What moved me was the story itself

Chelsey 2022-11-28 15:21:35

First of all, I think it's amazing that when I watched this documentary, I was so excited that it was like multiple climaxes, and the current was swirling backwards and forwards in my whole body, and I was as stupid as watching Korean dramas.
A lot of times, watching movies and reading novels is to shed tears in other people's stories, but this time it was only the story itself that moved me. But what the director classmates who have all the material for making the documentary showed me was too obvious. Sometimes it's not easy trying to explain something that gives you an orgasm. Looking back, we see what we see. Don't criticize the director, the legend he made in nine years, I may not be able to make it in nineteen years. In fact, when I recall the entire documentary, everything I knew before was just the video and the music. But what Coach Dru was thinking about when they lost their league title defense strikes me as philosophical. He said he became their coach just to help them grow, and now he's more focused on success or failure than the original purpose. I think this is a very good thing. They failed and they reflected on it. They succeeded. No one pays attention to the things behind the success and failure. We are crazy because of the little emperor. Emperor, look at him when he was young, look at his splendid godlike feats, just like those we have already heard about. And then... gone? Inspirational film? Documentary? I have no idea.

Aside from the film, I really envy the director's classmates to have so much close contact with Lebron.

Let's talk about these six people.
Coach Dru's
father is a doorman and his mother is a part-time worker. From a poor family, he wants to change his life. In his mind, he must go to college, just like going to high school. He is a rugby player, and he wanted his son to also play rugby, but his son chose basketball. He respected his son, and often accompanied him to contact him. Finally, he became the basketball coach of his son's school. The son of Coach
Dru Joyce III
, he has no height, no speed, no weight, or even cuteness, but he is stubborn and unwilling to admit defeat. It is this kind of character coupled with more rigorous training that allows him to make up for the lack of height. Now as a professional basketball player.
Romeo Travis
A transfer student, he joined the team with the idea of ​​picking up girls, and envied the "sister scouring" relationship of the "Four Tiger Generals". Self-reliance and selfish habits made it difficult for him to integrate into the team. After the failure of the league and the alienation of the players, he finally stepped out of his psychological defense and eventually became a member of the "Five Tigers".
Willie McGee
wrote in a survey when he was in fifth grade that he wanted to be an NBA player. He witnessed a family that was stifled by all the negative things like drug, alcohol, prison, etc. He left Chicago to live with his brother who just went to college, and the role of his older brother as a college student as a father and brother paid him a lot.
Sian Cotton
He has a father who has a bad reputation, but the elder brother of a good mentor, someone has recognized them because of their father since childhood, and he wants to do his best to make his father proud of him. Both basketball and football are extremely talented.
ok, the best one, I don't want to write, you can find it in any search engine.

View more about More Than a Game reviews