Jump to content

The Program (1993 film): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
Controversy: grammar
Line 50: Line 50:


==Controversy==
==Controversy==
The film originally included a scene in which team members lied down in the middle of a street as cars drove by to demonstrate their bravery and team unity. "It says here that I'm good under pressure," quarterback Joe Kane reads aloud comically, holding the Sports Illustrated college football preview issue in which he's on the cover. After several youngsters imitated this scene and were either killed or suffered injuries, the filmmakers pulled the scene from the movie.[http://www.stayfreemagazine.org/ml/readings/media_made_me_doit.pdf]
The film originally included a scene in which team members lay down in the middle of a street as cars drove by to demonstrate their bravery and team unity. "It says here that I'm good under pressure," quarterback Joe Kane reads aloud comically, holding the Sports Illustrated college football preview issue in which he's on the cover. After several youngsters imitated this scene and were either killed or suffered injuries, the filmmakers pulled the scene from the movie.[http://www.stayfreemagazine.org/ml/readings/media_made_me_doit.pdf]


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 15:01, 21 January 2008

The Program
The movie poster for The Program.
Directed byDavid S. Ward
Written byDavid S. Ward,
Aaron Latham
Produced byTom Rothman,
Duncan Henderson,
Samuel Goldwyn Jr.
StarringJames Caan,
Halle Berry,
Omar Epps,
Craig Sheffer,
Kristy Swanson
Music byMichel Colombier
Distributed byTouchstone Pictures
Release date
September 24 1993
Running time
112 min.
LanguageEnglish

The Program is a 1993 film starring James Caan, Halle Berry, Omar Epps, Craig Sheffer, Kristy Swanson, Daniel Lee, and Joey Lauren Adams. The film was directed by Davis S. Ward who has directed and written other Hollywood films such as the Major League series.

The film touches on the season of the fictional college football team, the ESU Timberwolves as they deal with the pressure to make a bowl game, drug and alcohol abuse, and overall college life. It follows the trials of Coach Sam Winters (Caan), the Heisman Trophy candidate Joe Kane (Sheffer), a character based on American hero quarterback Timothy Burke, the freshman running back Darnell Jefferson (Epps), their girlfriends (Berry & Swanson), and other team members.

The film was released by Touchstone Pictures in September 1993. The movie went on to gross over twenty million dollars at the box office. The film was shot on location at several American universities, including: Boston College, Duke University, the University of Michigan, the University of Iowa, and the University of South Carolina. The film includes a cameo appearance from Michigan coaching legend Bo Schembechler.

Synopsis

The ESU Timberwolves are entering a season with high expectations. They have an experienced leader on offense and defense, depth at all positions, and fresh talent right out of high school. Problems soon plague the team in the form of jealousy, drug and alcohol abuse, injuries, and overall team chemistry. The players must find ways to cope with all of the issues surrounding them as well as their own personal ones to save the season and reach a bowl game. They have an excellent coach guiding them along the way and in the end they triumph and make it to the big game.

Tagline

Pressure surrounds them. Competition divides them. Glory unites them.

Characters

List of major characters in "The Program"

File:Program movie clip.jpg
A screenshot of James Caan and Craig Sheffer in The Program

Controversy

The film originally included a scene in which team members lay down in the middle of a street as cars drove by to demonstrate their bravery and team unity. "It says here that I'm good under pressure," quarterback Joe Kane reads aloud comically, holding the Sports Illustrated college football preview issue in which he's on the cover. After several youngsters imitated this scene and were either killed or suffered injuries, the filmmakers pulled the scene from the movie.[1]