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November 25, 2009
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Home > Movies > Reviews > 2009 |  
More Than a Game
| posted 10/02/2009




More Than a Game

Our rating: 3 Stars - Good

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MPAA rating: PG
(for brief mild language and incidental smoking)

Genre: Documentary

Theater release:
October 02, 2009
by Lionsgate Media

Directed by: Kristopher Belman

Runtime: 1 hour 45 minutes

Cast: LeBron James (himself), Dru Joyce III (himself), Sian Cotton (himself), Willie McGee (himself), Romeo Travis (himself), and Dru Joyce II (himself)

Related: Talk About It/Family Corner


Hoop Dreams, one of my favorite documentaries, created quite a stir when it released in 1994. The film features two high school basketball players who hope to make it to the NBA and follows them through a series of highs and lows. It's remarkable for its scope—spanning five years—and its intimate perspective into these young men and their families. When it was shut out of the Best Feature Documentary category at the Oscars, people raised a fuss. (Since when do people care about documentaries?) And in 2007, the International Documentary Association named Hoop Dreams as the greatest documentary film in history.

The new documentary More Than a Game is a cousin to Hoop Dreams. It tells the story of NBA superstar LeBron James's high school basketball team in Akron, Ohio, and their quest to win a national championship. The film's six main characters are: LeBron; teammates Dru Joyce III, Sian Cotton, Willie McGee, and Romeo Travis; and their coach, Dru Joyce II. (Read our interview with Coach Joyce here.)

LeBron and his teammates take the floor
LeBron and his teammates take the floor

As in Hoop Dreams, the narrative of More Than Game spans several years. Also, in both films the main characters share a goal, and the players' off-the-court stories add weight to their on-the-court successes and failures. Furthermore, both started out as smaller projects that grew into feature-length films. Hoop Dreams was meant to be a 30-minute PBS feature, and More Than a Game was originally just a 10-minute class project for then-college student Kristopher Belman.

But while the style of Hoop Dreams reflects its PBS origins, More Than a Game feels more like a child of ESPN. The editing is faster, rap music enlivens the in-game highlights, and the story arc is neater and tidier. There's also a guy named LeBron who dunks the ball a lot. Much of this comes at the cost of the thoughtfulness and intimacy which made Hoop Dreams so compelling. Plus, and perhaps most notably, More Than a Game tells much of its multi-year story through backward-looking interviews, but Hoop Dreams captures its subjects in the present at every step along the way. Thus, in Hoop Dreams the changes over time in each character are much more pronounced.

Still, More Than a Game succeeds on its own terms. It's a fun, entertaining ride, and its central message—that relationships are the most important part of a game like basketball—is worth telling.

The movie opens in the middle of the action. The St. Vincent-St. Mary High School boys basketball team, headlined by senior LeBron James, is in the locker room just moments away from playing for a national championship. The coach is giving his players a pep talk. The anticipation builds, the players walk onto the court, the ref throws up the ball for the tip-off …

The Coach and 'Little Dru'
The Coach and 'Little Dru'

And then we cut away, and for the next hour and a half, we learn about the nine years that led up to this game. Only at the end of the film, after we've gotten to know each of these characters, do we get to see what happens to them and their championship dream.

One remarkable aspect of this story is that four of the five high school teammates—LeBron, Dru III (or "Little Dru"), Sian, and Willie—actually played basketball together as early as fifth grade. They started out on the same youth traveling team, and as they spent more time together, grew into a group of close (and talented) friends dubbed "The Fab Four." This young set of friendships forms the emotional core of More Than a Game.

Just as remarkably, "The Fab Four" were led at that early age by Coach Joyce, who had wanted the chance to coach his son, Little Dru. No one could have guessed that Joyce would coach these players again years later at St. Vincent-St. Mary.

To see clips of a scrawny, preteen LeBron in action is undeniably cool, especially if you're a basketball fan. Indeed, it's fun to watch his in-game highlights and see him blossom throughout the film into the athletic marvel he is today. Every other basketball highlight in the film includes LeBron.

A high school basketball dynasty
A high school basketball dynasty

Nevertheless, I was pleasantly surprised by how balanced the overall attention toward each character is. It could have easily become the LeBron & Co. Show, which would have been a real problem for a film that celebrates relationships. And one of the chief pleasures of More Than a Game is not just getting to know each of these guys, but getting to know them through each other. One teammate laughs about how Little Dru "was 4'10" on a good day" his freshman year. Another mentions more soberly that Willie, who was raised by his siblings, came in as the most mature of the bunch. Each interview in the film gives another glimpse into someone's personality or character, and the composite picture shows how much these young men leaned on one another. LeBron, who moved ten times between the ages of five and eight, admits that he was desperate to make these friendships last.




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