The
Mighty Ducks (1992)
Dir. by Stephen
Herek
Starring Emilio
Estevez, Lane Smith and Joshua Jackson
Plot:
A successful
but arrogant asshole Minneapolis attorney is sentenced to community service
coaching youth hockey following a DUI arrest.
He is assigned to the worst team in the league, an underfunded squad
without much in the way of talent or equipment.
Resistant at first, he starts to embrace the team when he begins a
rivalry with his old coach from when he was a youth player himself, who still
blames him for blowing the shot that would have won the championship.
Nostalgia:
I wasn’t big
on professional sports movies growing up.
Rocky, Field of Dreams, Major League…couldn’t have
cared less. However, for some reason I
watched a lot of youth sports movies, and this one was my favorite. Maybe it was growing up in Detroit, a city that
still bears the nickname “Hockeytown,” during the era of the Russian Five. Whatever it was, I probably watched this
several dozen times between the ages of 10 and 16. It never made the jump to DVD in our house,
though, so I haven’t seen it since I stopped watching VHS around 2004.
Review:
Sports
movies, especially underdog ones, have a very definitive formula. A new coach comes in, takes over a terrible
team with untalented players, and suffers a few humiliating losses, before
rallying the players around him and improbably winning the big game at the
end. If the movie’s a comedy, the
players will often have bizarre and distinctive quirks to make them stand out,
and which will usually factor into the team’s victory in some fashion.
The
Mighty Ducks doesn’t really break that mold at all. It’s almost a remake of The Bad News
Bears with the sport changed, the only major difference being that
unlike the Bears, the Ducks actually win the final
championship game. The movie still has
the major theme of obsessive competitiveness being bad both for the kids and
their coaches, though it does throw an extra narrative wrinkle into the mix by
having the Ducks’ ultra-aggressive rival, the Hawks, be the childhood team of
their new coach. It does seem to be a
little bit of stretch, however, to imply that most of Coach Bombay’s personal
problems stem from a single blown shot twenty years ago. Letting go of his old team and their
win-at-all-cost attitude is Bombay’s main character arc, and while it’s a
believable lesson to learn, hinging his entire character on a single experience
was a bit much for me.
In fact, if
you look a bit closer at the plot, the movie actually manages to undercut its
own message. At the beginning of the
movie, Bombay is seen in court, using dirt that he’s dug up about the presiding
judge to get an objection against him overruled. It’s an underhanded tactic that leads to a
victory, but gets him chewed out by both the prosecutor and his own boss. Later on, he’s shown to be using the same
dirty tactics with the hockey team, teaching them how to cheat by taking falls
instead of actually learning how to play.
If the lesson Bombay is supposed to learn is that having fun and coming
together as a team is more important than winning, you’d expect him to change
his tactics over the course of the movie.
However, late in the film he informs the league that Hawks star player
Adam Banks is living in an area that was redistricted, and is therefore
ineligible to play for them. He does
this without first approaching the Hawks or Banks’s family, using it as a
gotcha tactic right before a game. This
is exactly the same sort of dirty tactic that he was shown using earlier in the
movie. Sure, this time it’s done to
correct an injustice rather than create one.
But try telling that to Banks.
Overall, I
actually find that I don’t have a whole lot to say about the movie. It’s a perfectly fine kids’ sports movie,
with a nice performance from Emilio Estevez at the center. But it’s not much more than that.
Nostalgia: B
Rewatch: C+
Stray
Thoughts:
-This movie
kicked off a whole mini industry of sports movies with kid protagonists. Within two years you’d have Rookie
of the Year, Little Big League, Little
Giants and the Angels in the Outfield remake. I’d include The Sandlot as
well, but that movie is both a period piece and more a coming-of-age movie that
just happens to involve baseball.
-Yes, this
is the movie that inspired the original name of the Anaheim Ducks NHL
franchise, which was added as an expansion team the year after the movie, and
was originally owned by Disney.
-I grew up
watching Lois & Clark on TV, so seeing the actor who played Perry White be
so nasty here caused a fair bit of cognitive dissonance when I was young.
-I won’t be
covering it, because I’ve only seen it once and have no nostalgia for it (and
it’s not that good), but the third Mighty Ducks movie was actually filmed in
part at my alma mater, Carleton College.
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