From the Rough (FILM REVIEW)
From the Rough
Film Review
by Kam Williams
Taraji P. Henson Stars as Trailblazer in Inspirational
Biopic
Catana Starks was serving
as the female swim coach at Tennessee State University (TSU), when she learned
that the school’s Athletic Director, Kendrick Paulsen, Jr. (Henry Simmons), was
planning to form a golf team. Since golf had always been her first love, she
approached him about becoming the new squad’s head coach.
Her first
hurdle, however, was convincing him that despite being female, she’d be able to
field and manage an all-male squad. Second, she’d have to fill the roster with some
promising prospects.
The latter might
prove to be quite a challenge, since TSU, as an HBCU (Historically-Black
College/University), had an overwhelmingly African-American student body. That
might make it hard to recruit good golfers. Try naming me a good black one besides
Tiger Woods.
So, Catana
had her work cut out for her when A.D. Paulsen did decide to give her a shot.
She began by widening her search beyond the school’s normal pool of African-American
candidates.
She looked near
and far, even overseas, and by the beginning of the season she‘d assembled a motley,
international quintet comprised of an African-American, a Frenchman, a South Korean,
an Australian and a Brit. While they all were talented, each arrived on campus
carrying some sort of emotional baggage.
Ji-Kyung
(Justin Chon) is a wannabe gangsta who wears his pants and speaks Ebonic slang.
Meanwhile, Bassam (Ben Youcef), an Algerian from Paris,
is bitter about the fact that he had to matriculate in America because of discrimination against
Arabs back in his homeland.
Then
there’s Edward (Tom Felton), an English juvenile delinquent with a criminal
record. Rounding out the crew are Cameron (Paul Hodge), an Aussie with
allergies, and Craig, a black kid suffering from the soft bigotry of low
expectations.
Of course, Catana
proceeds to whip the boys into shape, intermittently turning to the sage school
janitor (the late Michael Clarke Duncan) for advice whenever she feels the
weight of the world on her shoulders. The flick also features an interracial
romance between bad boy Ed and a Goody Two-Shoes (Letoya Luckett) on her way to
medical school.
So, unfolds
From the Rough, an inspirational overcoming-the-odds biopic co-written and
directed by Pierre Bagley. The tale of female empowerment unfolds in fairly
formulaic fashion, which means it’s designed for youngsters unfamiliar with the
shopworn sports genre.
A
well-deserved, if syrupy sweet, overdue tribute to an African-American role
model and trailblazer.
Very Good (2.5 stars)
Rated PG
for mild epithets and mature themes
Running time: 97 minutes
Distributor: Freestyle Releasing
To see a trailer for From
the Rough, visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lKYfKidQnOQ
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