Directed by: Kent Alterman
Premise: In the 1970s, a low ranking ABA
basketball team rallies under a goofy owner and head coach (Will
Ferrell) to save their season before the league is merged into the NBA.
What Works: The film alternates between
standard sports film scenarios, in which the team of underdogs comes
together under the leadership of a former NBA player (Woody Harrelson),
and stunts the owner and coach puts on to promote the team, such as
wrestling a bear. The story written for Woody Harrelson’s character is
fairly compelling and he is given the best scenes in the film. The
stunts by Ferrell’s character are funny in and of themselves and will
elicit a few laughs.
What Doesn’t: The fatal flaw of Semi-Pro is its inability to reconcile these two elements. The promotions put on
by Ferrell’s character are only relevant for the moment they appear on
screen; the scenes do not connect to anything else in the story and just
become excuses for Ferrell to act like an idiot. These stunts divert
attention from the cliché riddled basketball story, which relies on
scenarios that have been done before and done better in a million other
movies. Although Harrelson gets some interesting moments in the film,
they don’t add up to anything. The humor of the movie is very
scattershot, with the filmmakers leaning on Ferrell to pull out his
likable moron routine whenever they need a laugh. But it’s not enough
to save Semi-Pro, and the entire film has a lazy feel about it;
apparently no effort went into the story, the jokes, the characters, the
acting, or the basketball choreography and that lack of effort is
painfully obvious on screen.
Bottom Line: Semi-Pro is a film
about minor league basketball, but the title might as well describe the
efforts put forth by the filmmakers. It’s a lazy picture that
cynically believes that its star power will distract from the film’s
absence of effort.