American Anthem movie storyline. Steve is a talented gymnast who has given up competition and is working at his father’s bike shop. Julie is the new girl at his old gym, who has moved to town to train with their powerful coach. Inspired by Julie, Steve resumes training. While dealing with the conflicts in their personal lives and the stress of training, they prepare for the US Olympic Trials.
American Anthem is a 1986 American Sports drama film produced by Lorimar Motion Pictures and released in North America by Columbia Pictures. It was directed by Albert Magnoli, and starred Mitchell Gaylord, Tiny Wells, Janet Jones, Michael Pataki, Patrice Donnelly, John Aprea, Michelle Phillips and Katherine Gosney.
The subject of the film was a football player turned gymnast who was seeking to join the United States Olympic gymnastics team. Gaylord was a member of the gold-medal U.S. men’s gymnastics team at the 1984 Summer Olympics. Mitch Gaylord’s performance in the film earned him a Razzie Award nomination for Worst New Star, where he lost to “the six guys and gals in the duck suit” from Howard the Duck.
Review for American Anthem
“American Anthem” is like a very bad Identikit sketch of “Purple Rain,” the previous movie by the same director. You can almost hear the police artist as he tries to make his drawing, based on half-witted descriptions of the big hit from the summer of 1984: Q. Who is the star? A. A major superstar in another field who has never acted before.
Q. What is his personal crisis? A. He has an unhappy homelife and a father who mistreats him.
Q. What is the suspense? A. Will he conquer his inner demons and perform once again at the peak of his ability? Q. Who is his girlfriend? A. A future star in his field whose excellence inspires him to start trying again.
Q. What’s the movie’s visual style? A. Kind of a cross between a concert film and an MTV video. Be sure to overedit. And put in lots of shots where the camera peers into the light source, so the heroic youth can be seen in silhouette as he tosses back his head and sweat flies through the air.
With this incomplete description, a filmmaker from Planet X might have made “American Anthem” from the basic ingredients of “Purple Rain.” The hero this time is not a rock star like Prince, but a gymnast played by the Olympic champion Mitch Gaylord. But since the movie treats him like a rock star, photographing him not as a sweating, breathing, striving athlete but as a pinup for the girls’ locker room, the difference isn’t as big as you might imagine.
In the movie, Gaylord plays a guy who has dropped off the gym team and refused a college scholarship because his father doesn’t love him. His father, we learn, does indeed love him but is frustrated because he doesn’t have a job. Gaylord sneaks into the gym to spy on his former teammates as they train, and one day he spots a beautiful newcomer (Janet Jones). She has arrived to train under the famous coach who is preparing everyone to try out for the U.S. Olympic gymnastics team.
It’s love, and so Gaylord decides to get in shape again, which he does by working out on a bar that he has suspended between two trees in the forest. He especially enjoys practicing during fierce rainstorms when the thunder and lightning make for a better MTV video.
The plot is dumb and predictable, but so what? Everything depends on dialogue and character. And “American Anthem” is a curious case: The screenplay seems to have been written by people who, on the one hand, were intimately familiar with every commercial and salable ingredient in every hit movie of the last five years, and yet who, on the other hand, had never heard a cliche before. My favorite moment comes after a family fight when the kid brother whines, “Why can’t we be like other families?”
A large portion of the movie is given over to gymnastics competitions, which are not explained or photographed well enough to be very interesting. Seeing a champion gymnast zip through his routine isn’t half as interesting as a beginner being taught a thing or two about dealing with the parallel bars would have been. Skilled moviemakers know that, in sports movies, you don’t create suspense by making something look easy, but by making it look difficult. Yet Gaylord’s competitive routines in “American Anthem” are the equivalent of a “Rocky” movie where Rocky knocks his opponent unconscious with the first swing.
One thing is especially annoying about the movie. During the final match, there are dozens of strobe lights flashing incessantly and distractingly behind the contestants. I guess these are supposed to represent camera flashbulbs. Two thoughts are inspired: (1) If the gymnastics were really interesting, they wouldn’t have to be tarted up with flashing lights, and (2) have you ever thought what it says about our national IQ that a lot of people believe you can take a flash picture from the 20th row?
American Anthem (1986)
Directed by: Albert Magnoli
Starring: Mitchell Gaylord, Tiny Wells, Janet Jones, Michael Pataki, Patrice Donnelly, John Aprea, Michelle Phillips, Katherine Gosney
Screenplay by: Evan Archerd, Jeff Benjamin
Production Design by: Ward Preston
Cinematography by: Donald E. Thorin
Film Editing by: Jim Oliver
Costume Design by: Jodie Lynn Tillen
Makeup Department: Steve LaPorte
Music by: Alan Silvestri
Distributed by: Columbia Pictures
Release Date: June 27, 1986
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