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LEATHERHEADS 3 Stars - Challenging The manner in which George Clooney directs and stars in “Leatherheads” is endearing as well as entertaining. Casting himself as Jimmy “Dodge” Connelly, the partial owner of the fledgling professional football team called the Duluth Bulldogs, Dodge is struggling to keep the team and the league alive in 1925. Defeated, Dodge has the idea of recruiting a college football star and World War I hero, Carter Rutherford (John Krasinski from the sitcom “The Office”). When he succeeds, his life and the league are changed forever. In this romantic comedy, the woman who is the object of both Dodge’s and Carter’s affections is the alluring Lexie Littleton (Renee Zellweger). An intelligent and confident young reporter for a major newspaper, Lexie is promised an assistant editor’s desk if she will expose Carter as a fraud. But what begins as a story becomes something far more complex as she not only realizes that Carter is a good man, but that she has become enamored with Dodge as well. The villain of the story is the manipulative and greedy CC Frazier (Jonathan Pryce). Having latched onto Carter and using his good looks and heroic fame for product endorsements, Frazier sees the young sport of professional football as a goldmine for his own profit. Long before there were rules and commissioners watching over professional sports, both the games and the financial schemes were lawless. Though this lack of rules pleased some people like Dodge, it undermined trust in the game as well as provide no care for the athletes. Both on and off the field, the players were in danger - whether from Frazier weaseling himself into the athlete’s income or to the physical risks of only wearing leather on their heads rather than helmets. The solution to this lawlessness is the congressional appointment of former prosecutor Pete Harkin (Peter Gerety) as commissioner. The comic-book style of “Leatherheads” where people can get into fights without bleeding and throw people into mud without breathing makes the film a delightful flight into romantic comedy. The quirky humor seen even during the credits reminds us of Clooney’s earlier film “O Brother, Where Art Thou.” Both will make you smile.
Discussion:
________________ Cinema In Focus is a social and spiritual movie commentary.
Hal
Conklin
is
former
mayor
of
Santa
Barbara
and
Denny
Wayman
is
pastor
of
the
Free
Methodist
Church.
For
more
reviews:
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