Any Given Sunday

Reviewed by: Glendajean

January 31, 2000

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  1. Does Oliver Stone have any opinions that he doesn't put in his movies?
  2. Is he aiming to work for MTV with all that editing?
  3. In real life, a football field is brilliantly lit. But in his world of anger, manhood, and conspiracy, the players are hardly lit, the angles of them are incomprehensible.
  4. Covering the same ground as Peter Gent's novel North Dallas Forty which was made into a movie with Nick Nolte, Stone finds little sentiment in the game of professional football. One of Gent's points, that the human body wasn't designed for the game, is prominent in the story of Dennis Quaid's injured quarterback, a hero to the working class of Miami, but who is losing all value with the front office. Another of Gent's observations: big muscled men who spend their entire youth being athletes may not be prepared for life.
  5. Unlike Gent's satire of Tom Landry, Stone makes his coach, Pacino, a man of frailities, terribly burnt-out. Another great role for Pacino where he gets to brood a lot and make a couple of speeches. Another role where he pulls back abit and doesn't spray the camera with his theatrics.
  6. Stone sets up the owners, the dead millionaire, spoken of but never seen, his wife the drunk (Ann-Margret) and his daughter, the Yuppie from hell (Cameron Diaz)as the worst of the lot. Almost all the characters are flawed, selling their souls and the bodies of those around them for the chance to play ball and make money.
  7. The women are particularly unlikable. Laren Holly has a particularly nasty turn as Quaid wife, pushing him to play when his body and his heart say it's time to quit.
  8. Jamie Foxx played the young quarterback who represents a new wave in football. Good chemistry between him and Pacino.
  9. James Woods, who doesn't have to act to show his vileness, shadows sweet Matthew Modine. They both play team doctors. And Stone shows how Modine will end up like Woods' character, a guy who likes hanging around teams, dating babes, giving drugs and covering up medical reports to get players out on the field.
 

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