When the Game Stands Tall
United States
17416 people rated The journey of legendary football coach Bob Ladouceur, who took the De La Salle High School Spartans from obscurity to a 151-game winning streak that shattered all records for any American sport.
Biography
Drama
Family
Cast (18)
You May Also Like
User Reviews
Altaf Sugat
15/10/2025 02:38
When the Game Stands Tall_360P
GOLD 🏳️🌈🌈🔐
29/05/2023 18:42
When the Game Stands Tall_720p(480P)
mootsam
29/05/2023 17:11
source: When the Game Stands Tall
Djenny Djenny
22/11/2022 12:11
In addition to football, When the Game Stands Tall is also about life and values. The movie teaches the importance of developing character and virtue so that when you mature you can be someone your loved ones can depend on and you can contribute to a stable society. The movie especially teaches the virtues of faith, hope, love, and courage.
Faith is a personal belief in God. Hope is the desire for God and the trust we will receive grace for the future and to be with Him in heaven. Charity leads us to love God and our neighbor as ourselves. Prudence is a moral virtue which helps us make the right choice in every instance. Justice leads us to respect the rights of others and to give them their due. Fortitude gives us the courage to carry out what is right even in the face of difficulty! Temperance gives us self-control over our desires and appetites.
preet Sharma
22/11/2022 12:11
The movie tries too hard to be more than a high school football flick.
Having been both a boy and a high school athlete, I cannot remember any of us who could stand up in a group and construct a complete sentence, much less deliver the lengthy gut-wrenchingly eloquent soliloquies the viewer is asked to accept every few minutes in this film from children aged 16-18.
Without a doubt this movie will appeal to the die-hard football fan - especially fathers who are actually so well symbolized by one negative portrayal in the movie. For the rest of us listening to those dramatic clashes of helmets and pads over and over and over, we couldn't get one word out of our minds - concussion concussion concussion.
Opening at the start of yet another football season of obsession in this Country, the story panders to the ideal that if you play well, no matter win or lose, you will be a wonderful human being. Gimme a break.
Thembisa Mdoda - Nxumalo
22/11/2022 12:11
Rife with clichés, leaden dialogue, and obvious greenscreen technology during the football games, "When the Game Stands Tall" was one of the most cringeworthy movies I've ever seen. The family wanted to go, so I did, but every time I hear the phrase "based on a true story", I think "direct to Lifetime channel" and my expectations drop about 20 points. The directors seem to think it's necessary to remind us that a scene is in a black neighborhood by making the hip hop soundtrack REALLY LOUD. Hamfisted doesn't begin to describe this turkey. I will say that the production team did a decent job recreating the real-life video of the funeral (translation: we have no imagination and we think you won't notice), and the games were interesting.
Here in Pennsylvania, there are high schools that field spectacular teams year after year--many by recruiting to a private school, some not so much. This was the California version of one of those schools. The school in the movie happened to be Catholic, a fact that was almost completely ignored, except for a couple scenes where the coach is also teaching religion class (or what passes for it).
The stereotypes are all there: The grandparents caring for their grandson, the rabid fan dad who lives vicariously through his son's accomplishments, even the cameo appearance by a real live football star.
This game didn't stand tall. Sorry pals and gals, don't waste your money.
Sebabatso
22/11/2022 12:11
When the Game Stands Tall is about coach Bob Ladouceur and his values. Bob Ladouceur turned down bigger offers to coach high school and build people. The movie has religious values about the measures we give is the measures we receive. Team over individuals, depending on each other, commitment, and selflessness over selfishness. One experiences the unfairness and trials of life, and the dealing with adversity. I keep seeing in substories Good over evil, and light over darkness. The most low point in a bad year and the movie is over come by giving at a V A hospital. A strong script, and inspiring story. The directing and acting excelled. One experiences the intelligence/strategy, heat, pain and pressure during the football action. The distractions and frustration off the field blend into the field action excellently. How the team deals with the adversity not only make the team winners, but builds productive people. The ending scene is inspirational. I give What the Game Stands Tall and eight out of ten.
Alpha_ks
22/11/2022 12:11
Before I review the movie proper, let me just mention how pleasantly surprised my movie theatre-working friend was in seeing LSU football coach Les Miles as an audience member in the beginning of the movie with lines, to boot! I wasn't as surprised since I knew about it having read about his appearance in last Friday's review-by John Wirt-in the Red section of our town paper, The Advocate. All right, we both loved the various plays as depicted on screen of the games and were touched by many of the dramatic scenes of many of the teammates outside of the game. Oh, and the filmmakers did a good job of disguising New Orleans as a California town, too. I really don't have anything else to say except I recommend When the Game Stands Tall.
Rae🖖🏾
22/11/2022 12:11
I could only watch about half of this film due to the horrible script. The characters don't talk, they spew talking points such as "We are doing it for the coach" or "Your not alone, you have us". I don't know what group of 7th graders wrote this crap but it is worse than an after-school special, I'm surprised Eve Plumb was not cast in the Laura Dern role.
The entire time that I did watch I just kept thinking "How desperate for work is Laura Dern to take this part?" There are some good actors/actresses in this film and they basically do nothing but chew the scenery and recite Hallmark card messages to the "kids" on the team.
The "kids" look like 30 year old men and they must have all attended the Copacobana Acting School, where they were taught to act like silent movie stars. I mean every expression is so overacted, it makes Mommie Dearest look like Sophie's Choice.
I think the producers thought "Hey that Sandra Bullock football movie was a hit, lets make another one" unfortunately the later is worse than most lifetime movies.
This is definitely a movie not worth even an in-demand or Netflix rental price, do yourself a favor and just watch We Are Marshall or Brian's Song again.
Stephanie
22/11/2022 12:11
I saw this at an early premiere. The sports scenes are fantastic and had the theater on the edge of our seats! The truth is even more compelling than the streak! But beyond that, this is a cool story to see as an accompaniment to Boyhood---it's another story, essentially, on the same theme of how boys become men in American society. Boyhood focuses on how family shapes a boy, When the Game Stands Tall focuses more on how a community, peers, and school can shape a boy. It shows how sports, coaches, teachers, and mentors all can play a transformative role. It's a story about how boys can learn to reach out to each other for support and become truly strong because of their bonds and brotherhood. This is an awesome, important message and as a Mom I can't wait to take my 13-year-old son to see it. (By the way, I think it's a good movie for teen girls to see also. The boy characters have much more depth than your average movie teen- aged boys, and the conflicts they face are more realistic and compelling. I think this respect for the experience of teens and the difficulties of growing older will speak to teens of both sexes. )
The true spirit of De La Salle and what happens when teachers and coaches work for reasons of the heart rather than the pocketbook, comes through and is part of what was inspiring for me. If this bothers some cynics because they just can't believe it's for real, they need to put their cynicism aside and watch it for the awesome football action! Coach Lad, inspired to make a difference in the world, started out working in juvenile justice. He realized that it would be much easier to make a difference in the lives of boys if he started to work with them at a younger age, and that was a major reason he decided to become a high school teacher. They happened to have a teacher/ coaching position available at DLS in the early 80's--- and that's how this all came to be. The portrayal of Coach Lad is accurate except in real life he looks more like the football players he coaches, and he also has a great sense of humor and charisma that you see only a hint of in the film. Unlike your typical stereotyped coach, he is philosophical: how many football coaches do you know who double as religion teachers? As a Mom I love the messages to teen-aged boys and I got attached to many of the characters, understanding the struggles of young men in a way I never had before. I thought the tackles in football scenes were too real--they made me cringe. But the action was still awesome! This movie is so inspirational and thought-provoking that I will keep taking friends to see it as long as it's in the theater. This movie is an achievement!! And you don't have to be a sports nut to love it but if you are it's even better!
Here is the spoiler: -- Ladouceur not only masterminded the streak but retired with a record of 399-25-3 !