Extras / Film: THE BEST OF THE BEST: THE TOP 4 SPORTS MOVIES OF ALL TIME

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by Aveline MacQuoid on January 16, 2023

in Extras,Film

The Best of the Best:
The Top 4 Sports Movies of All Time

Sport is an integral part of our lives. Whether you’re an athlete or a club supporter, sports have united us for several centuries. Various forms of entertainment have taken inspiration from sports, music, movies and even casinos like betshah.com, offering sports betting and other wagering options.

In this article, we will be discussing sports movies. Most of the time, the best sports movies are agnostic to the sport they show, with timeless stories that should captivate anybody, regardless of whether they enjoy the sport. However, enjoying the sport makes it wholesome.

What audiences enjoy about sports and movies in common is that they are unpredictable: you never know what will happen when you sit down to watch either.

Creed (2015)

By the time Ryan Coogler and his Fruitvale Station co-star Michael B. Jordan got together to pump the entire franchise with adrenaline and passion… and even stir up old Rock himself, the Rocky series had run out of gas multiple times.

The best scenes in Creed aren’t even about boxing, as we see teenage Adonis Creed battle with his identity, purpose in life, and the force of his love for a young, deaf artist (played wonderfully by Tessa Thompson). Rocky Balboa playing Paulie is a fantastic notion. The bond between the young athlete and his trainer works and transcends the entire 40-year-old business.

Rush (2013)

One of the sports film fundamentals is rooting for someone, whether a squad or an individual player. “What if both of our major protagonists are bad?” suggests Ron Howard’s somewhat audacious race-car film. Rush chronicles the heated rivalry between handsome, charming Formula One racer James Hunt (Chris Hemsworth) and the cold, unsmiling Niki Lauda (Daniel Brühl), and Howard makes it apparent early on he has no intention of presenting us with a rooting character.

At the same time, Rush isn’t a sports film in which we’re supposed to adore both men alike. These fierce, closed-off individuals appear to be looking for something higher than triumph, yet both seem unable to achieve it. Who you finally side with tells more about you than them, and the excitement of Rush is its questioning of our need to cast athletes as heroes and villains in the first place.

The Karate Kid (1984)

Eight years after Rocky, filmmaker John G. Avildsen released another underdog sports film, depicting the tale of a New Jersey lad named Daniel (Ralph Macchio) who goes to Southern California, falls in love with Elisabeth Shue’s cheerleader Ali, and learns with an immigrant handyman (Pat Morita) after some goons beat him up.

The Karate Kid is a daydream for each sensitive young kid who aspires to be cool and filled with heart, kindness, and sympathy. Macchio epitomized adolescent insecurity for the Atari generation. Morita (nominated for Best Supporting Actor) gave compassion and wisdom to a portrayal that could have easily been a stock-wise-mentor part.

The Fighter (2010)

This true story of underdog boxer Micky Ward (Mark Wahlberg) and his dysfunctional family, especially his addict brother Dicky, marked David O. Russell’s return to form (Christian Bale, who won an Oscar). The Fighter stresses Micky’s working-class beginnings, aiming for a plain reality in its portrayal of folks with few possibilities and many self-destructive inclinations. On paper, The Fighter follows a relatively typical sports-movie trajectory. Still, Russell and his ensemble (particularly Melissa Leo, who plays Micky’s mother and also won an Academy Award) keep delving into the story’s weird rhythms and gritty reality, showing us how, from the inside, clichés merely feel like reality when they happen to you.

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