The Beautiful Game shines an inspirational, if rough-edged, spotlight on the annual Homeless World Cup soccer tournament.
Ferrari features all the beautiful cars and fast times you might expect. But Ferrari red is not the only crimson …
Taika Waititi’s offbeat directorial style matches this offbeat soccer underdog story, but it bounces in some unexpected directions.
The Iron Claw ends with satisfying catharsis. But getting to that moment in this true wrestling story is a path …
Despite what The Underdoggs might insinuate, a movie doesn’t get better the more f-words you use.
The Boys in the Boat offers us an inspirational story that, outside a few issues, glides across the cinematic waters …
Nyad isn’t just about its centerpiece character’s remarkable swim: It’s also about a friendship that weathers its own stormy seas.
In its attempt to stay as authentic as possible, this faith-based movie employs some profanity that might make it strike …
When a film contains f-bombs in the triple digits, that pretty much drowns out any other positive messages.
George Foreman fought everyone—even God. But God always wins, and He uses the fight for His glory.
You could call this a romance of sorts—how Michael Jordan and Nike got together. But the language doesn’t have us …
Sweetwater scores more often than it fouls in its biographical look at the first Black NBA player.
Rocky Balboa doesn’t show up, but his well-worn Rocky formula is still intricately woven through Creed III’s narrative fabric.
Champions has some nice messages, but they’re buried under a full-court press of crass sexual allusions.
With strong, inspiring messages and very few content concerns, Chang Can Dunk is a slam dunk for the whole family.