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Travis Harrison Movies

2006  
 
One of two football-themed series of the 2006-2007 TV season (the other was Friday Night Lights, CW's The Game was a spinoff of the old WB network's long-running Girlfriends. Tia Mowry starred as Melanie Barnett, a Johns Hopkins med student who transferred to a smaller college in San Diego, California, the better to be near her football-player boyfriend Derwin Davis (Pooch Hall), a member of the "San Diego Sabers." Though not technically a "football wife", Melanie soon became an honorary member of that hardy sorority, quickly learning the ins and outs of NFL protocol and intrigue. Refreshingly, she refused to be merely Derwin's "arm ornament", remaining her own person with her own ambitions and dealing with the other football players on her level rather than theirs. Melanie's best friend was Tasha Mack (Wendy Raquel Robinson, the single mother and self-appointed business manager of her irresponsible quarterback son Malick Wright (Hosea Chanchez). Also on deck were interracial couple Kelly and Jason Pitts (Brittany Daniel, Coby Bell); as the white "trophy wife" of a black player, Kelly spent much of her time overcoming the prejudice of certain other Sabers and coping with her cheapskate (and possibly unfaithful) husband. Getting off to a rocky start with an unsatisfactory pilot film which had to be completely scrapped, The Game finally debuted on October 1, 2006. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1989  
PG  
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The title refers to those seemingly frail Southern belles who survive any and all deprivations through whims of iron. Robert Harling's original stage play was set exclusively in a Louisiana beauty parlor where an all-female cast of characters laughed, cried and compared menfolk. The film expands the playing field by including scenes at picnics, hospitals and the like, and by visually depicting the males who never appeared in the stage version. Dolly Parton plays the goodnatured beauty-shop owner, while Shirley MacLaine is the cantankerous town eccentric, decked out in grungy overalls and speaking fluent Trash. Well-to-do Sally Field bravely endures several assaults to her sensibilities, not the least of which is the illness (and subsequent death) of daughter Julia Roberts. The performances are first-rate, with the possible exception of Daryl Hannah's overemphatic portrayal of a gawky hairdresser. The film stumbles a bit in its depiction of the male characters as fools and deadheads, and in the final overlong hospital scenes involving the comatose Roberts, which play like a road company version of Terms of Endearment. Otherwise, Steel Magnolias is a prime example of ensemble filmmaking, lovingly coordinated by director Herbert Ross. (Sidebar: Herbert Ross was reportedly rather rough on Julia Roberts, deriding her lack of experience. The rest of the female cast rallied around Roberts and told the director to lay off or pay the price). ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Sally FieldDolly Parton, (more)