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Friday Night Lights

For the 2006 NBC TV series, see Friday Night Lights (TV series).
Friday Night Lights
Directed by Peter Berg
Produced by Brian Grazer
Written by Buzz Bissinger (original book)
David Aaron Cohen
Peter Berg
Starring Billy Bob Thornton
Derek Luke
Lucas Black
Jay Hernandez
Garrett Hedlund
Lee Thompson Young
and Tim McGraw
Music by Brian Reitzell
Explosions in the Sky
David Torn
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) October 8, 2004
Running time 118 min.
Language English
Budget $30,000,000
IMDb profile

Friday Night Lights in the a 1990 book and 2004 movie that documents the coach and players of a high school football team and the small, economically-depressed Texas town of Odessa that supports and is obsessed with them. The book on which it is based was authored by H.G. Bissinger and follows the story of the 1988 Permian High School Panthers football team as they made a run towards the state championship. A television series inspired by the movie — also called Friday Night Lights — premiered on October 3, 2006 on NBC. This movie ranked number 37 on Entertainment Weekly's list of the 50 Best High School Movies.


Contents

Plot

Bissinger followed the team for the entire 1988 season, which culminated in a loss in the semifinals against Carter High School from Dallas, Texas who went on to win the state championship. However, the book also deals with — or alludes to — a number of secondary political and social issues existing in Odessa, all of which share ties to the Permian football team. These include socioeconomic disparity; racism; segregation (and desegregation); and poverty.

The coach is constantly on the hot seat. After a loss, he comes back to see "For Sale" signs on his lawn. Also, he overuses his star player, James "Boobie" Miles, who gets seriously injured. When this happens, sports radios are flooded with calls for his resignation. His job depends on making the playoffs, which his team is in a three-way tie with two other teams. Under Texas rules for ties, the tiebreaker is a coin-toss. In an effort to prevent a riot, the location of the coin-toss is kept under wraps, and the Texas TV stations air it live at an unearthly hour. Permian does get a spot. They make it to the finals (in the movie, but actually only the semifinals), where they lose to a powerhouse Dallas high school team. The players are in tears as the game ends. The star fullback, whose father won a championship with Permian, is given his father's ring. The movie ends with the coach removing the departing seniors from the depth chart on his wall. This symbolizes how they are no longer part of the town's obsession with football and just regular citizens. The final scene is the quarterback throwing the ball to a bunch of pee-wees playing pick-football, acknowledging the changing of the guard.

Book

The book's release during the 1990 season coincided with the team being under investigation for holding illegal off-season practices, which resulted in the team being declared ineligible for the playoffs and thus not participating in the postseason for only the 2nd time since 1980. Permian's absence from the playoffs allowed San Angelo Central (see below) into the playoffs for only the 3rd time since 1966. The negative reaction to the playoff situation was exacerbated by the book, and many residents of Odessa received the book with responses ranging from mild indignation to threats of physical violence aimed at the book's author.

The movie version of Friday Night Lights was released in the United States on October 6, 2004, and starred Billy Bob Thornton as Permian Coach Gary Gaines. The film was a box office and critical success and, in turn, spawned an NBC television series of the same name. It began airing in October 2006.

Tagline

Quotes

Note: Many of these quotes have small errors though their overall messages are correct.

Boobie Miles: What hype?
Reporter: The hype about Boobie Miles.
Boobie Miles: The hype is something that's not for real. I'm all real.
Don Billingsley: Next question.
Brian Chavez: Isn't that guy, like, 35?
Mike Winchell: I'm not going out drunk and foolin'.
Don Billingsley: I can hold on to the football, Dad. Now get the hell out of here!
Don Billingsley: Chavez, you're like a human pinata. You get your ass all beat more than anybody I know, and you just sit there and spit out candy.
Mike Winchell: That's because he's out of here. He's got the grades. And no matter what, we win or lose, he knows he's getting out. He's the one foot out the door man.
Brian Chavez: Give me the gun.
Don Billingsley: [making fun of Chavez] You're going to be drinking martinis, eating lamb chops, getting manicures...
Brian Chavez: You're just jealous.
Don Billingsley: ...removing your freakin' shoes.
Brian Chavez: You've got to lighten up. You're 17.
Don Billingsley: Do you feel 17?
Mike Winchell: I don't feel 17.
Chris Comer: You don't want me to go in Coach?
Coach Gary Gaines: You're not wearing a helmet?
[Comer realizes he has no helmet on]
Coach Gary Gaines: My goodness gracious!
Sharon Gaines: No, honey.
Coach Gary Gaines: Possibly.
I want you to take a moment, and I want you to look each other in the eyes. I want you to put each other in your hearts forever because forever is about to happen here in just a few minutes. I want you to close your eyes, and I want you to think about Boobie Miles, who is your brother. And he would die to be out there on that field with you tonight. And I want you to put that in your hearts. Boys my heart is full. My heart is full.
Don Billingsley: I'm gonna miss the lights.
Brian Chavez: Yeah, me too. Stay low boys, keep those feet movin'
Don Billingsley: Hey Chavo, be perfect.
Brian Chavez: You be perfect.
Boobie Miles: Cmon baby, this is God-given, only thing I gotta do is just show up.

Analysis of major movie characters

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Differences between the movie and actual events


Categories


1990 books | 2004 films | American football films | Films based on non-fiction books | Universal Pictures films | English-language films

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