4 Minute Mile
United States
3230 people rated A former track coach decides to train a student with natural athletic talent. Tragedy strikes, forcing the student to confront everything that has been holding him back.
Drama
Sport
Cast (18)
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User Reviews
Prisma Khatiwada
29/05/2023 18:14
source: 4 Minute Mile
preet Sharma
22/11/2022 12:06
The movie was originally titled "One Square Mile" which made more sense than PLOT SPOILER "4 Minute Mile" as no one actually runs a four minute mile in this film. Drew Jacobs (Kelly Blatz) likes to run, his dad OD, his brother (Cam Gigandet) deals drugs, although not very good at it, and mom (Kim Basinger) tolerates it all.
Drew leaves the HS track team because he doesn't like the coach and can't handle the kids calling his brother a loser. The film moves on to the "Karate Kid" formula as the neighbor (Richard Jenkins) takes him under his wing and teaches him to run using semi-unorthodox training techniques. Drew has a female interest in Analeigh Tipton and a rival in Whitehall.
This is a movie for those who like those "Lifetime" films. Family drama outweighs much of the story. Not much action. And no four minute miles.
Parental Guide: No F-bombs, sex, or nudity.
its.verdex
22/11/2022 12:06
Drew Jacobs lives really a hard life, he lost his father, he lives in poverty and besides has to make illegal runs for his brother Wes.He has been expulsed from the university relay team.Other side Coleman is observing all the competitions and has noticed that Drew has a talent for running a one-mile distance.At the beginning Drew suffers very much, because Coleman gives him hard duties, running in the water, looking for a tire under the water.But Coleman wants to show him what means patience and tenacity.Besides this hard training Drew met Lisa, a student who practices also athletics and they become first friends (he got a black eye for definding her in her birthday cerebration) and fall in love together.
A good story about patience, tenacity and self improvement.
About performances, Richard Jenkins no needs any presentation, he is really a very good actor,Kelly Blatz is excellent in his role of Drew and Analeigh Tipton is also excellent in her role of Lisa.
ZompdeZomp
22/11/2022 12:06
It isn't made clear in the version that I saw that this is a true story....the runner comes from a family with a "low life brother" who has even "lower life friends" and a mother who seems very distant. His coach spends most of the film "in a bottle" and the drama of the "tragedy" only comes with 9 minutes of the film remaining. I don't see much in this to entertain given that's its unclear if the "hero" of the film actually really achieves anything in life. If you have other things to do, it may be better than watching this, although to be fair to Ms Basinger she still looks great heading into 60years of age
khelly
22/11/2022 12:06
We were able to watch this movie on Netflix streaming. From the brief description I figured I would like, and I found it to be even better than my expectations.
Set and filmed in the Seattle Washington area, it features a high school boy who has always been fast, and wants to be the fastest 400M runner on his team. But he has issues, mostly stemming from an abusive and no good older brother. When he has issues with the track coach he drops off the team. But someone tells him of an older coach that may be able to help him.
The older coach uses unusual methods, seemingly unrelated to running fast. It turns out he is testing the boy, to see if he has the patience and the guts to take instruction and give it his all. They even use the old "wax on, wax off' reference. And, the old coach wants him to run the mile, not the 400 meters.
The boy is Kelly Blatz, about 26, who plays Drew Jacobs. Blatz was an all-star high school athlete and looks very comfortable in his role as a runner. The old coach is Richard Jenkins who once again takes a generic role and makes it special. Also good is Analeigh Tipton as Lisa, also a runner and with eyes for Drew.
As the story unfolds it is made clear several times that what they are doing isn't so much about winning races on the track but clearing out your inner demons so that you can accomplish what you want.
A very special small film, never dull and always enjoyable, and with a few surprises.
SPOILERS: Drew's brother is getting drugs from some thugs, and Drew is expected to carry drugs and money back and forth by running with a shoulder bag. There is a showdown of sorts at Drew's home, the old coach sees it and calls cops, but he is accidentally shot and dies. The brother and other thugs end up in prison, and even though Drew had not won the regional mile race to go to state finals, on his own he ran his mile in 3:57 as we see in parallel the state championship race won in 4:03. And as the movie ends we get a short feel-good scene of one year later and Drew is lining up at the start of a college race.
Chimwemwe Mlombwa
22/11/2022 12:06
4 Minute Mile is a plodding unoriginal drama although it does make a reference to The Karate Kid at one point.
Drew (Kelly Blatz) is the headstrong teenager who is a good sprinter. His father died when he was a kid, his older brother is mixing with drug dealers and gets Drew to do some literal running for him and his glamorous mother (Kim Basinger) seems not to care that her sons could be descending down the crime ladder.
Drew comes to attention of an alcoholic, loner coach Coleman (Richard Jenkins) who suggests he moves up to running the mile and gets Drew involved in a tough training regime which also involves sanding a boat, pushing a tyre underwater and sometimes coming out with sage like advice which Drew listens to or ignores depending on his mood.
Their is a potential love interest for Drew but a heavy cloud hangs over his brother and his fractious relationship with the drug dealers which you will guess will play a pivotal role in the final act.
This really is a trite film lacking any resonance, it looks cheap and features a bland performance by Blatz, an excellent performance by Jenkins and a minor appearance by Basinger.
JLive Music
22/11/2022 12:06
I anticipated this being a typical, high school sports movie and was geared up for that sort of simple entertainment. Some aspects remained typical: conflict in the protagonists' life stemmed from family, some sort of important death would occur that would make him want to win more, and that the protagonist had a bit of a temper. HOWEVER, the two major unexpected aspects of this film is what pushed me to give it a 7 and not a 5, which I rate as a film that's just average in all ways.
The way in which Coleman died was thoroughly unexpected for me and I was shocked! Which I appreciated because I had no real emotional ties to the film until that point. Secondly, the fact that Drew never even made that last state championship meet was a perfect choice for the script and again, I was pleasantly surprised. I figured he would somehow make the meet by the skin of his teeth, and because it's a movie, he would not only be warmed up to race but also win for Coleman!
The subtle creation of a relationship with Lisa was a nice touch. Their low key love never distracted from the point of the film, but I do think it added to the tone of learning patience and understanding that it's all a process.
In another random side note, as a former 4X4 sprinter that was just as averse to moving up to the mile as Drew, I truly believed in the dedication and passion that was perceived as being a high school athlete. When you're banking on yourself to get an athletic scholarship, and it's just you and the clock, not you and a team backing your skills, you HAVE to be all the things that Coleman tried to teach Drew. I respect the ending of the film, where it's up to the viewer to decide the outcome of the D1 championship because you want to believe that Drew has taken those lessons in and is not only a great runner, but a quality man. At the end of the day, this film is more about learning to navigate life as opposed to just high school athleticism.
Danika
22/11/2022 12:06
Yes there were the standard clichés of high school underdog athlete from the wrong side of town. But there were enough fine qualities to this film to overcome stereotypes of the genre.
The outcome was realistic and that's refreshing. I've never seen the lead before, so I was able to believe him as the character without thinking of him as an actor from some other film.
No one was over-the-top. That's a big plus too. The gangster was pretty ordinary, the brother sleepy for the most part, the girl quiet and real, and the mom subtle and resigned. I've seen Richard Jenkins do these parts before, so I would have preferred someone else, but nevertheless, he did a decent job.
I totally get the message on a personal level. I have never been able to break through to that level of personal commitment required for greatness in anything. This kid had to.
Nice cinematography, adequate use of emotional music without being obnoxious. But this is a dark, slow film and it requires a special degree of commitment to stick with it. Not unlike that required of a long distance runner.
_j.mi______
22/11/2022 12:06
How does this type of drivel get made? Who sits down and decides to create something so cliché? Every single character was a cliché. Who enjoys this kind of predictability? Couldn't the writer have come up with even one original character? Maybe this is the world of talentless cookie cutter people that surrounds him. None of the relationships in the film would ever exist because people just don't behave this way to each other. Someone explain why he would listen to his brother when he acted like that? When coach said wax on wax off was the most enjoyable moment because I had been saying it to myself the entire film and I found something to laugh about. If you want to see a much better version of this film watch the Jerico Mile with the amazing Peter Strauss.
Kobby
22/11/2022 12:06
This film tells the story of a young man who takes up running as a way to get a college scholarship, so he can leave the undesirable social situation he is in.
The story of him forming a bond with a older coach, striving to win could have been touching, but "4 Minute Mile" doesn't achieve the emotional intensity that I hoped for. Mostly it's too do with the ineffective delivery of the plot. I watched the first ten minutes three times but I was still not entirely sure who was who. In addition, how the young man and the coach bond is unconvincing and poorly explained. And I think Cam Gigandet is under utilized in the film. Fortunately Richard Jenkins is there to save the day, but it still doesn't save this film from being rather flat and uninteresting.