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Hoop Realities (2007)

Hoop Realities (2007)

GENRESDocumentary
LANGEnglish
ACTOR
Arthur AgeePatrick BeverleyLamont Bryant
DIRECTOR
Lee Davis

SYNOPSICS

Hoop Realities (2007) is a English movie. Lee Davis has directed this movie. Arthur Agee,Patrick Beverley,Lamont Bryant are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2007. Hoop Realities (2007) is considered one of the best Documentary movie in India and around the world.

Hoop Reality is the sequel to the 1994 documentary "Hoop Dreams" and explores what happened during the last decade from where "Hoop Dreams" left off. It follows the original basketball hero past his dream and into reality, examining where life has carried him over the decade, and taking a look at where he is today, as the torch gets passed to the next dream seeker. Along the way he mentors and inspires the up-and-coming basketball star, Patrick Beverly, who leads his team, the Marshal Commandos, for the first time since the original "Hoop Dreams", to the State Finals.

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Hoop Realities (2007) Reviews

  • More Exploitation of the First Film Than Sequel

    Michael_Elliott2012-07-18

    Hoop Reality (2007) * 1/2 (out of 4) Disappointing "sequel" to HOOP DREAMS is more exploitation than anything else. Arthur Agee narrates this film and appears in a few spots as he updates a few bits of information about his life but it seems the real focus of this movie is to show off a new talent, Patrick Beverley, who is now considered by many to be the next big thing trying to make it to the NBA. It's easy to see why this documentary was attacked by so many people. I mean, if you're going to sell yourself as a sequel to HOOP DREAMS then people are going to expect a lot more than what they actually get here. For the most part the stuff dealing with what Agee has been doing since the release of that classic 1994 film is interesting. We hear some incredibly sad stuff including the brutal murder of his father but sadly there's really not too much else told. What on Earth was the point of having Agee here if we weren't going to learn more? I really don't see any reason for him to be here except so that the producers could push this as a sequel and try to milk fans of the original movie. What's even dumber about this picture is the fact that this so-called sequel doesn't even update us on the status of William Gates. Yes, that's right. As far as the "new" player is concerned, his story might have been interesting but this film has such a low production value that the entire thing just feels cheap. I'm sure another interesting movie could have been made about Beverley as his career certainly got farther than any of the previous two kids but this isn't the movie for that. Again, if you're going to sell yourself as a sequel it's best that you actually deliver and HOOP REALITY doesn't come anywhere close. Hopefully one day someone will come along and give us a real update on those from the original movie.

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  • You Can't Go Home Again

    RaiderDuck2012-09-22

    Sixteen years after the events chronicled in the seminal documentary "Hoop Dreams," Arthur Agee returns to his alma mater (Chicago's Marshall High School) and discovers a new prodigious talent in point guard Patrick Beverley. The documentary both catches viewers up on Arthur's life and gives us another glimpse into the world of high school basketball, as Beverley's team goes downstate to the Illinois high school tournament, just as Agee's team did all those years ago. Grandfatherly coach Luther Bedford has passed on (the documentary shows us his open-casket wake) and been replaced by stern, profane taskmaster Lamont Bryant. Bryant's obviously a skilled coach who gets great results out of his team, but his presence also lays bare the documentary's big weakness: it makes many of the same points as its unofficial predecessor, but the subjects are less appealing. Bedford's cranky charm wears better over the course of a film than Bryant's constant hectoring, even if their points are equally valid. Similarly, Patrick Beverley does not have Agee's infectious smile or ease before the camera, even if he is the better basketball player. Of the new participants, only Patrick's tough-as-nails mother Lisa matches her earlier counterpart (the equally tough Sheila Agee, who makes a brief appearance). The film could have benefited by featuring Lisa more prominently. Arthur's life gets an update. We learn that his father Bo Agee had cleaned up his life and become both a minister and clothing seller, only to be brutally murdered in a planned hit. The aforementioned Sheila returns to Chicago to visit her husband's gravestone (and charmingly chews out Arthur for getting the birth year wrong). Arthur never made it to the NBA, but has dedicated his life to the Hoop Dreams brand and is hoping to sell an entire clothing line based on it. Some points are glossed over or ignored outright. Arthur is reputed to have had two children with two different women, but neither is so much as mentioned in the film. The viewer gets the sense that Arthur is holding his current life very close to the vest. In addition, the earlier film's co-protagonist William Gates is neither seen nor mentioned. William's brother Curtis was murdered in 2001, and William himself is now an inner-city minister and is happily married to his girlfriend from the first movie, but "Hoop Reality" makes no mention of any of this. In short, "Hoop Reality" is a workmanlike update on the first film, but by no means comes close to its predecessor's excellence.

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