Director: David Anspaugh
Starring: Sean Astin, Ned Beatty, Jon Favreau, Charles S. Dutton, Lili Taylor
Running Time: 116 minutes
Synopsis: It's the 1960s, and young Rudy Ruettiger is growing up in a Midwest blue collar family. His father Daniel (Ned Beatty) works at the steel mill, but Rudy dreams of entering the University of Notre Dame and playing on its famed football team. After high school, and despite receiving no family support and lacking university-level grades, Rudy (Sean Astin) strikes out on his own and gains entry to Holy Cross College. He befriends Notre Dame's head groundkeeper Fortune (Charles S. Dutton), and perseveres in pursuit of his dream.
What Works Well: Based on actual events, this is a classic sports-and-academia underdog story. Writer Angelo Pizzo charts Rudy's determination to rise above family expectations and play college football, despite lackluster academic performance and physical attributes limited to speedy resilience. The standard lessons of pursuing the dream, bouncing back up after every setback (here demonstrated literally as Rudy becomes a punching bag for the larger players on the practice roster), and exceeding family expectations, are delivered with appropriate polish. Sean Astin brings genial likeability to the central role.
What Does Not Work As Well: The music soars frequently and loudly to underline the many this-is-important moments. Charles S. Dutton (in a composite role rather obviously named Fortune) adds weary wisdom, but all the other secondary characters (including Jon Favreau in a clumsy turn as a college classmate) are one dimensional. A feeling lingers that this is a minor story over-inflated to Hollywood proportions.
Key Quote:
Fortune (to Rudy): In this life, you don't have to prove nothin' to nobody but yourself.

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