Metacritic Film

Great Debaters, The

Starring Denzel Washington, Forest Whitaker, Jurnee Smollett, Denzel Whitaker, Kimberly Elise, and Nate Parker

MPAA RATING: PG-13 for depiction of strong thematic material including violence and disturbing images, and for language and brief sexuality

The Weinstein Company
Drama
123 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters December 25, 2007

Believe in the power of words. Inspired by a true story, The Great Debaters chronicles the journey of Professor Melvin Tolson, a brilliant but volatile debate team coach who uses the power of words to shape a group of underdog students from a small African-American college in the Deep South into a historically elite debate team. A controversial figure, Professor Tolson challenged the social mores of the time and was under constant fire for his unconventional and ferocious teaching methods as well as his radical political views. In their pursuit for excellence, Tolson's debate team receives a groundbreaking invitation to debate Harvard University's championship team. [The true story saw the team debating the University of Southern California.] (Weinstein Company)

WRITTEN BY
Robert Eisele

DIRECTED BY
Denzel Washington

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

65 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 Chicago Sun-Times
This is a film that is affirming and inspiring and re-creates the stories of a remarkable team and its coach.
88 Philadelphia Inquirer
A triumph. Unapologetically old-school, in both the literal and metaphorical meanings of the term, Debaters overlays the story of social underdogs onto the familiar template of the stand-and-deliver saga, the staple of sports inspirationals like "Rocky," "Invincible" and "The Karate Kid."
88 ReelViews
Ultimately an uplifting movie because it is about triumph.
75 New York Daily News
The three young actors are good, but the movie is held together from beginning to end by another riveting performance from Washington. Few actors can dominate a film with their diction as well as Washington, and the role of the erudite, passionate Mel Tolson gives him plenty of opportunity.
75 Entertainment Weekly
The Great Debaters is like one of those sentimentally revved youth-sports-team crowd-pleasers. This time, though, the sport is debating, and the setting is an elite black college in Marshall, Tex., in 1935
75 Chicago Tribune
Good story, well told. Interesting concept. I wonder if people will go for it.
75 San Francisco Chronicle
An edifying and forthright drama that aims to create a lump in the throat, and succeeds.
75 Christian Science Monitor
Succeeds in bringing a lump to the throat without, as is de rigueur these days, insulting our intelligence.
75 Charlotte Observer
Eisele and Washington lacked faith in their material. So they've made the big debate opponent not USC but Harvard, a more clear-cut epitome of the white world of privilege that has to face the hard truths of racial equality.
75 Boston Globe
For a film about the power of speech, it's the quiet moments of rapture that say everything.
75 Portland Oregonian
If I had to pick one word to describe The Great Debaters, it would be "nutritious."
70 Time
The film may be manipulative in its construction, and cliché-ridden in some of the incidents it recounts, but it has a good, large heart.
70 Wall Street Journal
Mr. Washington is splendid, as always. So is Forest Whitaker as James Farmer, Sr.
70 Washington Post
It's a great family movie, if not historically perfect, and something that a lot of people are going to like.
70 Chicago Reader
Conceived like a sports movie, this delivers passion, nuance, and historical insight along with unnecessary hokum.
70 Los Angeles Times
Because it is so old-school Hollywood, with a weakness for standard moments and pat situations, The Great Debaters initially comes off as easily dismissible. Largely saving it from that fate is the presence and ability of Denzel Washington, who costars with Forest Whitaker and directs from Robert Eisele's script.
70 Newsweek
Wouldn't it have been more fascinating if, just once, they had to argue, as all debate teams must, against their own beliefs? That would have really tested these amazing kids' mettle--and the movie's too.
70 Variety
Tailor-made for maximum inspirational, historical and educational impact, The Great Debaters shines a bright spotlight on a remarkable example of black achievement long forgotten in the sorry history of the Jim Crow South.
70 The Hollywood Reporter
An earnest drama about the search for self-esteem and sense of responsibility among young black people that successfully relies on its fine actors.
67 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Not the most thrilling of competition films. There are only two short debate scenes, and each time the team gets to argue (in sound bites of rhetoric) the politically correct side of the issue.
67 Baltimore Sun
Even when you're disappointed with the film's predictability, there's something invigorating about the way it embraces literacy and argument.
63 USA Today
An enjoyable, rousing film, despite its formulaic quality.
63 Premiere
While The Great Debaters' intentions don't lead it to movie hell, this picture is far more diffuse, commonplace, and predictable than the surprisingly convincing "Fisher."
63 New York Post
There's an air of extreme predictability and inevitability in the script - which takes liberties like moving the climactic debate from the University of Southern California to the grander precincts of Harvard.
60 The New York Times
The wonder is that The Great Debaters transcends its own simplifying and manipulative ploys; it radiates nobility of spirit.
60 Salon.com
About midway through Denzel Washington's new film The Great Debaters comes a raw and terrifying scene that exemplifies why the movie's worth seeing, despite its hackneyed and awkward story.
58 The Onion (A.V. Club)
Too bad the story is all over the place. One second, it focuses on a love triangle between students; the next, it's about Washington's efforts to unionize the local farmers.
50 TV Guide
Polished, pokey and cloyingly formulaic, Denzel Washington's directing follow-up to "Antwone Fisher" is a Harpo -- as in Oprah spelled backwards -- Production all the way.
50 Austin Chronicle
The film is hobbled by the narrative predictability that inevitably governs this type of drama.
50 Village Voice Nick Pinkerton
The film avoids potentially interesting frictions by always letting the team debate (and win) on the "correct" side of every issue--that which aligns with generally accepted modern liberal sympathies. The kids follow their party line all the way to the big game, a ridiculous, fallacy-riddled face-off against Harvard.
50 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
All of this unfolds with such predictability, the title might as well be The Great Foregone Conclusion.
50 Miami Herald
The Great Debaters keeps things on the surface and pushes the obvious buttons, hoping you won't notice its distinct lack of depth.

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