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Resolved (2008)

Resolved (2008)
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Filmmaker Greg Whiteley presents two sides of the current state of high-school debating in this documentary. Matt Andrews and Sam Iola are two students from Highland Park High in Texas who are stars of the school's debating team. Highly rated in nationwide competition, Andrews and Iola are gifted practitioners of a debate style known as "the Flow" -- rather than focusing on a few salient points and supporting them with strong oratory, "the Flow" depends on students amassing a huge amount of factual material and delivering it as quickly as possible, with the sheer bulk of data telling the tale. However, Andrews and Iola also come from a wealthy and well-funded school where they're given the time and resources to collect the information necessary to make "the Flow" work. Meanwhile, Louis Blackwell and Richard Funches represent Long Beach, California's Jordan High, where, with their coach Dave Wiltz, they've turned their back on "the Flow," a system they believe rewards time, money, and rote memorization over genuine talent in presenting an argument. Coming from a primarily African-American high school in a low-income neighborhood, Blackwell and Funches show great linguistic skill and a knack for logical argument, but can their gifts for the fundamentals of debate pay off in a competitive atmosphere that's been dominated by "the Flow" in recent decades? Resolved was screened as part of the 2007 Los Angeles Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Director(s):
Greg Whiteley
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
PG13
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Resolved

Filmmaker Greg Whiteley presents two sides of the current state of high-school debating in this documentary. Matt Andrews and Sam Iola are two students from Highland Park High in Texas who are stars of the school's debating team. Highly rated in nationwide competition, Andrews and Iola are gifted practitioners of a debate style known as "the Flow" -- rather than focusing on a few salient points and supporting them with strong oratory, "the Flow" depends on students amassing a huge amount of factual material and delivering it as quickly as possible, with the sheer bulk of data telling the tale. However, Andrews and Iola also come from a wealthy and well-funded school where they're given the time and resources to collect the information necessary to make "the Flow" work. Meanwhile, Louis Blackwell and Richard Funches represent Long Beach, California's Jordan High, where, with their coach Dave Wiltz, they've turned their back on "the Flow," a system they believe rewards time, money, and rote memorization over genuine talent in presenting an argument. Coming from a primarily African-American high school in a low-income neighborhood, Blackwell and Funches show great linguistic skill and a knack for logical argument, but can their gifts for the fundamentals of debate pay off in a competitive atmosphere that's been dominated by "the Flow" in recent decades? Resolved was screened as part of the 2007 Los Angeles Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
90 mins

Complete Cast of Resolved


Director(s):
Greg Whiteley
Writer(s):
Greg Whiteley
Producer(s):
Greg Whiteley
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
PG13
Categories:
Special InterestDocumentary
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Member Reviews
 
Oscar G.

as a former high school debater I found this movie nostalgic and it echoed some of the concerns I had about the Flow

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Ariah K.

Being a policy debater, I have to say this movie is very interesting. In some ways I agree that quality over quantity could be better. But what this movie doesn't tell you is that policy is only one one form of debate. Most if not all of the other forms of debate are already based on quality over quantity. So do they really need to change Policy debate? The reason the smartest people do policy debate is because it is the hardest. Let me just say Policy debate is the most gratifying but it also takes the most time by far. What I like about this movie is that it is a good way to show what policy debate and its level of competitiveness is like for people who aren't already policy debaters.

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Harry M.

Who would have thought a movie (quasi-documentary) about a couple of high school debate teams would prove to be so interesting? I took a chance on this and I'm very glad I did, I found it to be surprisingly entertaining. This is is not a masterpiece, and I found to be the popularity of the 'Flow' to be disturbing as I can barely understand a third of what is being said. But still, I found this to be informative and engaging.

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