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Streaming Something to Cheer About Online

Posted by hgoise on January 14, 2011

Streaming Something to Cheer About Online. Streaming Something to Cheer About Online.

Movie Title: Something to Cheer About
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Something to Cheer About is available for streaming or downloading.

Click Here to Stream or Download Something to Cheer About

My wife and I unprejudiced saw this movie at a local theatre last night. It was a recent experience on several levels. The movie was pleasant and remarkable, covering an historic series of events in Indiana that have been largely ignored. The Crispus Attucks High School basketball teams of the early and mid-fifties under the caring, tough, and inspirational leadership of their coach, overcame intense racism to rep several area championship basketball titles. The footage of some of those basketball games (which include Oscar Robertson, Willie Merriweather, Hallie Bryant, and other stout players) is astonishing and the interviews with players, the coach (Ray Crowe), Isiah Thomas, among others are illuminating. At the raze of the movie, the director of the film and several of the players came down to the front of the theatre to talk to the audience and acknowledge questions. This was one of the most new and delightful movie experiences I have ever had. My advice: stare this movie and pick the DVD. With enough benefit, this stout narrative may soon be made into a feature motion narrate.

You don’t have to be an avid basketball fan to savor “Something to Cheer About,” a lovely and interesting documentary about the Crispus Attucks Tigers, the first all-black high school team ever to collect a station championship – and the team that changed the face of the game forever.

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Crispus Attucks High School was an all-black institution that was itself conceived and born out of racism. It was established in Indianapolis in 1927 by the Ku Klux Klan as a means of keeping public schools in that city segregated along racial lines. It is gleefully ironic, then, that such a spot would, a mere two or three decades later, have become one of the key focal points for the civil rights movement in the world of sports.

Director Betsy Blankenbaker has assembled a number of the key players from that period (mainly the early to mid 1950’s) to reminisce about their experiences both as teammates and as pioneers in the cause of social justice. Of course, these boys didn’t state out to change the world; they unbiased wanted to play basketball. Yet, fate decreed a special spot in history for them, and they were more than equal to the challenge.

Buy,Download, Or Stream Something to Cheer About! Click Here

Blankenbaker fills in the background with historical data, photos from the period, and grainy footage from accurate Tigers games. These, together with the many thoughtful and reflective interviews given by the players and various supporters of the team, wait on to picture a bewitching era that seems almost like musty history to many of us living today, yet which took station only a brief half century ago. The movie shows how, in their bear modest arrangement, the Tigers became instrumental in breaking down racial barriers in the city, even if the progress itself was painfully unhurried, halting, and slow-moving at times. Let`s face it, nothing succeeds like success, and the amazing playing of that all-black team went a long diagram towards opening minds and changing attitudes in that community.

The movie ends with a scene at an NBA halftime present in which a handful of the modern, now-aged Tigers are brought onto the court and honored for their legacy both as players and as individuals whose actions changed their community and the game of basketball forever. It is a moment guaranteed to leave you with a lope in your gawk and a lump in your throat. Something to cheer about, indeed.
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