Hoop Dreams: Trying to make dreams come true In the movie Hoop Dreams, we are introduced to two teens that both have dreams of making it to the NBA. The movie stars William Gates and Arthur Agee. Both teens are recruited to play for St. Joseph high school.
After their freshman year, the boys are already headed on opposite paths. Arthur did not do as well as William, so he has to leave the school. William begins on the Varsity team and begins to rise. William grows into the star of the basketball team and Arthur struggles to adjust to Marshall High School. William hurts his knee while Arthur becomes the driving force on Marshall’s basketball team. In their senior year, William tries to take St.
Joseph to the Championship, but doesn’t make it. Arthur leads Marshall to 3 rd in the state, while his Mr. Pingatore (old coach) and William watched him. William attended Marquette University and Arthur attended a junior college in Missouri and then transferred to Arkansas State University.
We, as the audience, get an opportunity to first hand experience pure human struggle. We are able to connect with them and grow them as they grow. This documentary is able to show things that can not be created, but are apart of human nature. You can witness pain, hope, desire, failure, depression, and even racism.
These are things that can be made artificially but are so much stronger when they are not. By this being a documentary, you receive the rawness in film. You get to see it as if you are standing right there with them, walking with them. If this movie had been written, the connection would not have been that deep.
The Essay on A Midsummer Night’s Dream: Book or Movie
Personally, I prefer the original play of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” only slightly more than the film adaption that was recreated in the late 1990’s. Not only had William Shakespeare managed to fully grasp the meaning of true love, but had also comprehended the dark times that came alongside such an influential and overpowering emotion. Although the movie had effectively and humorously portrayed ...
There was not any special lighting or effects used in this movie. That was an actual plus for the movie. When movies have a lot of different effects in it the realistic feel of the movie begins to fade. When the movie provides you with moments when you can almost cry or even rejoice with them. For instance, when the camera shows their 90 minute ride to St.
Joseph, the way the camera displays the winter, you can almost feel it, as if you were riding with them. Or even when Sheila Agee, graduates from nursing school, you can rejoice with her as if she was related to you. This documentary not only made us examine the Arthur and William but, ourselves and the world we live in. We were given a position of responsibility.
When we are watching movies, we can get up knowing that it wasn’t real. We can feel guilt free knowing that no one was effected and it was just fiction. Yet, when you are watching a documentary you know have to accept the responsibilities of being a well rounded person, in result of what you just learned. And we have no choice to accept it.