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12 Mighty Orphans

12 Mighty Orphans

  • Status: Released
  • 18-06-2021
  • Runtime: 118 min
  • Score: 7.2
  • Vote count: 232

Haunted by his mysterious past, a devoted high school football coach leads a scrawny team of orphans to the state championship during the Great Depression and inspires a broken nation along the way.

Luke Wilson

Rusty Russell

Vinessa Shaw

Juanita Russell

Wayne Knight

Frank Wynn

Martin Sheen

Doc Hall

Jake Austin Walker

Hardy Brown

Scott Haze

Rodney Kidd

Levi Dylan

Fairbanks

Jacob Lofland

Snoggs

Rooster McConaughey

Pop Boone

King Orba

Remmert

Treat Williams

Amon Carter

Larry Pine

President Roosevelt

Lillie Fink

Betty

Josie Fink

Betty

Slade Monroe

Wheatie

Preston Porter

Dewitt

Ron White

Sheriff Red Wright

Woodrow Luttrell

Leon Pickett

Jacob Audirsch

Scott McCall

Gavin Warren

Young Rusty

Michael Gohlke

Crazy

Bailey Roberts

Miller

Tyler Silva

A.P. Torres

Manuel Tapia

Carlos Torres

Austin Shook

Ray

Sampley Barinaga

Chicken

Natasha Bassett

Opal

Carlson Young

Annie

David Lambert

UIL Member

Lane Garrison

Luther Scarborough

Robert Duvall

Mason Hawk

Austin Robert Russell

Maywood

Kellen McAlone

Poly Kicker

Aaron Beck

Referee Poly Game 1

Lucy Faust

Wanda Sealy

Jeff Swearingen

Earl

Lee Ellis

Referee Poly Game 2

Keath Kibbey

Big Poly Player

Kelly Frye

Young Mary Jame

Zach Rose

Pinkney Russell

Heath Freeman

Coach Cox

Brian Lafontaine

Referee #2

Scott Sayers

Highland Park Coach

Robert Henry

Referee Highland Game

Troy Dungan

Amarillo Reporter

Robert Musgrave

Mineral Wells Coach

Jake McAlister

Burly Assistant

Hal Jay

Radio Announcer

Matt Herring

Reveler

Kelly Dealyn

Secretary

Breckyn Hager

Greathouse

George Young Jr.

Amarillo Coach

Gil Prather

Mason Band Leader

Angelique De Luca

Sister Cora

Harry Hudson

Dr. Worley

Michael Lockwood Crouch

Movie Theater Announcer

John Anthony Torres

Announcer

Braden Balazik

Orphan (uncredited)

Jack Doke

Young George (uncredited)

Nicholas Reed

Jersey Boy (uncredited)

Keegan Bouton

Homeless Kid (uncredited)

Alex Bilbrey

Homeless Kid (uncredited)

Casey Grisham

Young Orphan Boy (uncredited)

Cooper Justin Grisham

Young Orphan Boy (uncredited)

Victoria Paige Watkins

Orphan (uncredited)

PaulaSu Grisham

Football Fan / Mom (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

Luke Wilson is quite effective here as a football coach (Rusty) who, with his teacher wife (Juanita) and his daughter arrive at a run down orphanage, home to 150 children of all ages abandoned by their parents in the midst of the Great Depression. Pretty quickly, they get the general idea that those in the establishment are considered more like the inmates of a prison, and those running it are at best indifferent, at worst ruthlessly exploitative of their charges. Rusty sets out to try and galvanise the disparate young men into some sort of cohesive unit. Initially, they are sullen, demotivated and would rather fight each other than try to play a game and the task looks impossible, but luckily he has some help from school doctor "Hall" (Martin Sheen) a worldly dipsomaniac with a thorough knowledge of American football and of human nature. The younger cast are made of relative unknowns, but as with the aspirations for their their team, they bond well - especially Jacob Lofland as the skinny Snoggs; Slade Monroe as the chunky quarterback Wheatie and a there is strong, heartfelt effort from Jake Austin Walker - the sort of recalcitrant-in-chief Hardy Brown. The coach enables the boys to feel something other than despair for the first time in their lives - he gives them hope, a sense of purpose and of family. Wayne Knight - whom i always recall as the dodgy IT bloke from "Jurassic Park" (1993) is really quite good as the odious teacher Frank Wynn, who uses the youngsters as cheap labour - and is brutal with his paddle if anyone steps out of line. Director Ty Roberts has done well to illustrate the sense of abandonment felt by the youngsters, and to a certain extent by the school management too, but more so - he manages, through some sparing appearances from Treat Williams - to share with us the sensational effects these young men had on the ordinary men and women of the USA - desperate for something positive to get behind after years of poverty and gloom. For reasons that make no sense to me, the timeline has been shifted from the mid 1920s until the late 1930s. It's not that it makes a great deal of difference to the narrative it's just curious that the end credits are accompanied by interesting mini-bios of the boys that don't remotely tie up - unless they were flying bombers WWII at a very early age. Still, it is a well structured production which has just enough of the facts to keep it real, but just enough imagination to enable me to feel engaged with the men, their efforts and ultimately, I rather enjoyed it.