Rating: PG-13
Starring:
George Clooney as Jimmy ‘Dodge’ Connelly
Renée Zellweger as Lexie Littleton
John Krasinski as Carter Rutherford
Jonathan Pryce as C.C. Frazier
Stephen Root as Suds
Max Casella as Mack Steiner
Malcolm Goodwin as Bakes
Matt Bushell as Curly
Tommy Hinkley as Hardleg
Tim Griffin as Ralph
Robert Baker as Stump
Nick Paonessa as Zoom
Special Features:
Deleted Scenes
Football’s Beginning: The Making of Leatherheads
No Pads, No Fear: Creating the Rowdy Football Scenes
George Clooney: A Leatherheaded Prankster
Visual Effects Sequences
Feature Commentary with Director George Clooney and Producer Grant Heslov
Other Info:
Widescreen (1.85:1)
Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound
Spanish and French Languages
Spanish and French Subtitles
Running Time: 1 Hour 54 Minutes
Synopsis:
The following is from the official synopsis of the film:
“Academy Award® winners George Clooney and Renée Zellweger team up in this fun-filled comedy set against the beginnings of pro football. Dodge Connelly (Clooney), captain of a struggling squad of barroom brawlers, has only one hope to save his team: recruit college superstar Carter Rutherford (John Krasinski, The Office). But when a feisty reporter (Zellweger) starts snooping around, she turns the two teammates into instant rivals and kicks off a wild competition filled with hilarious screwball antics!”
“Leatherheads” is rated PG-13 for brief strong language.
The Movie:
It’s hard to imagine that a mere eighty years ago professional sports as we know them didn’t exist. How far we’ve come since those heady days of the mid-’20s when professional football was barely a step above working in a mine or on a farm, and the men who played did it because they loved it, or at least didn’t mind it very much. Of course, as soon as some money started to be made all bets were off, and suddenly an adolescent lark had to make way for rules, regulations and civilization.
In reality, these sorts of things happen gradually over time and through the many and varied decisions of dozens, if not hundreds, of individuals each looking after their own self-interest. Sports, however, have always prided itself on its semi-mythological nature a nature the people involved have done their best to cultivate and that sort of dry historical treatment just won’t do. What’s called for is an unlikely yarn filled with ups, downs, laughs, romance, underdogs, World War I trench warfare and maybe even a little football, and that’s exactly what director and star George Clooney (“Good Night, And Good Luck.”) provides.
Set at the dawn of football, circa 1925, Clooney can’t resist making a period film out of his period film and, perhaps influenced a little by his various Coen Brothers collaborations, dives head first into classic screwball comedy territory with his little sports film.
Dodge Connelly is the last of the pro-football believers, several years past his prime and using his own money and gift for gab to keep his dreams of sports glory alive. Just when it seems all hope is lost and the league itself is doomed to go into receivership, the football gods answer with war and football hero Carter Rutherford (John Krasinski), a picture perfect poster boy for the game. Seeing a chance for real glory and, more importantly, a way to keep the team together for just one more day, Dodge cons him into the game, realizing almost immediately that his last minute Hail Mary is going to change the game he loves forever.
Clooney actually does more than passable screwball, complete with fast-talking no nonsense Hawksian girl Friday Lexie Littleton (Renée Zellweger) to stir up both leading men without ever feeling like just an addition to the plot, though she only gets half of her own story instead of a complete one.
Unfortunately, Clooney never seems to commit completely to the classic screwball tone he seems to want, veering wildly from farcical to earnest; so much so that when the zanier moments occur, even though they’re perfectly fine by themselves, they don’t really gel with the rest of the film. It doesn’t help that Clooney often uses them to break up much more serious story points, which works, but also highlights the disparity in tone.
That being said, it also boasts some fantastic character work. A lot of effort has been made to make the three leads as completely rounded as possible. None of them are completely good, nor are they completely bad. They’re very much human, capable of all the heights and lows that means. Clooney never takes the easy route to make one character easily likeable and promotable as ‘the hero’ at anyone else’s expense. The result is a movie that doesn’t really have an antagonist, except perhaps Carter’s amoral money grubbing agent (Jonathan Pryce), but instead three equally likeable leads who are inextricably at loggerheads. It’s far more complex than a movie like this normally is, and Clooney handles it well.
He’s done a version, usually a smarter version, of Dodge several times over the years and he’s got it down pat. His considerable screen presence doesn’t hurt either, and Zellweger’s story is much the same. The real find is Krasinski, who gets probably the most complex character in the film and does wonders with it. Carter could be, it almost feels like he should be, mindboggingly obnoxious, but Krasinski keeps him relatable and likeable throughout. For all his abilities and strength of character he’s not entirely a good guy, and for all his foibles he’s not a bad one. It’s remarkably well done on everyone’s part.
At the end of the day though, “Leatherheads” is still a light-hearted sports film, too light-hearted to rise above its limitations, and its inability to decide on a tone doesn’t help any, but it’s too well crafted and thought out to be anything less than good. As sports film go, it’s not particularly memorable, but for a Saturday afternoon diversion, it’s probably just the ticket.
The Extras:
You’ll find a pretty good selection of bonus features on this DVD. “No Pads, No Fear: Creating the Rowdy Football Scenes” shows the extensive training the cast went through to make the 1920’s football look authentic. From the running to the throwing to the plays, it’s all completely different. Along those lines, “Football’s Beginning: The Making of Leatherheads” shows the great lengths the production designers and costumers went through to get the period setting right. It’s an effort you don’t entirely appreciate until you see this featurette. A highlight among the deleted scenes is an entire dinner scene between Clooney, Zellweger, and Krasinski. We see Carter’s healthy eating routine and a bet on whether or not Jonathan Pryce will be able to seduce a married woman on the dining car. “George Clooney: A Leatherheaded Prankster” shows a rather weak prank he pulled on his cast, but he fortunately takes part in the commentary with producer Grant Heslov. Overall it’s an entertaining look at the making of the film.