Necessary Roughness (film)
Necessary Roughness | |
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Directed by | Stan Dragoti |
Written by |
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Produced by | |
Starring |
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Cinematography | Peter Stein |
Edited by |
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Music by | Bill Conti |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 108 minutes |
Language | English |
Budget | $13.5 million[1] |
Box office | $26.3 million (US)[2] |
Necessary Roughness is a 1991 American
The film touches on an up-and-coming
The once-powerful Armadillos are forced to start the season with a host of new coaches and players after the previous staff and all but one players are banned following a scandal. This predicament is based on the "death penalty" handed out to the Southern Methodist University football team for violations very similar to the ones found at the fictional Texas State.
Plot
The Texas State University Fighting Armadillos were once one of the most powerful teams in college football. After winning consecutive conference and national championships, massive NCAA violations resulted in the program having to forfeit years' worth of victories. All of the coaches were fired and all of the players are banned from returning and expelled from college except Charlie Banks, the only "clean" player, who never got to play despite having "heart".
This move forces new head coach Ed "Straight Arrow" Gennero (Elizondo) to build an almost entirely new team with little assistance. No athletic scholarships are available, forcing them to hold tryouts. Along with this, they must worry about Phillip Elias (Miller), the dean of the university, who wants the team to fail so he can scrap it due to the corruption the football program has caused over the years, and funnel the funding into his own pocket. The coaches soon have a makeshift team in place.
Due to Dean Elias declaring many prospective players ineligible because of poor grades, only 17 players are allowed on the team—not enough for separate
Blake arrives on campus and catches everyone's attention due to his age, especially Professor Carter (Kozak). Blake then recruits a graduate student teaching assistant named Andre Krimm (Sinbad), who is also enrolled at the school and still has some eligibility remaining. Blake convinces him to join, and he is positioned on the defensive line, where he excelled years earlier. Even with the new members, the team is unable to win.
Carter tells Blake that she knows him from 16 years earlier. Carter's ex-boyfriend was a high school football star, but Blake and his team humiliated him and his team in a 1975 championship game. This episode actually caused Carter to become infatuated with Blake. Now, years after the fact, the two begin a romantic relationship which Dean Elias opposes due to their student-teacher dynamic—not to mention Elias' own lascivious interest in Carter.
Coach Rig makes one more recruiting move to secure a kicker. He shocks everybody by selecting Lucy Draper (Ireland) from the school's women's soccer team. When she is brought on board, the team has its first taste of success, as Draper kicks a field goal in a driving rainstorm to forge a 3–3 tie with Kansas. After this game, Blake quits the team after arguments with Gennero and Carter, but convinces himself to come back after a teammate Edison, who is also quitting, inadvertently changes his mind and both come back. Dean Elias barges into Carter's office after end-of-term exams, first coming onto her as a distraction from him tampering with the team's grades (to sabotage their eligibility for the final game), but she plays along momentarily before warning him that if one grade changes, she'll report him to the University President.
With the coaches and players now on the same page, the team plays their last game of the season against the number one ranked team in the state of Texas, the University of Texas Colts, with whom the Armadillos were involved in a barroom brawl earlier in the season. They head into the game as huge underdogs, and without Gennero, who is hospitalized just before the game for a potential heart attack, leaving Coach Rig in charge. After a horrible first half, they rally in the second half to cut the deficit to one, and Gennero returns to the sideline, having only suffered from indigestion, though he lets Coach Rig call the final play. Minutes before the final touchdown, after learning about his scheme to get rid of the football program (and his sexual harassment of Carter), TSU president Purcell fires Dean Elias, though not before the entire Armadillo defensive line runs him down. The team decides to try to win it all with a
Cast
Team
- Scott Bakula as Paul Blake
- Héctor Elizondo as Coach Ed Gennero
- Robert Loggia as Coach Wally Riggendorf
- Sinbadas Andre Krimm
- Jason Bateman as Jarvis Edison
- Andrew Bryniarski as Wyatt Beaudry
- Duane Davis as Featherstone
- Michael Dolan as Eric 'Samurai' Hansen
- Marcus Giamatti as Sargie 'Fumblina' Wilkinson
- Kathy Ireland as Lucy Draper
- Andrew Lauer as Charlie Banks
- Louis Mandylor as McKenzie
- Peter Tuiasosopoas Laikai "the Slender" Manumana
Other
- Harley Jane Kozak as Dr. Suzanne Carter
- Larry Miller as Dean Phillip Elias
- Fred Thompson as University President Carver Purcell
- Rob Schneider as Chuck Neiderman
- Garrett Schenck as Grant Edison
- Rodger Boyce as Sheriff Woods
- Chris Berman as himself
Production
The film was shot at various locations in
During one scene, when the team takes part in a scrimmage game with a team of convicts, cameos are made by several NFL players. These players included
Reception
The film was released on September 27, 1991, and went on to gross over $26 million at the box office.[2] The film earned an approval rating of 35% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 31 reviews. The consensus states: "This likable, goofy football comedy has its moments, but it ultimately adheres too closely to the sports movie playbook to overcome the cliches in the script."[5] The film was released in the United Kingdom on March 27, 1992, and failed to reach the Top 10.[6]
The Los Angeles Times called it "a genial, slight, entirely predictable football comedy".[7] Roger Ebert wrote a more positive review, giving the film three out of four stars. Ebert stated that the film is predictable but does not pretend to be anything more than entertainment.[8]
Legacy
In an unusual coincidence,
See also
References
- ^ "AFI|Catalog".
- ^ a b "Necessary Roughness (1991)". Box Office Mojo. 1991-11-12. Retrieved 2012-12-15.
- ^ "Movie/TV helmets". Mghelmets.com. Archived from the original on 2011-07-14. Retrieved 2012-12-15.
- ^ a b "'Necessary Roughness' includes football stars". The Baltimore Sun. 1991-05-17. Retrieved 2016-01-16.
- ^ "Necessary Roughness (1991)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2023-06-20.
- ^ "Weekend box office 27th March 1992 - 29th March 1992". www.25thframe.co.uk. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
- ^ Thomas, Kevin (1991-09-27). "MOVIE REVIEWS : Scott Bakula Scores in Slight Football Comedy". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2016-01-16.
- ^ "Necessary Roughness :: rogerebert.com :: Reviews". Rogerebert.suntimes.com. 1991-09-27. Retrieved 2012-12-15.