08 July, 2008

Category Archives: Hockey Movies

We’re Hollywood Star-Struck

Forgive us this hiccup of indulgence — yesterday the makers and marketers of the documentary ‘Pond Hockey’ referred to OFB as their favorite blog.

Well, from the early looks of things, they’re our favorite documentarians. Now that July in D.C. is upon us (and Happy Canada Day to our cousins to the North!), be sure to visit the film’s web site when you need a helping hand in getting cooled off during these dog days of summer.

When Son of Ishtar Attacks Lord Stanley

In the last six months we’ve been contacted by representatives from two different feature-length films, both including hockey in their stories. We were provided with promotional material and politely asked to assist in the marketing endeavors. We found the outreach flattering, and so we obliged.

We are greatly anticipating the release of ‘Pond Hockey’ this November, and will assist its filmmakers additionally in every manner we possibly can.

With Mike Myers’ ‘The Love Guru,’ now in its third week of screening nationwide, not so much enthusiasm . . . insomuch as the film, accumulating from critics an average grade of D+, is quickly earning the ignominious designation as one of the worst cinematic creations in the history of humanity.

Rotten Tomatoes has tabulated 122 reviews of the abomination and classified 103 of them as rotten.

“It’s just deadly,” exclaims Richard Roeper of Ebert & Roeper.

“Holy Dave Keon!” begins Newsday’s ‘Sportswatch’ columnist Neil Best. “Even I am shocked by the level of disgust over [The Love Guru] being expressed by movie critics.”

The dreck, which cost $64 million to make, to date has grossed just $13 million (and likely will limp to $20 million). Who would have imagined a month ago that a Mike Myers comedy with one Jessica Alba in the cast would struggle to surpass the gross receipts of say ‘Meatballs 4,’ ‘Snowboard Academy,’ ‘Die Hard Dracula,’ and ‘Soccer Dog: The Movie’ ?

The Internet Movie Database has a ranking of a “Bottom 100″ films of all time; look for ‘Love Guru’ to make its debut in it soon.

For me, it’s poetic justice. ‘Guru’s’ marketers concocted all manner of disingenuous pledges of admiration for each and every hockey blog it solicited. They sugared us with flattery and even went so far as to claim that OFB’s assistance was one that was going to be “personally conveyed to Mike Myers.” Whatever.

We feel dirty for having participated in the mass e-marketing of this bomb, and while we know that it’s metaphysically impossible for more than 11 or 12 or our readers to have patronized it, to them, we express particular and red-faced regret. Your tickets to ‘Pond Hockey’ are on us.

But imagine the blazered communications and PR flacks in the NHL’s New York office. The league went above and beyond in its support of the crap film. Amazingly enough, today the league still acknowledges its supporting role on its web site. I wonder if Gary Bettman had a say in the matter?

Anyway, we’ll talk no more of this movie monstrocity, and instead try and cleanse your film palate with this promotional snippet for the movie we’re proud to have associated ourselves with.

Dreaming of Puckheads in the ‘Passion Pits’

Are you aware that there is a revival of drive-in movie theaters taking place nationwide? I wasn’t either. But on Monday, ambling up congestion-free roads toward a business appointment and enjoying the pastoral beauty of Rt. 15 toward Harrisburg, Pa., I passed a still-operating drive-in movie theater in Dillsburg. It advertised a current playing of ‘Get Smart.’ Were it not nearly 90 minutes from my home I’d be there this Friday night.

I was stunned. How could VCRs, DVDs, cinema-replicating, massively sized modern televisions, and NetFlix have failed to vanquish our ‘Happy Days’-style of theater experience? How could high-tech, high definition America embrace cinema in surrounded-by-woods sound — in analog un-crispness?

Maybe what goes around actually comes back around in American culture. Who for instance would have thought that American teens would re-embrace skateboards?

Returned home Monday evening, I resolved to research my run-in with this sliver of seemingly archaic Americana. Two excellent web sites chronicling both drive-ins’ history and current status are found with driveinmovie.com and driveintheater.com. One thing seems certain: America’s perception that the theaters had vanquished entirely from our landscape is undermined by the largely rural reality of their staying power. It’s true that you aren’t going to find 50 acres in Fairfax or Montgomery County devoted today to the theaters. It’s also true that the theater numbers nationally are about one-tenth what they were in the experience’s heyday: from a peak of about 4,000 in the early 1960s to around 400 today.

But new ones are being built. Maryland once had 42 such theaters, according to driveinmovie.com. Today she is home to just two, but three new ones (all in Carroll County) are in the planning or construction stages. Virginia has eight of the theaters in operation today. Pennsylvania is a veritable hotbed of throwback cinema: 35 illuminating today’s Friday and Saturday night skies.

But what can possibly account for both the theaters’ residual existence out in the American hinterland as well as its sudden if modest resurgence this decade? NetFlix, after all, mails its movies to Dillsburg.

Perhaps it’s because the theaters are a marvelous confluence of enduring American pastimes: the great symbol of liberty, the automobile; our never-out-of-vogue love affair with big screen film; and teenagers in heat desperate for isolation. Those plots of land, their darkness so enveloping save the screen on the horizon, were the great liberators of hormones. Wikipedia’s summary notes that at their peak popularity media labeled the sites “passion pits.”

By God, Revive, Revive I say!

It’s probably also true that in grand summer weather, like that we’ve had in D.C. early this summer, a lot of folks don’t want to go indoors to see films, especially to the cookie-cutter shopping mall holes in the corners masquerading as theaters.

Interesting to note, I think, that in and around D.C. we do rather robustly celebrate the outdoor film experience. ‘Screen on the Green’ runs on Monday nights on the Mall in July and August, and Strathmore’s outdoor film festival commands a week in August. They’re necessarily a car-less bit of culture, but they do seem to harken back to the spirit of the drive-in.

Drive-in theaters are as American as apple pie and Coca-Cola. If indeed they are on the rebound it’s cause for great celebration.

And if they’re back we’d do well to keep them around, this time for good. It would be wise, perhaps, to update their offerings. Can’t we bring more to the outdoor screens than merely contemporary Hollywood? If next summer you were given a month’s notice of ‘Slapshot’ being screened at a faraway drive-in one Friday night, an event promoted and patronized by Washington’s hockey bloggers and hundreds of their readers, even though you’ve seen the movie 63 times, wouldn’t you consider a 64th viewing then?

And wouldn’t it be swell if we found a way to beam in satellite signals upon the gatherings? And if so, the theater proprietors would appreciate knowing of events that command grand gatherings, in city after city, especially for just single nights.

Shouldn’t we galvanize the surging momentum of the NHL Entry Draft, and in particular the city-specific parties it engenders, and make appeals to the drive-in proprietors next June to host a grand evening for DraftGeeks and pucksheads? Wouldn’t a Friday draft following involving some tasty tailgating, a little tonsil hockey in the dark, and all that first-round trading frenzy super sized onscreen be just about the best-ever draft party?

Victor Hedman, next June’s likely towering top choice, would look very big there indeed.

Fight Cancer with Hockey, Cake, The Zambonis, and More

My friend Jay not only has a cool job, he knows cool people, too. He recently introduced me to Dave Zamboni who is described by Jay as “the free-skating guitar-man / defenseman for the ultra hip hockey rockers The Zambonis.” Speaking with Dave, he told me about a great event coming to our area in May.

The Zambonis will be performing at a one-day “fun filled extravaganza” to raise money to fight cancer. In addition to The Zambonis playing live, there will be a hockey game, skate-a-thon, skills competition, broom ball, rides, carnival games, vendors, food and Duff “Ace of Cakesâ€? Goldman from Charm City Cakes. Oh…. and to help everyone fight cancer… a special appearance by the Hanson Brothers.

Here are the particulars:
Hockey Fights Cancer Maryland, Sunday, 4 May, 2008 - Ice World in Harford County, Maryland

We’ll have more details as the event draws closer and perhaps even have a special OFB/Zambonis promotion. Until then, check out this brilliant commercial promoting the event.

The Love Guru


There’s good news for Leafs fans. The Maple Leafs will be playing in June … in a new Mike Myers movie called The Love Guru.

From a National Hockey League press release:

In the comedy “The Love Guru,� Pitka (Mike Myers in his first original character since Austin Powers) is an American who was left at the gates of an ashram in India as a child and raised by gurus. He moves back to the U.S. to seek fame and fortune in the world of self-help and spirituality. His unorthodox methods are put to the test when he must settle a rift between Toronto Maple Leafs star hockey player Darren Roanoke (Romany Malco) and his estranged wife. After the split, Roanoke’s wife starts dating L.A. Kings star Jacques Grande (Justin Timberlake) out of revenge, sending her husband into a major professional skid – to the horror of the teams’ owner Jane Bullard (Jessica Alba) and Coach Cherkov (Verne Troyer). Pitka must return the couple to marital nirvana and get Roanoke back on his game so the team can break the 40-year-old “Bullard Curse� and win the Stanley Cup.

Myers co-wrote the script featuring his beloved hometown Maple Leafs and shot the film in that city. For the production, the NHL provided Myers and Paramount Pictures unprecedented access and rights, including the use of NHL marks and NHL game action footage, permission and facilitation to film inside NHL arenas, and guest appearances by NHL players and the Stanley Cup, the most revered trophy in all professional sports, marking its first starring turn in a feature film.

For more exclusive video, visit The Love Guru on YouTube.

Nats vs. Caps vs. Chiefs

The red, white, and blue couple
The red, white, and blue couple
Caps, 'Skins- where's the Nats gear?
Caps, 'Skins- where's the Nats gear?
While one of the biggest local sports stories in recent weeks has been the Capitals’ playoff push, they were upstaged this weekend by the Nationals and the new stadium. I was fortunate to attend last night’s Opening Day game, and quickly noticed a decent number of Caps fans in attendance. They were wearing Caps hats, sweatshirts, T-shirts, and even jerseys. After attending many, many Nationals games over the past few seasons, I can’t recall ever seeing a display like the one I witnessed last night. Perhaps the Caps weren’t as back-burnered as I thought they were. I was, however, heartened to see that the new stadium kept the Washington Hall of Stars tradition alive, with Rod Langway representing local hockey on the banner.

Last week, the Washington Post’s Barry Svrluga shared this item about the Nats’ manager at Nationals Journal:

Manny Acta really likes the movie “Slapshot”, and was very happy to find out that Caps Coach Bruce Boudreau was an extra in the movie.

Personally, I was a little surprised to learn this, since Manny doesn’t seem like a hockey movie kind of guy, although I suppose the movie could (and should) be considered one of the quintessential sports films. One article from the San Jose Mercury-News captured the essence of “Slap Shot” without once mentioning Bruce Boudreau! (It seems to be a rarity in articles about “Slap Shot” since November 2007.)

In the frozen world of hockey, “Slap Shot” isn’t merely a film. It’s a cinematic treasure that has forever been ingrained in the sport’s culture. Almost everyone, from NHL equipment guys to team captains, can quote the often profane dialogue, inside and out…Although it didn’t impress critics much when it was released in 1977, “Slap Shot” quickly developed a cult following and now routinely is placed on the short list of all-time best sports films. The biggest raves come from the people who watch - over and over - their sport mocked as thuggery on ice. All these years later, hockey players still are laughing along with it.

One can now add a major league baseball manager to those who laugh along with it. Who knew?

Ice Kings

Tonight begins a six game road trip for the Capitals. A trip which finds our weekend bare of hockey, save for Friday night’s game in Atlanta. We have a solution for you.

Grab your favorite puck soda, ready the pop corn get a copy of the documentary movie ICE KINGS. Ice Kings is about high school hockey at Mount St. Charles Academy, a Catholic high school in Woonsocket, Rhode Island. What sets Mount St. Charles Academy — known simply as “The Mount” — apart from any other high school in any sport is their consecutive state championships from 1978 to 2003 all under the guidance of the same coach, Bill Belisle. That’s 26 straight titles.

While the focus is on the Mount, it can be argued that the main character is high school hockey in Rhode Island. When you think of high school football, you think Texas. When you think of high school hockey, you should think Rhode Island. Award winning writer/producer/director Craig E. Shapiro does a wonderful job setting the stage with the history of Rhode Island and the importance of hockey. The movie has a Discovery Channel-type feel to it, with vivid imagery, strong narration, and plenty of interviews with known hockey commodities including Garth Snow, Mathieu Schneider, Lou Lamoriello, and ex-Capitals coach Ron Wilson. You learn of Rhode Island’s history, some unique quirks, and their love of hockey.

Another major character in the movie is The Mount’s home rink. A former airplane hanger, Adelard Arena is a formidable foe in its own right. Small. Cramped. Intimidating. Like an old-school NHL rink. The unique feature of Adelard Arena is not necessarily what it has, but rather, what it lacks: Plexiglass. Adelard is as old school as you can get with chicken wire — chain link fencing, really — separating the spectators from the athletes.

You may have heard about the Michigan Division I Championship going eight overtimes before co-champions were crowned this year? Rhode Island can claim a “been there, done that” attitude with the 1988 championship. A normal two game series needed a third game do decide the winner. Game three was tied at double-over time. That’s where the rules take over which cancels the game and adds a fourth. Would you believe a fifth game is added after the fourth game is canceled after the second consecutive double-over time game?

It’s a great film worthy of your time and effort and an excellent addition to your library of hockey movies.

Son of Slap Shot

Son of a Hanson brother winning an award for sportsmanship? It’s true:

Hockey Helping Heal Family Hurt

Disappointed that my father couldn’t attend our screening of ‘The Rocket‘ at the Avalon Theater this past December, I made the DVD a Christmas present to him. (He was thrilled.) Throughout January when we spoke on the telephone I was quick to ask if he’d found a quiet evening at home to view it. He hadn’t. I found this curious, and somewhat disappointing, for as I enjoyed the film so thoroughly, I knew he would, too. But in his retirement my father is anything but sedentary and stationary, and so even something as seemingly pedestrian as movie night at home can be hard to come by.

It was a sad coincidence for me to learn last week, not long after I heard of the Capitals traveling with their fathers on their roadtrip South, that I’d be spending the weekend with my father — our first visit together in 2008 — under the most unfortunate of circumstances: gathering to get past the passing of his mother. He learned of his loss last week while on a Caribbean sailing vacation, hastily cut it short, joined family for the remembrance, and at his mother’s funeral delivered a stunning and moving eulogy. Now without both parents, Dad is feeling “orphaned.”

I was in his Maryland Eastern Shore home all of about seven minutes this weekend before he initiated talk of the Saturday night victory by the Caps in Tampa. “Did you see that game last night?” he asked me with victory voice and wide eyes. We talked of the superb passing by both teams, the heart-wrenching, concluding drama, the visiting team’s resiliency. He knew, too, of my appearance on Saturday night radio in Washington to discuss the Caps, and when the Chesapeake Bay poorly cooperated with his radio reception of the broadcast at home he hopped in his car and began driving around the shore to find better reception.

Dad and I aren’t emotive in tough times; instead, we find the seemingly necessary solace simply in one another’s company. With this in mind I shouldn’t have been surprised at our next discussion.

“We’re going to watch the movie tonight,” he said, with no small enthusiasm. The screening, it became clear, was to be the centerpiece of my visit. Turns out, he had no intention of watching the movie without me, no matter how long that took. And this weekend ‘The Rocket’ represented a fresh immersion in the pursuit that has consistently — over the course of our more than 35 years of sharing it — delivered the fondest and most rewarding of life experiences together.

In my youth Dad was alternately my soccer coach, my Little League manager, my supporter in the stands in hoops and junior varsity football. But it was when he first took me to the neighborhood ice rink for my first skating lessons that a special and lasting sporting bond forged between us. I don’t think skating comes easy to any beginner, no matter how athletically gifted. I remember well my struggles and how after each session of Saturday lessons Dad always aided my perseverance by removing my skates and rubbing my young pained feet back to life.

Later, once I’d become proficient with my skating, he infuriated my mother by taking me along on his Friday night pickup skates near midnight — when the ice was cheap and available — when all other 10- and 11-year-olds were fast asleep. Later still, when I was in high school and working weekends at the local rink, he’d assure my mother that the reason I wasn’t returning home from Saturday night shifts was because I was skating after hours with college-aged hockey playing staff, literally until sunrise, then collapsing on a cot in the rink’s First Aid room. My mother was convinced that hockey couldn’t be my mistress every Saturday night when I was 14 and 15 and 16 and 17. My father knew better.

His shore home is well equipped for Blockbuster night — or Hockey Night in Canada: 48 inches of Panasonic, wall-hung high definition above the fireplace. Center Ice subscribed to. We had a roaring fire in the fireplace, our feet up, beers and spirits on the coasters at our feet. We were seated next to one another on his couch with not six inches separating us. That in itself felt healing.

I explained to him the necessity of absorbing the film in its Francophone rendering, with English subtitles. He needed about 25 minutes of it before he professed Stephen McHattie’s work as Habs’ coach Dick Irvin “magnificent.” He was absorbed, and I was grateful.

A great home in a great location has a way of breeding enthusiastic loyalty among friends and former business associates, and so my father’s telephone rings a lot. It’s about that time of year when the calls begin announcing intended spring and summer weekend visits. Dad is always generous with his time and attentions on the phone, but I noticed that with this film on pause during the calls he was quite short on the phone. He took perhaps five calls and dispatched all of them with haste. I really think he was enjoying the movie that much.

During opportune times he’d share with me fascinating tidbits about his passion for puck while growing up just outside New York City. I never knew, for instance, that he’d traveled to the old Madison Square Garden just to see Rocket play. I think he paid $2 for that ticket.

When the movie ended and my father judged it superb, he wanted (or needed) more from it, so we began watching the DVD extras. All of them, in French. The phone rang once during that overtime period and again Dad shoulder checked it aside.

Eventually we dimmed the lights on our night, hugged, and went to bed. Breakfast the next morning was delicious, and we talked a lot about the movie some more.

“Outdoor Hockey Is Beautiful”

That’s the sentiment of a couple of Minnesotans behind the making of the documentary ‘Pond Hockey’, now in final editing and awaiting a distributor. The filmmakers believe it’s mere weeks from showing at a theater near you. Eighty minutes of cinema we can’t wait for; sure looks like we have another OFB night at the movies looming. The trailer suggests that the filmmakers have honed in on the heart of the matter:

As you might expect, Minnesota television stations are on this story like black on fresh lake ice. One treatment can be found here. Still another can be found here.   

But it isn’t just in Minnesota where outdoor puck is being pursued these days. Jeff Jackson’s Notre Dame Fighting Irish got swept by no. 1 Michigan last weekend, so on Monday of last week, with his charges’ spirits slumped, he took them outside for practice, where it was a not so balmy 12 degrees. That story is chronicled here. The Irish, incidentally, rebounded and swept Bowling Green this past weekend.    

Update: We heard this afternoon from Andrew Sherburne, ‘Pond Hockey’s’ Producer. The first closed screening for cast and crew will take place in a matter of weeks, while the actual release isn’t quite that close. We’ll keep you informed.

In The Crease

A while ago, we received a copy of the movie In The Crease. The documentary follows the California Wave Bantam AAA travel hockey team and their quest for a national title.

In The Crease
In The Crease
Production began on IN THE CREASE in March 2005 in Lakewood, California, immediately after the California Wave won the Pacific District Regional Championship and qualified for nationals. For approximately one month, the Stickmen Pictures crew spent nearly every day with players, families and coaches filming at practices, in the locker room, and at their homes across Southern California. The film crew then traveled with the team to Bensenville, Illinois where they covered all the action at nationals over the six days of the tournament and also interviewed scouts, agents, and opposing players and coaches.

The movie was done quite well. There is a good mix of game and practice footage as well as interviews with the California Wave coach, players and families. Being former players themselves, the directors wanted to make sure they showed the dedication and commitment of not just the players, but the families themselves. To augment the story of the California Wave, 15 of professional hockey’s biggest stars shared their stories of their hockey beginnings and early days. A few of the pros featured are Joe Thornton, Scott Niedermayer, Brendan Shanahan, Scott Gomez, Brian Rolston, and Martin Havlat.

Check out some In The Crease articles by James Mirtle, USA Hockey, and NHL.com and then watch the movie this Sunday, January 20th at 4pm on Versus or buy the DVD which includes 20 minutes of bonus features including extended interviews with the pros.

Training Camp for Washington Sports Editors

Morning Cup-A-Joe
Morning Cup-A-Joe
Near 8:00 this past Saturday night, Washington’s mainstream sports editors confronted an annual dilemma: the end of another Redskins’ season. Joe Gibbs’ second retirement from football offered our local press horde a brief stay of execution from the Burgundy and Gold beat, but today the harsh reality sets in.

Their dilemma is existential: what now?

To the disappointment of Wizards’ fans, and the horror of Dan Steinberg, Agent Zero recently hinted at the likelihood of shutting it down this season to recover fully from his knee injury. Nats’ pitchers and catchers don’t report south for weeks. We’re many months away from Tiger’s return to town.

Customarily, this season in the D.C. sports calendar dictates that sports editors assign their staff the research and drafting of obituaries for American sports legends solidly on life’s back nine. Long lunches. And vacations.

We at OFB, however, think that with the arrival of Redskin-free Januaries, henceforth and inaugurating with this one, the region’s hockey bloggers, in a joint endeavor with the Washington Capitals, ought to conduct a training camp for MSM sports editors.

To introduce them to the sport of hockey.

In a very real sense, it’d be analogous to the fantasy camps the well-heeled, middle-aged, and portly participate in across all sports. Making no judgment on the physical well being of our MSM editors, it’s abundantly clear that their cognitive acumen with respect to hockey is, shall we say, under exercised. As such, the heart of our camp would feature a fully developed Capitals University for the editors. JoeB is particularly busy at this time of year, but given the claims of this cause, I’d anticipate some creative schedule juggling on his part and ultimately his cooperation.

Orientation would have to start with the most basic of basics: a Mapquest route from WaPost and the various network broadcast studios in the District to Kettler Capitals. Initially, the editors would be picked up and led to the facility by various Caps’ players in a caravan, but as part of a camp final exam, the editors would have to demonstrate their ability to navigate their own way to the Capitals’ new home.

Early on, too, it would imperative to dispel some false assumptions long held by the editors. For instance, on Day One of camp we’d have one of the region’s meteorologists present Dopler data conforming that no reporters covering Caps’ games actually freeze from the experience. Indeed, at Verizon Center, there’s the greater likelihood of visitors suffering heat stroke. It is simply not true that the Caps travel to Saskatchewan to contest their games outdoors December through March.

As part of camp, the editors would be taken on field trips to the region’s rinks — Reston, Ft. Dupont, Columbia and Cabin John — where they would be asked to view the thousands of youths, male and female, clogging the weekend clocks morning, noon, and night with the playing of hockey. They would be asked to sit in the rinks’ stands among players’ parents and interview them about families’ devotion — in finances, time, and travel — to the sport of ice hockey. The tongues the hockey families would speak in would be foreign to the editors, and so bloggers and Caps’ communications professionals like Mike Vogel would be strategically stationed in the stands to facilitate translation.

Back at camp, VIP speakers would address the editors. An emissary from the Canadian Embassy would allege that his home is not in fact a 51st American state or territory, but instead a sovereign nation which celebrates the awe-inspiring playgrounds that nature etches across his home’s landscape for half the calendar year. Executives from cable television providers would arrive and testify to the fact that indeed thousands of Washingtonian households spiritedly subscribe to NHL CenterIce and the NHL Network.

High priests of puck like Don Cherry and Barry Melrose would lunch and cocktail hour with the campers and lead chalkboard Xs and Os and endearing narratives of the sport’s legacy. Melrose would even suggest that here in Washington there is a viable Jack Adams candidate.

Craigh Laughlin and Joe Reekie would lead a discussion of conflict resolution in hockey, and how the United Nations Security Council is not involved.

A professor of comparative literature and linguistics from the University of Maryland would attend and identify the sliver of contemporary professional athletes who commonly speak to the press in complete sentences, often thoughtfully. He will introduce the editors to the concepts of humility and modesty that commonly lace these orations.

The District’s Chief of Police would brief the editors on the needlessness of bringing along weapons of self defense into the players’ rooms during interviews.

Necessarily, camp would conclude with a screening of ‘Slapshot,’ and accompanying consumption of beer would be mandatory.

To prepare for camp, we who conduct it might want to view the film ‘300,’ for in this quest we face the same odds for victory as the Spartans.

“The Rocket” Comments by Weber and Labre

We were lucky to have had former Washington Capital Yvon Labre and former radio play-by-play voice Ron Weber not only attend OFB’s viewing of “The Rocket”, but they graciously took the microphone in hand at the front of the theatre to answer questions and provide a little insight as well.

Here is a short video with part of their observations.

‘The Rocket’ Belongs with the Best in Hockey Filmmaking

If you couldn’t attend OFB Night at the Movies last night, you still have two evenings — tonight and tomorrow — to make it over to the Avalon during its week-long screening of ‘The Rocket.’ I highly recommend you doing so. I would not term ‘The Rocket’ a great movie but rather a good one that was, for me, deeply affecting. A good movie has a way of staying with you a while after the credits roll, the lights go up, and even a day or three later, when your brain hits ‘refresh’ with reminiscing images. That, for this viewer, is ‘The Rocket.’ The film won nine Genie awards — the Canadian equivalent of Oscars — and near 11:00 last night I knew why.

Before midnight last night I’d heard from a handful of friends in the theater express their surprise at the enormity of Maurice Richard’s career. And these impressions had little to do with the number of goals he’d scored.

These friends were Canadians and Americans, and they were reacting with me in precisely a vein I think the filmmaker’s had hoped for. By now you’ve heard that the film has as its heart the issue of bigotry directed at French Canadians in the first half of 20th century North American professional hockey. One Canadian in particular came up to me afterward and shared how emotional she’d become by the film’s illustration of the the brutal, even life-threatening violence directed Richard’s way.

Films that tackle pressing social issues always engage in high-risk endeavors. When they are well made, they are able to avoid a sense of strong-armed didacticism — hautily lecturing the movie-going public. Success here depends on a filmmaker’s adherence to subtlety as well as delineating a nuanced fluency with the issue. ‘The Rocket,’ I thought, achieved this rather gloriously.

And speaking of illustration, the visual beauty of ‘The Rocket’ is what distinguishes it from all other hockey films. Ron Weber told us afterward that he actually felt Montreal’s snowy cold while seated in the Avalon, and I, too, owned up to feeling transported back to 1940s and ’50s Canada. Director Charles Biname offers a virtuoso performance in cinematography. With great effect he strung together scenes flushed out of color, then, in the blink of an eye, following ones saturated in shimmering water color-like portraits. This was an elaborately illustrated period piece, a feast for the eyes. As such, it made for me a wonderful seasonal theater immersion.

Roy Dupuis’ performance in the lead is consistently brilliant. Richard the hockey player matures from isolated introvert to battered agent of social change, and Dupuis accords that notable progression great dignity and credibility. But I most enjoyed Stephen McHattie’s performance as the Canadiens’ maestro behind the bench, Dick Irvin. The story of the relationship between Irvin and Richard is one for its own movie, which Biname honors. This film has at least a half dozen scenes of great emotional impact, and my favorite involved Irvin in the Habs’ locker room late in Richard’s career, when the Rocket’s advocacy for change perhaps secured its most notable convert.

OFB Night at the Movies

The Rocket
The Rocket

Join OFB along with Connect2Canada and the Washington Capitals for
OFB Night at the Movies: ‘THE ROCKET’
Tuesday, 18 December, 2007 - 8:30pm
The Avalon Theatre - 5612 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20015

Drop us a line with your full name and reserve your seats today: email@onfrozenblog.com
The Rocket
The Rocket

Reunion Night for ‘The Rocket’

Ron Weber
Ron Weber
OFB is pleased to announce the participation of legendary local radio voice Ron Weber and former Caps’ great Yvon Labre this Tuesday night for our screening of ‘The Rocket’ at the Avalon Theater. These Caps’ legends will offer us their insights into the movie and the career of Rocket Richard during a post-film Q & A.

Eric McErlain of OffWingOpinion published a terrific review of ‘The Rocket’ this past week for The Sporting News. Eric writes:

” . . . the movie gets down cold . . . the ability to transport you back in time to the Montreal of the 1940s and 1950s, both on the streets of the city and inside the legendary Forum that closed for good back in 1996.

Yvon Labre
Yvon Labre

“One of the greatest challenges for any sports movie is figuring out a way to depict live action in a believable manner, and The Rocket acquits itself well in that sense. By the time the movie ended I was sincerely hoping that there was a men’s league somewhere in North America that would let folks play hockey donning vintage uniforms and equipment. Can there possibly be a league anywhere that will let you play without a helmet anymore?”

Seats are still available for Tuesday — join us for a memorable night at the movies in the company of Washington hockey royalty.

Join Us for OFB Night at the Movies: ‘The Rocket’

The Rocket - Movie Poster
The Rocket - Movie Poster
If you’re like us, once or twice in December you like to take a break from the tsunami sea of shopping mall humanity and spend a couple of hours tucked inside a dark theater for a holiday season movie. Thanks to the supportive management at the Avalon Theater in Northwest D.C., and a partnership with the Washington Capitals and the Canadian Embassy, OFB readers have an opportunity for precisely this next Tuesday, December 18, when they’re invited to gather at the Avalon for a discounted screening of ‘The Rocket, the Legend of Rocket Richard,’ the icon of icons in Canadian athletic lore.

“As a young boy from blue collar Québec, Richard had a dream to play in the National Hockey League. Beneath his soft-spoken, working class exterior burned a passion that transformed this young factory worker into “The Rocket.â€? In the 1950s pre-helmet days of hockey, facing constant discrimination, The Rocket played with finesse, speed, and the fire that defied all odds and made him a legend.”

On Tuesday evening, December 18 at 8:30, OFB readers will be able to see ‘The Rocket’ for the discounted admission of $7 at the Avalon. Released in limited distribution in 2005, ‘The Rocket’ has played to strong reviews, and its DVD was released in the U.S. just yesterday. Some notable current and former NHLers had on-screen roles in the film: Sean Avery of the Rangers; Pascal Dupuis of the Thrashers; Ian Lapierriere of the Avalanche; Vincent Lecavalier of the Lightning; Stephane Quintal, a former Canadien; and Mike Ricchi, former Shark and Coyote.

One of Washington’s great old movie houses, the Avalon opened in February 1923 — “when patrons could watch a silent film for thirty cents.” By 2001, the Avalon was the oldest continuously operating movie house in Washington. We won’t get in for thirty cents next Tuesday night, but we’ll be seated in a classic cinematic setting for a strong film. Additionally, the Capitals are working hard to secure a few current and former players to attend, and we’ll have a post-movie bit of Q & A about Rocket and the movie with them.

We may even invite Gene Weingarten and Michael Wilbon.

The Avalon will be screening ‘The Rocket’ for us Tuesday night in Theater 1. We have 125 seats reserved at the discounted $7 admission. All OFB readers wishing to attend Tuesday night must email us their names and those in their party. Given our involvement with the Caps and the Canadian Embassy for this event, seats are sure to go fast. We do not want you driving into town on a whim next Tuesday night only to get shut out. So drop us a line with your full name and reserve your seats today: email@onfrozenblog.com

Who doesn’t like taking in a great flick during the holiday season, and in this instance, surrounded by hundreds of fellow hockey lovers? The Avalon will be showing ‘The Rocket’ each day from December 14 through 20, at 3:15 and 8:30.

The Avalon is located at 5612 Connecticut Ave. NW; (202) 966-6000.

Check out ‘The Rocket’s’ YouTube movie trailer:

Rocket Richard In the House

Roy Dupuis- photo courtesy of NowToronto.com
Roy Dupuis- photo courtesy of NowToronto.com
Tomorrow, the dreams of Roy Dupuis fans will come true: “The Rocket” is being released on DVD. (The trailer is here for your viewing pleasure.) I was able to see this introspective of Maurice Richard’s life again, and the movie holds up well over multiple viewings. The movie depicted the struggle in Canada between Anglophones and Francophones, as well as the various social classes, especially well. This aspect of the plot helped to further develop my understanding of the issues. As an American with a French-Canadian husband, I was already aware of the tensions, but this movie further defined the fine points of the problems.

However, my favorite part of the movie was when Sean Avery “Bob Dill” got the stuffing knocked out of him by Richard. Avery will never win any awards for acting, but even he seemed convincing, probably because he was doing what he always does: mouthing off, pushing guys around, and generally acting like a jerk. Other players were involved in the film– Vincent Lecavalier and Mike Ricci, to name a couple– so there was a degree of authenticity when it came to the hockey scenes. (It didn’t hurt that Dupuis has been skating since he was three.)

Personally, I preferred watching the film in French with English subtitles; it added to the experience. I’d rank this movie up there in the hockey movie genre, somewhere between “Mystery, Alaska” and “Miracle” (and definitely higher than “Most Valuable Primate.”) If you’re in the mood for a hockey movie and want to see something other than “Slapshot,” check out “The Rocket.”

Hyannisport Prez #7 Makes Good

Bruce Boudreau- photo courtesy of the Hershey Bears
Bruce Boudreau- photo courtesy of the Hershey Bears

Now that Bruce Boudreau is the Caps’ interim head coach, I figured it was worth revisiting an article that appeared in the Toronto Star in June. He’s finally realized his dream, according to his comments from several months ago:

“This is my 32nd year of fighting to get to the NHL,” said Boudreau yesterday. “It’s always your goal. You’re always plugging away and hoping something will happen. But at the same time, quite frankly, I don’t know what else I could do if it wasn’t for hockey. “I loved everywhere I’ve gone. I just keep doing what I do and hopefully somebody will notice.”

Bruce Boudreau- photo courtesy of http://pages.prodigy.net/oldchl
Bruce Boudreau- photo courtesy of http://pages.prodigy.net/oldchl

He believes he’ll coach in the NHL someday. “I’m very happy with the Capitals,” said Boudreau. But if anybody ever came along, I would certainly look at it.” Former St. Louis Blues coach Mike Kitchen, Boudreau’s friend since they were teammates on the Marlies, thinks it’s a matter of time. “He recognizes talent so well,” said Kitchen. “As we all know, there’s only 30 of those jobs out there. “It’s being patient, and timing is everything in those jobs.”

Kitchen was right: timing is everything. Congrats to Boudreau, and here’s hoping he has an immediate positive impact.