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Football Player Who Finds His Family Again Movie

2007 American movie

The Game Plan
TheGamePlanposter.jpg

Theatrical release poster

Directed past Andy Fickman
Screenplay by
  • Nichole Millard
  • Kathryn Cost
Story by
  • Nichole Millard
  • Kathryn Price
  • Audrey Wells
Produced by
  • Marking Ciardi
  • Gordon Gray
Starring
  • Dwayne Johnson
  • Madison Pettis
  • Kyra Sedgwick
  • Morris Chestnut
  • Roselyn Sanchez
Cinematography Greg Gardiner
Edited by Michael Jablow
Music by Nathan Wang

Product
companies

  • Walt Disney Pictures
  • Commotion Pictures
Distributed by Buena Vista Pictures

Release dates

  • September 23, 2007 (2007-09-23) (Hollywood)
  • September 28, 2007 (2007-09-28) (U.s.)

Running time

110 minutes
Land United States
Language English
Upkeep $22 million[1]
Box office $146.vi million[1]

The Game Plan is a 2007 American family comedy flick directed by Andy Fickman and with a screenplay by Nichole Millard and Kathryn Price from a story by Millard, Price and Audrey Wells. The motion-picture show stars Dwayne Johnson in the championship role, Madison Pettis and Kyra Sedgwick. It follows a professional quarterback who finds out he has an 8-year-quondam daughter from a previous relationship.

It was the last motion picture to be distributed by Buena Vista Pictures, after Disney retired the Buena Vista moniker across their company's divisions in the same year. Information technology is too the concluding film where Johnson is credited with his ring name. The Game Plan was released in the U.s.a. on September 28, 2007 and grossed $146 one thousand thousand worldwide.

Plot [edit]

In the terminal game of the American Football game Federation regular flavour between the Boston Rebels and the New York Dukes, Rebels quarterback Joe Kingman (Dwayne Johnson) scores a touchdown later on ignoring an open wide receiver, Travis Sanders. The next morning, an eight-twelvemonth-old girl named Peyton Kelly (Madison Pettis) arrives on Joe's doorstep saying that she is his biological daughter, and that his divorced wife, Sara, sent her there to meet him. His amanuensis, Stella Peck (Kyra Sedgwick), thinks this will be bad for his image and distracts him with the upcoming playoffs.

At the opening of his own restaurant/nighttime guild & bar, Joe inadvertently leaves without Peyton, and is on the embrace of a tabloid the next 24-hour interval. Stella decides Joe needs a new fatherly paradigm. At a subsequently press conference, the reporters make Joe miserable, until Peyton comes to his defense, maxim that he is new to this and trying the best he can, and that she thinks he is the best father in the world. Peyton and then says that Joe has to repay her, so she has him accept her to a ballet university run by Monique Vasquez (Roselyn Sánchez). Monique has Joe bring together their ballet performance to bear witness him that ballet takes but as much able-bodied ability as football game. Joe and Peyton begin their relationship afterward Peyton calls his arrogant and selfish behavior to his attention. Joe takes Peyton and her new friends to the mall where he begins to develop romantic feelings for Monique.

The Rebels march through the playoffs via three road games: Denver in the Wild Card round, Indianapolis in the Divisional circular and finally Baltimore in the Conference round. They somewhen arrive to the championship game held in Arizona in a rematch with the New York Dukes. Stella offers Joe a $25 million endorsement bargain with Fanny'south Burgers, a successful fast food restaurant run by Samuel Blake, Jr., if he wins the game and mentions the product to the press. While at lunch with Joe and Monique at the Barking Crab, Peyton accidentally reveals that she was scheduled to go to a ballet school programme for the calendar month, only instead she ran away to meet her male parent. Before anything else can be said, Peyton has an allergic reaction to the nuts in the dessert she was eating, and Joe rushes her to the hospital; yet, the doctors tell him that the reaction is mild, and his girl is going to be fine.

Joe's former sister-in-law and Peyton's legal guardian, Karen Kelly, arrives to take her domicile and reveals to Joe that Sara was killed in a traffic accident six months earlier. After Peyton overhears Stella on the phone explaining that she would be a huge distraction to Joe, Peyton decides to return dwelling with Karen. Later, while going through Peyton's bag under her bed at Joe'south house, Joe finds some photos and reads a letter from Sara, saying that she hid Peyton away from Joe, every bit his career was just starting and she didn't want Peyton to be a distraction to him.

Every bit the championship game begins, Joe'south mind is not fully assault the game and he is before long injured. Joe is then surprised to discover that Peyton has arrived with Karen. Understanding Joe'southward earlier words about how he wants to remain in Peyton's life, Karen decides to let Peyton live with Joe. Near the terminate of the fourth quarter, Joe passes the brawl to the running back, Jamal Webber, who gains positive yardage only fails to go out of bounds. Joe hurries his team to the line with the clock running, and rushes ahead before being knocked out of bounds. With time for one last play, Joe throws a lob laissez passer to Sanders, who catches the pass, allowing the Rebels to win their beginning championship. In a mail service-game interview, Joe declines the Fanny'southward Burgers offering to be with Peyton.

Cast [edit]

  • Dwayne Johnson equally Joseph "Joe" Kingman
  • Madison Pettis as Peyton Kelly
  • Roselyn Sánchez every bit Monique Vasquez
  • Kyra Sedgwick every bit Stella Peck
  • Morris Chestnut as Travis Sanders
  • Paige Turco as Karen Kelly
  • Hayes MacArthur equally Kyle Cooper
  • Brian J. White every bit Jamal Webber
  • Jamal Duff as Clarence Monroe
  • Lauren Storm as Nanny Cindy
  • Gordon Clapp as Omnibus Marking Maddox
  • Kate Nauta as Tatianna
  • Robert Torti as Samuel "Sam" Blake Jr.
  • Elizabeth Chambers as Kathryn

Marv Albert and Boomer Esiason portray themselves, offer commentary in every game. Steve Levy also portrays himself as office of one game's postgame coverage for SportsCenter. Stuart Scott makes a cameo as himself on SportsCenter giving a report on Joe Kingman.

Production [edit]

The Game Plan was filmed in the Boston, Massachusetts surface area. The flick was also filmed in three stadiums across the country: Gillette Stadium in Foxboro, Invesco Field at Mile High in Denver, and Lord's day Devil Stadium in Arizona.

Johnson'south grapheme taking ballet lessons in the movie was an indirect nod to Pro Football Hall of Fame wide receiver Lynn Swann, who took ballet lessons during his NFL career with the Pittsburgh Steelers. Swann later on worked every bit a reporter for Disney-owned ABC and ESPN. Swann left Disney for a career in politics while The Game Program was in pre-production.

Reception [edit]

Critical response [edit]

Review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes reports a 28% rating based on 102 reviews, and an average rating of 4.61/10. The website'southward disquisitional consensus reads, "Despite The Rock's abundant charisma, The Game Programme is merely some other run-of-the-factory Disney one-act."[2] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 44 out of 100, based on 23 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[iii] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the moving-picture show an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale.[4]

Box office [edit]

Produced at an estimated cost of US$22 million, the film grossed $90,648,202 in the U.S market and $55,942,785 in foreign ticket sales and $50,643,312 brought from DVD sales, in its stay on the Top 50 chart, sales producing a one thousand full gross of $197,234,299, clearly makes this film a profitable venture for Disney. Information technology opened at #1 at the box office grossing $22,950,971 in its first weekend in three,103 theaters and averaging $7,396 per venue. It closed on Feb 18, 2008 with a final domestic gross of $90,648,202.[i]

Habitation media [edit]

The Game Plan was released on Disney DVD (in Widescreen and Full Screen formats) and Disney Blu-ray on January 22, 2008. Through April 27, 2008, DVD rentals for The Game Plan were able to stay in the Top l nautical chart, while earning more than than $48 million.[five] Special features include deleted scenes, bloopers, and audio commentaries. Information technology is likewise available for streaming on Disney+.

Run across also [edit]

  • Mr. Nanny

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c "The Game Plan (2007)". The Numbers . Retrieved 2013-12-29 .
  2. ^ "The Game Plan (2007)". Retrieved 5 July 2020 – via world wide web.rottentomatoes.com.
  3. ^ The Game Plan , retrieved 2020-07-06
  4. ^ "Box Part Guru Wrapup:Game Plan Rushes Past Kingdom For #one Spot". Retrieved 2020-07-06 .
  5. ^ "Box Office Mojo figures for 'Game Program' DVD Rentals". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2008-05-24 .

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • The Game Programme at IMDb
  • The Game Plan at AllMovie
  • The Game Plan at Rotten Tomatoes
  • The Game Plan at Metacritic
  • The Game Programme at Box Office Mojo

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Game_Plan_(film)

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