Hurricane Season

2009

Action / Drama / Sport

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Taraji P. Henson Photo
Taraji P. Henson as Dayna Collins
Bonnie Hunt Photo
Bonnie Hunt as Principal
Forest Whitaker Photo
Forest Whitaker as Al Collins
Michael Gaston Photo
Michael Gaston as Coach Frank Landon
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
874.38 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
PG-13
23.976 fps
1 hr 42 min
P/S 2 / 3
1.64 GB
1920*1072
English 2.0
PG-13
23.976 fps
1 hr 42 min
P/S 2 / 5

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by NickyJ04719 / 10

It's Hurricane Season

I thought this would be a cheap movie given that it Lil Wayne and Bow Wow in the movie but boy was I surprised. Hurricane Season is a great story of triumph in the face of tremendous adversity. It puts you in New Orleans before and after Hurricane Katrina. It showed how people's lives were turned upside down. The life and history of a town swept away in just a few moments. In one of the darker times of our nation's history it illustrates what makes the human spirit so powerful. And how a group of misfits can become brothers and form a collective bond that can accomplish anything. As someone who has watched every sports movie known to man, I dare say this movie is a better basketball movie then Coach Carter. And is easily right up there in inspiration with Rudy. I love how the movie showed such a powerful resiliency from such young men. Move over Remember The Titans, Hurricane Season is ready to take you by storm.

Reviewed by view_and_review3 / 10

Another Against-All-Odds Sports Movie

Apparently, the New Orleans City Commerce collected money to put together a movie. This movie featured one of the most openly selfish coaches I've ever seen on film as the protagonist. After hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans and the entire city was underwater, all this coach could think about was getting his basketball team on the court again. Nevermind that they had no homes, no food, or no school; to Coach Al Collins (Forest Whitaker) basketball was the most important thing in the world.

At one point Coach Al tried to shame his best player out of transferring to a better school where he'd have a better opportunity to get recruited. He tried to persuade the boy's father by using lines like, "Is that what you want to teach your son, to run when things get tough?" After failing at that weak Jedi mind trick he went to another player and shamed him by saying "Don't take the easy way out," and other lame lines as though leaving was a shameful thing. I wonder about all of those people who relocated and what message this movie is sending to them? You guys are soft. You're traitors. You're weak.

This whole movie was a sham. It was yet another movie showing that the only way out of a bad situation for young Black men is sports. But it wasn't just that. This movie barely showed the deplorable state of things in New Orleans. It was as if as long as there was Patriots basketball then everything was right with New Orleans.

This was no "Coach Carter," or "Glory Road" for that matter, even though it featured angry players and a yelling coach. This movie resembled your traditional against-all-odds sports movie, but it was only a superficial resemblance. Where it counted this movie was vacant. I don't want to make it seem like I'm denigrating the team, or the city of New Orleans by extension, but this movie was just a carbon copy of sports movies past.

Reviewed by RosanaBotafogo8 / 10

Good, very good...

Just the theme, overcoming after a catastrophe at the level of Hurricane Katrina is already moving, associated with the passion, love and dedication of a teacher/coach, it makes you want to cry, the dramas faced by the athletes/students, all very exciting and cute, of course, as it could not be otherwise, I love these films, it makes us believe that humanity has a future through kindness and fraternity...

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