All the Right Moves | |
---|---|
Directed by | Michael Chapman |
Written by | Michael Kane |
Produced by | Stephen Deutsch |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Jan de Bont |
Edited by | David Garfield |
Music by | David Richard Campbell |
Production company | Lucille Ball Productions |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date |
|
Running time | 91 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $5.6 million [1] |
Box office | $17.2 million [2] |
All the Right Moves is a 1983 American sports drama film directed by Michael Chapman, and starring Tom Cruise, Craig T. Nelson, Lea Thompson, Chris Penn and Gary Graham. It was filmed on location in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, [3] [4] [5] [6] and Pittsburgh.
Stefen "Stef" Djordjevic is a Serbian American high school defensive back who is gifted in sports and is a B student academically. He is seeking a college football scholarship to escape the economically depressed small Western Pennsylvania town of Ampipe and a dead-end job and life working at the mill, just like his grandfather, father, and his brother Greg. He dreams of becoming an electrical engineer right after he graduates from college. Ampipe is a company town whose economy is dominated by the town's main employer, American Pipe & Steel, a steel mill struggling through the downturn of the early 1980s recession. Stef gets through his days with the love of his girlfriend, Lisa Lietzke, and his strong bond with his teammates.
In the big football game against the undefeated Walnut Heights High School, Ampipe appears headed to win the game, when a fumbled handoff in the closing seconds, along with Stefen's pass interference penalty earlier in the game, lead to Walnut Heights' victory. Following the game, Coach Vern Nickerson lambastes the fumbler in the locker room, telling him he "quit" the game. When Stefen retorts that the coach himself quit, the coach kicks him off the team.
In the aftermath, disgruntled Ampipe fans vandalize Coach Nickerson's house and yard. Stefen is present and is a reluctant participant, but is nonetheless spotted by Nickerson as the vandals flee. From there, Stefen deals with personal battles, including dealing with the coach blackballing him among colleges because of his attitude and participation in the vandalism. Stefen gets in an argument with Lisa, and his best friend Brian declines a scholarship offer to USC and plans to marry his pregnant girlfriend.
Frustrated by what Nickerson did, Stefen angrily confronts his former coach which ends in a shouting match out in the street. Lisa decides to talk to Nickerson's wife to try to help. Nickerson realizes he was wrong for blackballing Stefen. He has accepted a coaching position on the West Coast at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo and offers Stefen a full scholarship to play football there, the best engineering school in California, which he accepts.
The film was produced by Stephen Deutsch, with Phillip Goldfarb as co-producer. Gary Morton of Lucille Ball Productions was executive producer. The production was filmed over seven weeks in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, in the early spring of 1983. [5] [8] The recently closed sixty-year-old high school ( 40°19′18″N78°55′18″W / 40.3217°N 78.9217°W ), the former campus of Greater Johnstown High School, was used as the location of the film, along with Point Stadium. [4] Actress Thompson was inserted as a new student at Ferndale Area High School for three days prior to shooting. [3] [5] [9] Cruise was similarly inserted into Greater Johnstown High School, but was recognized immediately. [10] (His only notable film part at the time was in Taps in 1981; The Outsiders and Risky Business were yet to be released.)
In 2018, Thompson stated she initially did not want the part, as the script required her to participate in two nude scenes, but Cruise persuaded the producers to drop one of the scenes and was naked with her in the remaining scene. [11]
The film was released to favorable reviews. It has a score of 63% on the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes based on 24 reviews. The website's consensus reads, "All the Right Moves is an uncommonly grim coming-of-age drama that overcomes numerous clichés with its realistic approach to its characters and setting." [12] On Metacritic, it has a score of 62 out of 100 based on seven reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews". [13]
Jay Carr from The Boston Globe stated "Cruise is believable as an athlete,"[ citation needed ] and Janet Maslin of The New York Times called it "a well-made but sugar-coated working-class fable about a football star." [14] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave it 3 out of 4 and wrote: "Two people finally tell each other the truth. This is, of course, an astonishing breakthrough in movies about teenagers, and All the Right Moves deserves it." [15] Locally, Ed Blank of the Pittsburgh Press saw it as flawed, but captured the look of Johnstown, [16] and Marylynn Urucchio of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette rated it as elementary but uplifting. [17]
Among the unfavorable reviews, TV Guide called the movie "cliché-riddled" and criticized director Michael Chapman for not taking any risks. [18] Richard Corliss of Time called it a "naive little movie (that) hopes to prove itself the Flashdance of football." [19]
Johnstown is the largest city in Cambria County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 18,411 as of the 2020 census. Located 57 miles (92 km) east of Pittsburgh, it is the principal city of the Johnstown metropolitan area, which is located in Cambria County and had 133,472 residents in 2020. It is also part of the Johnstown–Somerset combined statistical area, which includes both Cambria and Somerset Counties.
Lea Katherine Thompson is an American actress, singer, dancer, and director.
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Hardy Otto Nickerson Sr. is an American former professional football player and coach. He played professionally as a linebacker for four teams over 16 seasons in the National Football League (NFL) from 1987 to 2002,. He played college football for the California Golden Bears. He was a fifth round draft pick of the Pittsburgh Steelers in the 1987 NFL draft. Nickerson spent the prime of his career with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The hiring of head coaches Sam Wyche and Tony Dungy allowed Nickerson to play in the middle in a 4–3 defense for both coaches; Nickerson played in a 3–4 defense with the Steelers. While playing in the 4–3, Nickerson went to five Pro Bowls, and was selected for the National Football League 1990s All-Decade Team.
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