Who doesn't love a good sports movie? You know, the kind that makes you want to stand up and cheer for the athletes and teams who overcome huge challenges--and learn important lessons along the way.
In celebration of the upcoming Olympic Games in Beijing, Beliefnet contributors made their personal picks for the Top 20 Inspirational Sports Movies of All Time. Click through the gallery and then let us know which ones we missed.
Karate Kid
I watched "The Karate Kid" again (87th time, give or take) a couple months ago with my 5-year-old. She's too young for it, but it was worth being a bad dad for one afternoon to see my daughter get mad at the bullies. When Daniel Larusso (Ralph Macchio) faced his enemies at the end, she got up and kicked her legs and flailed her arms, screaming, "Hi-ya!" She finally fell over and scraped her arm on the fireplace, just as Daniel hobbled his way to victory. As Johnny, the meanest of the meanies, acknowledged that he'd been beat ("You're alright, Larruso"), I wiped away my daughter's tears, then wiped mine.
--Patton Dodd
Bend It Like Beckham
The story of Jess (Parminder Nagra), a David Beckham-idolizing soccer phenom forced to choose between her sport and her traditional Indian family--but who found a way to have it all--made me hopeful that I too could have it all. She loved soccer and her family enough to unite the two.
I walked out of that theater with my hand on my belly and felt that my daughter wouldn't just be fine, she'd be a firecracker like Jess. Five years later, Amal is our own active, feisty version of Jess. Ole, ole, ole!
--Dilshad Ali
Cinderella Man
Not knowing much about Braddock before watching this movie, I was surprised to learn that upon retiring from boxing, he helped build New York's Verrazano Bridge. I don't live far from this bridge, and every now and again when I cross it or see it in the distance, I remember this tidbit of information and think about the ordinary man who became a hero to his family, and so many others.
--Dena Ross
The Jackie Robinson Story
At a time when blacks were excluded from many areas of American life, Jackie Robinson stood up for black people everywhere at great personal cost. In the 1950 film "The Jackie Robinson Story," Jackie plays himself just three years after he ended 80 years of segregation by becoming the first black baseball player in the major leagues. As a condition of his playing for the Dodgers, he was required by general manager Branch Rickey to keep his anger and frustration to himself--no matter what the provocation. And the provocations were many, including racial slurs, boos, abuse by other players, sitting at the back of the bus--the full, ugly gamut of racism. This film had a profound effect on me as a 7-year-old Dodgers fan. Robinson's inspiring example planted the seeds of social conscience in many of us who grew up in the '50s.
--Ken Schuman
Rudy
And that's the way it was for most of the movie...but then the ending happened. The part where pint-sized Rudy finally makes good on his dream of playing Notre Dame football. The music swells, the camera pans, the coach yells, "Alright, go get 'em kid," and Rudy races onto the field for a kickoff. Uh-oh. My chest tightens, and I'm grinning just like the people in the shots of the crowd. The music swells higher, the crowd chants "Rudy! Rudy!" and the Georgia Tech quarterback doesn't stand a chance. Neither do I--"Rudy" wins.
--Patton Dodd
Hoosiers
In 1986, David Anspaugh's Oscar-nominated "Hoosiers" played all the clichés of the classic underdog sports movie: the unorthodox coach (Gene Hackman), his brilliant but drunken assistant (Dennis Hopper), the teacher (Barbara Hershey) trying to stop the best player from going out for the team, the doubting players who conquered their fears. Inspired by a true story, "Hoosiers" had a predictable outcome, but nevertheless I was a kid mesmerized and inspired by their victory. And I'm sure I wasn't the only one who cried.
--Dilshad Ali
Ali
What makes "Ali" (and, indeed, the life of Muhammad Ali) so memorable is the way the career of the fighter, considered by many to be untouchable in his greatness, reflected the fiery, passionate mood of the time. Smith's moving and pitch-perfect emulation of Ali shows the heart of a man who fought racism, religious discrimination, war and injustice the same way he fought in the ring: with all the majesty and potency of the human soul. The film also stars Jamie Foxx and Jon Voight.
--John Brooks
Miracle
It's a story made for Hollywood, and Disney's "Miracle" (2004), starring Kurt Russell and Patricia Clarkson, gets it just right. Each character's story has a dip, then an arc, with redemption all around. The movie plays like good ol' home cooking--a generous helping of comfort food that makes you feel warm inside.
--Patton Dodd
We Are Marshall
The film stars Matthew McConaughey and Matthew Fox as coaches who attempt to convince the team's remaining players (those who were not on board the plane due to disciplinary actions or injury) to join a new team, as well as petition the NCAA to let freshman players on the varsity squad. The first year, that underdog team won only two games--their home opener and their homecoming.
--Dena Ross
Pride
There are incredible losses, amazing triumphs, many a teary-eyed moment, and lest I forget, plenty of laughter by way of comedian Bernie Mac who plays Ellis's acerbic sidekick, Elston.
I loved this movie because it reminded me that to achieve greatness, you must have a formula. PDR had pride, determination, and resilience, and I believe that's a formula we can all use. To have pride in who we are, determination to succeed, and resilience to dust ourselves off and keep moving toward our goals. To victory!
--Nicole Symmonds
The Rookie
I choke up during many scenes from this wonderful, family-friendly film: My favorite is when his former students show up--along with much of the town--to watch Morris play his first Major League game. The look of awe and amazement on the teens' faces as they enter a packed Rangers Ballpark is priceless, as is the look on Morris's face when he successfully finishes the game (by throwing three perfect strikeouts) and is greeted by all of his family and friends.
--Dena Ross
A League of Their Own
Based on a true story, the film is about two sisters who join the Rockford Peaches, an Illinois-based team created because there were no men around to fill stadiums.
The sisters (Geena Davis and Lori Petty) diverge when one succeeds and one flails--tension (and trading) ensue. The fantastic cast also includes Madonna (at her sassy rebel best), Jon Lovitz, Rosie O'Donnell, and Tom Hanks as the drunken coach ("There's no crying in baseball!"). Stereotypes are conquered, pitches are perfected, and, years later, the ladies realize that their early baseball struggles and victories not only shaped their own lives, but history.
--Valerie Reiss
Field of Dreams
At the end of the movie, in what is certainly the film's most touching scene, one of the players, Shoeless Joe Jackson, played by Ray Liotta, repeats the phrase "If you build it, he will come," glancing toward the catcher, who then removes his mask and reveals himself to be Kinsella's father as a young man, not yet "worn down by life." They then play an emotional game of catch--a beautiful father-son moment from beyond the grave.
--Dena Ross
Seabiscuit
As Seabiscuit fought his way to one victory after another, his raw courage inspired a nation and healed the fractured lives of the three men. "Everyone thinks we got this broken-down horse and fixed him," says Pollard. "But we didn't. He fixed us. Every one of us." The movie is based on the book "Seabiscuit" by Laura Hillenbrand, and received seven Oscar nominations.
--Martha Ainsworth
Rocky I
More than 30 years since the film was released, tourists still flock to Philadelphia's Museum of Art to recreate Rocky's iconic run up the steps to the museum, jumping up down with their fists raised triumphantly toward the sky.
--John Brooks
The Natural
Hobbs's quiet determination, his sense of patience with what he knows to be his destiny, is what inspires me about the film. Also the breathtaking way that light functions as a character in the story, from the way the sun floats through both Hobbs's golden hair and the wheat fields of his youth, to the angry lightning that splits open the tree from which Hobbs carves his signature bat "Wonder Boy," to the way Iris's hat gleams pearly white in the brown, gritty crowd to inspire Hobbs to break a cold streak, to the iconic moment when the final home run literally explodes the stadium lights, unleashing a shower of sparks on a great, long-awaited victory.
--Holly Rossi
Friday Night Lights
--John Brooks
Bull Durham
Hilarious, heart-breaking sexual tension, baseball highs and lows, and lover triangulation ensue. My favorite part is Crash's amazing speech about sex and baseball, not quotable here, but Annie's breathless "Oh my" after shows she just may have found a new religion.
--Valerie Reiss
Hoop Dreams
Its subjects, William Gates and Arthur Agee, and their family members are heavily featured and as memorable as the best fictional characters, and the film makes poignant and profound observations about race, class, and culture. But ultimately it succeeds in reminding us that no dream, no matter how lofty or unlikely, is ever too big for the human spirit to realize.
--John Brooks
The Mighty Ducks
Thanks to the charm of Emilio Estevez and the talented young cast (led by a pre-"Dawson's Creek" Joshua Jackson), the 1992 "The Mighty Ducks" becomes more than the sum of its rather pedestrian and cliched parts and effectively conveys an inspiring and lasting message about the importance of teamwork, leadership, and believing that we all have the ability to surpass the limitations others may impose upon us.
--John Brooks
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