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Review: Yellowbrickroad
Reviews
Pride
Hope floats, and so does Terrance Howard
By
TOM MEEK
|
March 21, 2007
PRIDE
2.5
Stars
VIDEO: Watch the trailer for
Pride
.
Predictable and rickety, yet heartfelt,
Pride
dips into the rage of civil rights as a team of inner-city African-American teens from Philadelphia
circa
1974 jumps into the white world of swimming. (It was former LA Dodgers general manager Al Campanis who suggested blacks weren’t buoyant enough to swim, just as they didn’t have the qualities to manage a baseball team.) The movie is based on the real-life travails of Jim Ellis, who coaches the misfit lot after experiencing a dose of racism himself. Terrence Howard (
Crash
) plays Ellis with smoldering resolve and guarded optimism; Bernie Mac hangs in his wake as the curmudgeonly custodian of the recreation center about to be shuttered, and Tom Arnold does laps as the bigoted swim coach from the lily-white Main Line Academy. The premise of the underdog fighting against stacked odds doesn’t figure to break new ground, and director Sunu Gonera doesn’t try to. He does, however, evoke the power of hope and the sting of racism.
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Harrah’s hummer
Hey, hats off to the dignity of the Rhode Island Constitution.
The Boston Red Sox
This article originally appeared in the August 17, 1976 issue of the Boston Phoenix.
Sex, violence and video games
Popular culture has always had a bogeyman. These days, it’s most often video games being accused of leading the nation’s youth astray.
White hunters, black hearts
There are hundreds of faces in the “Trophy Room” of 419Eater.com , and most of them are black.
A change is gonna come
I was raised in the south. It was the 1950s. The civil-rights movement was just getting started. Nobody in my fourth-grade class considered it unusual when our teacher told us racial segregation was the “natural” state of humanity.
Ron Paul and race
How dare you call Ron Paul a racist!
Dartmouth's right is wrong
This article originally appeared in the April 15, 1988 issue of the Boston Phoenix.
Hate groups
Jacob Robida, the teenager who assaulted patrons of a New Bedford gay bar and ultimately killed himself after a chase with police in Arkansas, does not appear to have been active in local neo-Nazi social circles.
The enforcer
Once upon a time, the washed-up hulking athlete didn’t have very many employment opportunities.
Stringer in a strange land
One principle of comedy is that something is funny if it’s us laughing at them, not the other way around. Watch the trailer for Borat (QuickTime) The anti-Borat: Ali G on DVD; Sergei Dvortsevoy at the HFA. By Gerald Peary
Parody flunks out
Artist Barry Blitt’s brilliant illustration — which sought to satirize the naysayers who portray Obama as a flag-burning, unpatriotic Muslim and his wife as a black-power radical — cut to the core of today’s political paradox.
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[
05/26
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"A Natural Order," photographs by Lucas Foglia
@ David Winton Bell Gallery
[
05/26
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George Orwell's 1984, adapted by Nick Lane
@ Gamm Theatre
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"2012 RISD Graduate Thesis Exhibition"
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