Tonight on Triple Feature, we’re covering three football movies from the late ’80s and ’90s that approach the sport from very different angles: Varsity Blues, The Program, and Necessary Roughness.
Varsity Blues, directed by Brian Robbins and written by W. Peter Iliff, was released in 1999, stars James Van Der Beek, Jon Voight, Paul Walker, and Scott Caan, and made about $54 million on a roughly $16 million budget. It’s the small-town Texas football movie — pressure, injuries, and a tyrant coach — that became a cult staple.
The Program, released in 1993, was directed by David S. Ward and stars James Caan, Omar Epps, Craig Sheffer, Kristy Swanson, and Halle Berry. It aimed for a darker, more realistic look at college football, steroids, and exploitation, grossing around $23 million and becoming best known for its controversies rather than its box office.
And Necessary Roughness, from 1991, directed by Stan Dragoti, stars Scott Bakula, Robert Loggia, Sinbad, and Kathy Ireland. It’s the disgraced-team rebuild comedy, made for about $13 million and earning roughly $25 million, and it helped codify a formula Hollywood would reuse endlessly.
Three movies, three tones, three decades of football storytelling — let’s get into it.
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