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DVD : Varsity BluesIn association with Amazon.comstarring: James Van Der Beek, Jon Voight, Amy Smart, Paul Walker, Ron Lester directed by: Brian Robbins List Price: $12.98 Amazon.com's Price: $9.99 You Save: $2.99 (23%)Prices subject to change. Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1Audience Rating: R (Restricted) Binding: DVD Brand: Team Marketing EAN: 9780792155515 Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC ISBN: 0792155513 Label: Paramount Manufacturer: Paramount Number Of Items: 1 Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Publisher: Paramount Region Code: 1 Release Date: May 31, 1999 Running Time: 106 minutes Studio: Paramount Theatrical Release Date: January 15, 1999 Sales Rank: 5538 MPN: TM2568 Related Items:
Editorial Review: Product Description: In small-town Texas, high school football is a religion. The head coach is deified, as long as the team is winning and 17-year-old schoolboys carry the hopes of an entire community onto the gridiron every Friday night. In his 35th year as head coach, Bud Kilmer (Jon Voight) is trying to lead his West Canaan Coyotes to their 23rd division title. When star quarterback Lance Harbor (Paul Walker) suffers an injury, the Coyotes are forced to regroup under the questionable leadership of John Moxon (James Van Der Beek), a second-string quarterback with a slightly irreverent approach to the game. "Varsity Blues" explores our obsession with sports and how teenage athletes respond to the extraordinary pressures places on them. Amazon.com: This MTV-produced drama only looks like an adaptation of H.G. Bissinger's expert dissertation of the church of high school football, Friday Night Lights. The energetic, breezy movie has none of the seriousness of Bissinger's book except on its basic level: in West Texas, high school football is life. Into this world comes Jonathan "Mox" Moxon (James Van Der Beek), a brainy, uncharacteristic jock who sits on the sideline reading Slaughterhouse Five until the West Caanan High School Coyotes All-Texas QB goes down with an injury. Suddenly the spotlight and the tyrannical ways of coach Bud Kilmer (another ace evil turn by Jon Voight) are on Mox and the light is white-hot. There have been several films that show tough, honest kids doing their best against the worst of small-town coaches (Tom Cruise in All the Right Moves, for one) but Varsity Blues, in its glossy style, takes a more curious turn: studying what happens when celebrity comes to the well-adjusted high schooler. Mox starts seeing the rewards of stardom: a six-pack under the counter, acceptance in school, even easy sex from the girl who goes after the starting quarterback (Ali Larter). Will Mox win the big game? Will he bend to the wills of his coach? Will he stay with his old girlfriend? The questions are easy enough to answer, but the film has an ace up its sleeve: Van Der Beek has the stuff to carry the movie. Fans of TV's Dawson's Creek will see a slightly grittier dreamboat here, and Van Der Beek's care with the role makes the most ludicrous parts--including a trip to a strip club--manage a certain aura. --Doug Thomas Average Rating:
![]() Rating: - Dawson with a football and accent.Varsity Blues starring James Van Der Beek is a pretty lame and vile film. Van Der Beek's acting sounds and looks so fake, don't even get me started with that southern accent he tries to pull off, ugh! Amy Smart and Paul Walker are great and make this film not so unbearable. I am sure a lot of guys like this film for that whipped cream bikni scene with Ali Larter. The dialogue is unforgivable, the movie plays good songs though. Rating: - An appealing movieI liked this movie. A lot. Yet, it's a relatively standard teen angst/sports flick--but the engaging cast makes it worth watching. Varsity Blues isn't great film-making, but it's great storytelling. You care about the players and their friends and the characters are believable. You also hate Bud Kilmer, the win-obsessed coach that treats high school players like disposable cameras at a wedding--use them for important moments and then toss them. Jon Voight plays Kilmer with so much intensity ... Read More Rating: - The hard work of so many, sacrificed by the disrespect of fewIn 'Mean Girls' there is a reference to 'Varsity Blues.' In a montage of ordinary students who are in awe of Regina George (Rachel McAdams), one of them comments that her favorite movie is 'Varsity Blues.' I thought that Tina Fey and the 'Mean Girls' writers must have been mocking this movie, so I decided that if it was worth mocking, it would be worth watching. If it's good enough for Regina George, it's good enough for me. Let the mocking begin: Top Ten Reasons to Watch 'Varsity Blues' Read More Rating: - Varsity BluesIt is a very good movie. If you want to see a good football movie, this is it. Rating: - "Let's Be Heroes"The '99 film `Varsity Blues' is definitely one of the best high school coming of age-teen angst-sports films within the genre. There are plenty of good ole boy hysteronics and football action to keep the male audience focused, a couple of pretty girls and of course James Van Der Beek and Paul Walker to keep the girls involved. The two keys to this film that set it above other films of this nature is the performance of Jon Voight as the thoroughly unlikable Coach Bud Kilmer and Ron Lester as the big, soft-hearted ... Read More Browse for similar items by category:
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