Glory Road

2006
|
106 mins
Poster for Glory Road

Sporting underdog story from Disney. The Texas Western basketball team was the first with an all African American starting lineup.... More

Where to watch Glory Road

Glory Road is available to stream in the United Kingdom... More now on Amazon Video and Disney+ and Apple TV Store and Google TV and YouTube.

There is no screening information for this title.

Glory Road | Ratings & Reviews

"Disney's profitable roster of uplifting, fact-based sports movies ("Remember the Titans," "Miracle," "The Rookie""The Rookie") has a new hardcourt addition drawn from a terrific story -- the saga of the all-black Texas team whose success spurred the integrating of college basketball throughout the South -- that is, for the most part, deftly executed. Although doubtless destined to evoke comparisons with "Hoosiers" and even TV's "The White Shadow," "Glory Road" is a slick enterprise buoyed by a Motown-flavored '60s soundtrack and an appealing ensemble cast. Box office should be in line with its predecessors and might higher, provided today's urban teens can accept basketball players wearing short shorts."

VarietyVariety

"( out of 4) The words "based on a true story" cover a lot of sins. Don't get me wrong. Don Haskins has a story worth telling. A basketball coach for the underdog Texas Western Miners, Haskins elbowed segregation in 1966 when he started five black players against the all-white team from the University of Kentucky Wildcats at the NCAA championships. And Josh Lucas plays Haskins with a no-bull vir that comes in handy when the script saddles him with all-bull platitudes ("It's not about talent, it's about heart")...<br /><br /><a href="http://www.rollingstone.com/reviews/movie/_/id/6824559/rid/9139190/?rnd=1137538515250&has-player=false" target="_blank">Click to read the full review. </a><br />"

Rolling StoneRolling Stone

""Glory Road" is like other sports movies, and different from all of them. It is the same in the way it shows a rookie coach with an underdog team; he finds resistance from his players at first, he imposes his system and is a merciless taskmaster, and do I have to ask if they win the big game? This has been the formula for countless films, and "Glory Road" will not be the last.<br /><br />But the movie is not really about underdogs and winning the big game. It's about racism in American sports, and how coach Don Haskins and his players on the 1965-66 basketball team from Texas Western University made a breakthrough comparable to when Jackie Robinson was hired by the Brooklyn Dodgers. In Texas at that time, we learn, college basketball teams had been integrated, but there was an "informal rule" that you never played more than one black player at home, two on the road or three if you were behind..."

Roger EbertRoger Ebert

"Uberproducer Jerry Bruckheimer has never met a subject he couldn't turn into a glossy piece of eye candy. Forensic crime solving? Check. Stock-car racing? Check. Impossibly hot women dancing on bar counters? Big ol' check."

Premiere MagazinePremiere Magazine

Glory Road | Details

Runtime
106
Genre
Drama, Sport, True Story & Biography
Country of origin
USA