By Jody Worsham
All rights reserved
for writing lessons and lessons learned
If you have
not yet seen the Disney movie “McFarland” do not read any further. If you have, read on.
If an
exceptional movie is based on telling a story that loops through your brain night
and day, makes you laugh and cry at the
same time, and finds you thinking, thinking, and still thinking weeks after
seeing the movie, then “McFarland” is that kind of movie.
This movie
spoke to me on so many levels.
As a Caucasian
, I identified with Coach White on his first day in town when he and his family
were leaving the restaurant and a group of cars with Latino males drove
up. As a teenager I remember walking
around the block to keep from having to walk in front of a store where several
teenage Latino boys were leaning against the storefront windows. They spoke a language I did not understand
and that frightened me.
The Diaz
boys were on the bleachers just before school was out when their Mama pulled up
in a truck to pick them up before class was over. Coach White told the boys to stay. “That’s our Mama” the boys said as they
left. “Tell your Mama she can
wait.” The boys laughed and said “You
tell her that” and they jumped in the truck.
Family over school.
That first
team worked in the fields starting at 4:30 a.m. as pickers before school and
after school. When it was time for
school Mama Diaz called out “Run to school.
Show respect to your teachers.”
Respect, always.
When the
cross country team had their first match, a white team member from another
school commented “I’ve never seen a Mexican run unless a cop was behind him or
a Taco Bell was in front.” McFarland’s
team did not respond with anger or hatred; no response was necessary or would have
changed anything. Running the race was
the challenge. When McFarland won their first match, the team immediately knelt
in prayer and thanksgiving. God first.
Mr. White
was known as White or Blanco to his team until the morning he showed up at 4:30
a.m. to work in the fields alongside his team.
The boys told him to bend his knees to save his back. They shared their lunch with him. When he couldn’t work any longer, they had
him lay down and worked on his back to relieve the pain. He was soon
Coach. No judgment.
No ridicule. Only encouragement
and acceptance.
Coach White
got the team shoes for their next race.
Mama Diaz and the other ladies were organizing a tamale sale to raise
money for the team. “Why you buy the
boys cheap shoes? You don’t think they
deserve good shoes?” Being poor is an
economic state, not a measurement of value.
That kept me thinking for a couple of days.
There were
so many other incidents in this movie that had my brain thinking all night.
As a writer,
I appreciate the script for this movie.
It presented so many lessons that sneak up on you in retrospect. It
struck common chords in us as human beings.
Mama Diaz pulling her son off the top bunk by his shirt for breakfast
had me laughing. Coach White receiving
the phone call that strikes ice in the veins of any parent whose child is out
with other kids at night. No words,
silence then “We’ll be right there.” In
the car only murmurings “Please God, no. Please God, no.” Deafening chords of silence resonating within
all parents. All this without a curse
word.
The cinematography
and screen writing was so subtle yet powerful.
In one scene the track team runs down along the fence line of the nearby
prison before turning a corner. The
white car pulling out and blocking the quincenera parade and then cutting away
to the phone call to Coach White. And
the next picture of the ambulance, the police lights, the firemen. Without showing me any of the graphic
details, I shuddered. The next picture
is the store owner hosing down the parking lot in front of his store. Such a picture!
“McFarland” was never just about a cross country track team. It was never about just getting out of poverty. It is about character and discovering who you really are. It is a journey that simply continued for the Dias boys but along another path provided by Coach White. For Thomas, it was a chance to make a difference in lives similar yet different from his own. Victor made his choices and used that experience in his life. For Coach White it was seeing through different eyes, the same things we all value, the importance below the surface.
“McFarland” was never just about a cross country track team. It was never about just getting out of poverty. It is about character and discovering who you really are. It is a journey that simply continued for the Dias boys but along another path provided by Coach White. For Thomas, it was a chance to make a difference in lives similar yet different from his own. Victor made his choices and used that experience in his life. For Coach White it was seeing through different eyes, the same things we all value, the importance below the surface.
With the
exception of Thomas, that first track team still lives in McFarland along with
Coach White. They still run with and
encourage McFarland’s cross country team.
It was never about escaping from McFarland; it was always about God,
family, respect for themselves and each other and home…..wherever that may be.
3 comments:
I also loved the movie. It came and went in the theaters quickly to be replaced by blow-them- ups, shoot everyone, littered with degrading words, horror beyond horror, money making pictures. I don't understand why great stories about good decent people that entertain and make you feel hopeful about the world fail at the box office.
I didn't see it either. Thank you so much for the review, Jody. It's a good story with many teaching points. I'll be sure to rent it when it comes out.
I ordered it on Netflix--don't know when it will be out, though!!
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