Are any of the Prefontaine (or other classic running) movies appropriate to show in a middle school setting? I have students as young as 11 who would be viewing the film and I know some PG-13 ratings are softer than others. Thanks!
Are any of the Prefontaine (or other classic running) movies appropriate to show in a middle school setting? I have students as young as 11 who would be viewing the film and I know some PG-13 ratings are softer than others. Thanks!
Chasing a Dream
Really you can't go wrong with any of the Debbie does movies. Basically as the title suggests ie Debbie Does Dallas, Debbie goes to a different city and performs a workout with as many guys as she can find to test her fitness.
porn
"Endurance"
I believe it's only on VHS.
http://www.amazon.com/dp/630573237X
I enjoyed it as a youngster.
The Loneliest Runner, autobiographical made-for-television film written, and directed by Michael Landon:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FpM71RDQUQk
The Loneliest Runner follows the story of Michael Landon's alter-ego, 13 year-old John Curtis (played by Kerwin), who still wets his bed although already into his teens. The problem is publicized, by his mother, Alice Curtis (Mears), not only at home but also in public. She even goes so far as to hang her son’s stained bed sheets up in the window for all to see.
For fear of having his friends see the yellow sheets, the embarrassed John runs home from school every day and takes them down to avoid further humiliation. Soon, however, the running becomes more than a race home but an ambition. Partly because he loves it, and also to help him forget his shame and hurt of his unhappy home life, John starts running with the Junior track team in order to channel his anger.
The show continues on ten years later when the now adult John Curtis (played by Landon himself) is an Olympic marathon runner and a gold-medal-winner. During a post-race interview, the adult Curtis gives credit to his mother for his success as a runner.