These kids really bonded with one another. Of course we worked them hard and that helped bring them closer. I guess they even hated out basketball advisors for a while because they worked so hard. But that was all part of trying to make a movie that feels so real; the audience is swept up in the story.
 
Read the review of Glory Road
Recommended Audience:
Halloween Gifts and More Chocolate Gifts at Chocolate.com
Try Netflix for Free!
association of women film jpurnalists
FEATURES & NEWS

Contest To WIN the Unrated DVD of REPO MAN

$5 A Day with Christopher Walken Blu-Ray

Cookie Jar Entertainment for Kids

Glee – The Complete First Season DVD

Heath Ledge in THE ORDER

Movie Trailers

Bring NBC's THE EVENT to San Diego

UPCOMING DVDS - August & Beyond

San Diego Film Critics Awards
About Us
FAQ
 
Contact
 


Studio Links

 

Try Netflix for Free!
© 2005-2010 Saenger Syndicate