12 Mighty Orphans (2021) Movie Script

1
[marching band playing triumphant music]
[wind blowing]
[pensive music playing]
[Doc] Vicious winds peeled
the topsoil off
the plains and prairies
of the Texas Panhandle,
creating a waking nightmare
called the Dust Bowl.
It's hard to remember
which came first,
the Dust Bowl or the Great Depression,
but what followed made
hell on earth look forgiving
and would leave families broken,
as thousands of children
were orphaned
across a nation
clamoring for a sense of hope.
What they didn't know
was that hope was coming.
But it wasn't coming
in the form of rain.
- Here we go. Okay.
- [grunts]
You wanna block?
You're gonna tell me to block?
We're losing because of you!
- Hey! Hey!
- I don't know why you can't block!
- Don't touch me!
- You haven't done shit!
- You need to help.
- Get your ass out there
so I can hand it to you!
You want faster?
Maybe we ought to think about calling
this game right now.
- [boy 1] Hardy ain't even said a word.
- [boy 2] Think you've done a good job?
- [boy 3] Don't talk to him like that!
- [boy 4] Shut up!
- Y'all need to do better!
- [boy 1] Run down the damn field!
[boy 2] What now, coach?
[Roosevelt on radio]
Let me assert my firm belief
that the only thing
we have to fear is fear itself.
Daddy, what are all these people doing?
- Rusty. Rusty.
- Yes?
Well, honey, they're finding
a new place to live.
I want to go back home.
We have a new home now,
and we should be very thankful.
What do I always say?
New adventures brave the heart
and set the soul asail.
- Isn't that right?
- Yes, Daddy.
[Roosevelt] This nation
is asking for action,
and action now.
We humbly ask the blessing of God.
May he protect each and every one of us.
- Is that it?
- Yup.
Looks like a castle.
I've never seen a building like that.
Me neither.
[Doc] A castle perhaps,
but this is no fairy tale.
The Masonic Home was not
full of imaginary beings,
but of children,
forgotten during the
harsh reality of these times.
[Wheatie] Half a mile out.
Fancy?
Nah, shitty old Ford.
Hell, you can take them.
Looking for a sugar mama myself.
There's a lady in there,
and, boy, does she look like a peach.
Let me see that.
Oh, Lordy, does she got a set on her.
Here comes mama.
You boys just save yourselves
the heartache.
One look at me,
I'm out of this damn hoosegow.
[stuttering] Who'd want a bag of bones
like you, Snoggs?
You're one to t... Talk, De... DeWitt.
Who's gonna adopt a grown man,
you stuttering Sasquatch?
It's what's inside that counts.
Mommy, I don't like it here.
[Doc] The orphanage was seen as
a cold, uncaring institution
where children were
to be pitied, if not feared.
Are you picking up,
or are you dropping off?
Aren't you the cutest thing.
I'm Rusty Russell,
the new math, science teacher.
This is my wife. She's teaching English...
- How do you do?
- And music.
- The football coach? [laughs]
- [Rusty] That's right.
Yeah, I'm Frank Wynn.
I run the day-to-day
and keep the hooligans in line.
- Welcome to the home.
- Thank you very much.
- We're very pleased to be here and...
- Let's get you settled.
Boys, get down here and unload this car!
[Rusty] That's not necessary.
Thank you, I've got it.
You see, it's a little precarious there,
the way I got it tied up.
[car doors closing]
[Wright] Afternoon, Frank.
Got another stray for your stock.
This old Hardy Brown's boy.
Found him curled up
next to his dead daddy.
Smells like it too.
- Could use a little scrubbing.
- Yeah, we can handle that.
Uh... Meet the new football coach.
This is Rusty Russell.
This is Red Wright.
- Sheriff.
- Football, huh?
That's right.
I'd say you're a little south on talent.
- Don't even have a field.
- The field don't make the team.
I'm gonna get my family inside.
It's nice to meet you.
Can you get the Brown boy up to Doc?
- Yeah, I can do that.
- [Wynn] Unload the car!
[Doc] Orphans were stigmatized
as misfits and outcasts
and often referred to
not as orphans, but as inmates.
It didn't matter that
they had done nothing wrong.
Kids without parents
were simply second-class citizens.
[Juanita] How many orphans do you have?
I got about 150 right now.
I like to keep it manageable.
Everything in order.
I run a very tight ship, military style.
Leon! Get to the back of the line!
You can't trust those types.
They'll steal your hat,
then help you look for it.
[laughs]
Help you look for it.
Come on!
[Doc] You got jock itch.
I don't want to scare you,
but if you don't stop
shucking your corn,
your cob's gonna fall off.
Oh, Doc, there's got to be
something else we can do.
No cure for adolescence,
but this might help the itching.
- [Wright] Good afternoon, Doc.
- Sheriff.
I got Hardy Brown here.
Mr. Brown, I'm Doc Hall.
You all right?
He's all right. It's not his blood.
I assume you can read and write, son.
It's okay. Uh...
You can fill this out later
after you get cleaned up.
How that'd be?
Snoggs, maybe you can show
Mr. Brown his new home.
[Snoggs] Yes, sir.
I'll show you the shower.
What in the tarnation
are the Masons thinking,
hiring a damn football coach?
He's not just a damn football coach,
he's a damn good one.
Took Temple to district three times.
He must have a screw loose somewhere,
signing on with this outfit.
No offense, but this is no Poly High.
Well, not yet. To the New Deal.
All right, here we go.
One, two.
I'll get that fixed right away.
[Juanita] Careful, careful.
Watch out.
[coughs] Let's get you some air in here.
That'll make it better.
[chuckles] Already been unlocked.
Come on, now.
All right, okay.
[whimpering]
[pensive music playing]
[Snoggs] Didn't figure you had any soap,
seeing as how you came in
with the sheriff.
Unless you got some
stuffed somewhere,
but who the hell'd have soap on them?
So I brought you some.
Fat-ass gets off on whupping our butts.
Especially Snoggs' skinny ass.
You can sleep here.
Any questions?
My mama will come for me.
Only mamas that come here
are the ones that give up their kids.
You're an orphan now.
It'll be all right.
Don't worry, I'm gonna...
I'm gonna get that patched
and painted up, all of that.
Oh, I'm not worried about the ceiling.
I'm more concerned about the fact
that we just adopted 150 kids.
This is going to be even
more work than you imagined.
Juanita, we have a chance
to make a real difference here.
We were making a difference at Temple.
We left everything
for a place with nothing.
That's exactly why we came here.
We can do this together.
I'm starting to question that
for the first time in my life.
This decision was not made together.
You informed me.
There is a big difference.
[sighs]
[Pinkney] Boy, you're gonna
have to earn your keep.
Mind your elders.
God help you.
George, look after Rusty.
When things get better, I'll be back.
I promise. I do.
- Mom, please don't leave.
- [Pinkney] Let's go!
Mommy!
Not much to look at, is it?
Matter of perspective, I guess.
I like your optimism.
We need more of that around here.
I'm E.P. Hall. They call me Doc.
- Rusty Russell. I'm a new teacher...
- I know who you are.
And I know what you can do
with mediocre talent.
I saw what you did
against Corsicana in '34.
- Yeah.
- That's why I recommended you
for this job.
- You did?
- Yes, sir.
- Why'd you do that, doctor?
- Well, like I said,
I like your optimism.
Okay.
This field used for anything?
Mexican lad used to graze
his goats up here a while back.
Guess he quit the goat business.
- Goat must've liked to eat rocks.
- That's right.
I grew up out in West Texas,
and I know goats don't need much grass,
but I never did know one
- that liked to eat rocks.
- These were Fort Worth goats, coach.
Fort Worth goats are different.
[chuckling]
All right.
- Fort Worth goats, huh?
- [boys shouting]
- Uh-oh.
- Fight, fight, fight!
Kick his ass!
[shouting indistinctly]
Hey! Hey.
Stop it!
Didn't take you long
to make friends.
Hey, calm down. Take it easy, son.
- No, it's over. Hey.
- Calm down. Calm down.
Look at me. You all right?
What is going on?
[Doc] Nothing to be concerned
about, Frank.
A little misunderstanding about
who's gonna play what position
on the new football team, right, lads?
- That's right.
- Sure.
The rest of you should come out too.
Well, the way I see it,
you can either work the field
or play the field.
[mellow bluegrass music playing]
Hell, sounds good to me.
I'm in. See you on the field.
All right, good deal.
- Might as well.
- Okay.
Here we go.
Looks like there's gonna be
changes around here, Frank.
Oh, nothing changes around here, Doc.
[flask clanking]
You should know that more than anyone.
[Doc] Rusty knew that life
inside the orphanage
held little promise.
Now, Chicken, I'm putting
a football team together,
and we could use a good athlete
like yourself.
Thank you, sir,
but I ain't never played football before.
I ain't so good with balls,
just mainly eggs.
[Rusty] I want you to think about joining
this team I'm putting together.
[Doc] He knew that football
would inevitably
bring self-respect to these boys.
We teach survival here.
If we don't,
they'll never make it on the outside.
Well, the Masonic board
hired us to implement a curriculum
and a football program
that'll prepare these kids
for new opportunities
beyond manual labor.
Right.
I'm sure you're probably aware
that the Interscholastic League
has strict guidelines
when it comes to admitting teams.
- Yes, sir.
- Convince them,
then go ahead
and have your football program.
- Okay.
- It's very important
that it does not interfere
with the day-to-day at the home.
What is it that you produce at the home,
if I might ask?
[Wynn] More paper!
And get these rollers cleaned faster.
You boys wouldn't last
two days in the outside world.
Hey! God! These are two-dollar shoes!
It was just an accident.
Do you have something
to say for yourself?
- Do you?
- Sir, my brother ain't said
- more than four words since he was little.
- He's got a mouth, doesn't he?
Are you dumb or are you just plain crazy?
Listen here. He's clumsy.
- He didn't mean to...
- Who you talking to?
Hug that pole!
This should open his mouth.
I have a little prescription.
Maybe this will open your mouth, huh?
It's a little kiss of mercy!
Yeah, that'll make you
wide-mouthed, won't it, boy?
- Whoo!
- Agh!
You gonna feel this one, boy!
You gonna...
Do not hit that boy.
You understand?
- I think you're making a mistake.
- Yeah?
And you, you don't have
any authority here.
It's my class.
- My rules apply.
- Actually, it's 9:20.
These boys are due
in my classroom at 9 a.m.
Do not release them tardy again.
See, those are my rules.
All right?
Let's go, gentlemen, right now.
Let's go. Come on.
My name's Harvey Nual Russell.
But you can call me Mr. Russell.
I grew up in Fredonia, Texas,
and my father farmed and he drank.
He's a better drinker
than he was a farmer.
Life's difficult,
hard work leads to great beginnings,
knowledge is power, and education...
Boys, that's the key.
So let's begin with a question.
You got four apples
and they're setting in a basket,
and you got to feed 16 people.
How many baskets do you need?
What do you think?
Any of you.
What about you, young man?
Howdy, sir.
My name is Leon gosh damn Pickett,
and honestly I think the answer's none.
Make everybody bring
their own damn apples.
[boys laugh]
Incorrect, and I don't appreciate
the swearing, Mr. Pickett.
- Sit down.
- Yes, sir. Thank you.
Take your hat off. You too.
Get your head up off the desk.
Get your hand out of your head.
How about you?
Stand up.
[stuttering] I'm not sure, sir.
Four into 16.
What do you think?
It's all right. Sit down.
Mr. Brown, what do you say?
Four into 16.
- Four.
- Four.
He's correct. Come on up to the board.
Show everyone how you figured that out.
Come on up, son.
Go ahead.
Just write it out.
There you go.
It's okay. Just show them
how you figured it out.
It's all right, son.
You're the teacher.
Figure it out yourself.
[boys muttering]
It's all right.
We'll get to it.
Now, who of you
has played football before?
[mellow bluegrass music playing]
How many of you actually held
a football before today?
Least we don't
have to start from scratch.
Where are their shoes at?
We have two seasons here,
one with shoes and one without shoes.
This here is the without shoes season.
You need shoes to play football.
And helmets and pads and jerseys.
But you do have players.
- Optimism.
- Right.
Okay, boys, one step at a time.
Now, the more mass an object has,
the greater its kinetic energy.
Now, DeWitt's energy,
it's clearly greater than
old Snoggs over here,
because Snoggs is a little smaller.
Snoggs's velocity can be reached quicker,
and he can maneuver it
to divert and transfer that energy
in another direction, faster.
Get down in defensive stance for me.
Notice your opponent's knuckles.
If they're white,
he's leaning too far forward.
You throw him off his feet.
Balance is key.
All right, let's line up.
Eight-on-eight, right down here.
[Doc] Choose a partner, one-on-one.
[Rusty] On one.
Ready!
Set!
Hike!
[Doc] When you hear the word "hike,"
that means the ball has been centered
and play may commence.
Ready! Set! Hike!
Come on, boys.
You got to use leverage.
Drive with your lower body.
You can't wrap up and put
your opponent in a headlock.
Looks like an Arthur Murray dance class.
- It ain't funny.
- And it ain't funny!
[yells]
What the hell, Hardy?
Whoa!
- [Hardy] Should've been quicker.
- You all right? You okay?
Hey, check him out.
I'm here. Don't move, Scott.
- You just got your bell rung.
- Now, here's what's gonna happen.
Mr. Brown gonna run
to the water tower and back
till I say stop or you drop.
You got it?
- Yeah.
- What?
Yes, sir.
That's right.
- Now, hit it.
- Move.
God dog.
Sumbitch is still running.
Toughest old mule I ever saw.
He ain't so tough.
If he ain't tough,
then you're a little flower,
because he tossed you around
like a rag doll.
My old man used to say
the best horses
are always the hardest to break.
Yeah.
Every horse wants to be ridden.
Some are just particular
about when and how.
I'll drink to that.
- Here you go.
- No, no.
Juanita'd have my hide.
Funny the things you miss
about a woman.
Even the henpecking, no offense.
You ever been married?
Yes, sir.
Agnes.
Lost her and the baby in childbirth.
Long time ago.
These kids are my family now.
Kind of strange, because
that's what she always wanted.
Lots of kids.
I'm sorry. I didn't know that.
I know these boys think the world of you.
That's for sure.
It true you don't take
a paycheck up here?
I don't know where you heard that story.
- Is that true?
- Well,
I know damn well
you're not here for the do-re-mi.
You ain't got the do-re-mi, boy
If you ain't got that do-re-mi
[Hardy shouts]
Think you might be
too hard on that boy?
I'll go check on him.
That's enough.
Hardy.
Now, look, I understand
that you don't want to be here,
and I get that you're angry,
but I want you to know something.
Look at me.
I'm here for you, son.
I'm not your son.
You can make me play
this little game of yours.
Don't mean I got to like you.
We done here, coach?
Go ahead.
[Wynn] Every second
that they're on the field,
we're losing money.
You make it sound like we're
running a damn assembly line.
Yeah, well...
Just ease up
on any new printing jobs
till I can figure
this football program out.
- Bill.
- Hey, new rules, page 24, section C.
It's gonna be tough to field a team
if most of these boys
aren't able to pass
their standardized test.
- Section C?
- Mm-hm.
Watch where you're going there.
Yeah, just keep it moving.
- Speak of the devil.
- [Rusty] To Mrs. Russell.
- [Remmert] Mr. Russell?
- Y'all should be on opposite sides.
Yes, sir?
The Interscholastic League has agreed
to hear your request for admittance.
That's great news. I'm happy to hear that.
[Remmert] However, new rules state
that all players are required
to take a basic aptitude test.
- All right.
- Rules are rules.
Shame to come all this way
and not even be able to play ball.
Page 24, section C.
Oh. Thank you.
You take that with you
and let me know
if you have any questions.
- All right, then.
- Thank you for your time.
The sensational struggle for existence.
The result of this
is the formation of a new species,
perhaps known as
the great orphan football player.
I kind of like that.
It's science, gentlemen, it's evolution,
and it's happening all around us.
I do appreciate your time.
Frank, it's always good to see you.
I'm gonna get on to class,
and thanks for the notebook.
[upbeat big-band music playing]
The survival of those
who are better equipped for surviving.
Some are heritable traits.
That means they're inherited.
Others are learned.
That means you learn them.
[Juanita] "Those," "these,"
"there," "that."
[all] "Those," "these," "there," "that."
[Rusty] But our focus will be
on learning through
intense practice through repetition,
so that we can pass
this test together.
Fumble!
Come on, coach, that's horseshit.
Horse excrement.
I've never seen a more chaotic clamber
for a football in my entire life!
Most boys your age
could pass this test blindfolded,
but you're not most boys, are you?
You need to focus.
They had the fundamental idea.
- Are you kidding? Come on.
- No, sir.
You're better than most boys.
You're unique.
You've dealt with some hardship,
and now you got something to prove,
and that's called motivation.
Is this test gonna cover female parts?
Because I'm looking to get
a little hands-on practice,
you know, sharpen my skills.
[all laughing]
No, Snoggs,
unfortunately for you, it won't.
But the examination will cover
reading, writing, science and arithmetic.
Arithme-what?
- Does that mean we got to dance?
- Coach, I don't dance.
Everything that's donated
to the home goes down here.
[Rusty] All right, boys,
this is from Dutch Meyer,
Texas Christian University
athletic department.
Shoulder pads, helmets and cleats.
Make sure to find cleats that fit you.
Don't want you getting blisters.
I'm gonna teach you
how to become ladies.
- Come on, it'll be fun.
- Yes!
- [engine sputtering]
- [laughing]
What'd I tell you?
- What's that?
- "Tie-on."
- What do you think, coach?
- I think it looks good.
Hey, you got those on
backwards, Chicken.
Is a dozen six or 12?
I don't know.
- "Block"?
- That's right, Leon.
Thank you, sir.
Twenty percent off next time.
Good doing business with you.
[Rusty] That's where all life began,
and I've always found it
particularly fascinating that...
Damn it, boys!
All right, that's good.
[boy whistles]
"Wild Saddle"?
"Men's Club"?
We're not here to practice our reading!
Get to work! Now!
[Miller] Mr. Russell, you forgot
the final valence electron.
You're right. Thank you.
You don't pass the test,
you don't play football.
So let's buck up and let's bear down
and let's get back to work.
[mellow bluegrass music playing]
Two minutes.
- Time.
- Pencils down.
[man] You'll have your results
on Wednesday.
Stack them neatly.
Thank you.
It's a good field.
Well, I don't know if you can
technically call it a field.
[Juanita] Well, it doesn't
have to be fancy
to know what it represents.
Even if those boys don't pass,
we have a purpose here
that's greater than football.
I ever tell you how attractive you are
when you're optimistic?
No, I don't believe you have.
Well...
maybe one day I will.
- Oh, Rusty.
- Hey.
[laughing]
Hike!
[grunts]
Hold on! There's a penalty here!
Carlos, you may not trip anyone!
[speaking in Spanish]
[in English] That's 15-yard penalty
against the defense.
- Let's move it back.
- They only take the young ones.
I want you to be good, all right?
Take care of your new mom and dad.
I'm sure you boys
are all chomping at the bit
to hear about your test results.
Miraculously, some of you pulled it off.
Scott, Hal, Jerry, Daniel, step forward.
I'm sorry, boys. Didn't pass.
Better luck next time.
Which means the remaining
of you can play ball.
That is, if Mr. Russell
gets you all accepted into the district.
[Rusty] Natural selection
seems to have reduced our team
to only 12 players.
So let's consider
that high-level evolutionary fitness
will allow us to play both ways.
Leon, you and Chicken
got to be ready
to rotate in at various positions.
Y'all think you can do that?
- It sounds like they're a lesser species.
- I should be the first string.
I'm the fittest sumbitch out here.
[air hissing]
Pickett, you know
that was our only football?
Sorry, coach.
All right, now hit the tower.
Let's go. Hustle!
They really wear on me sometimes.
I got to be honest with you.
At least one good thing
came out of all that.
What's that?
We got a punter.
That's true. Can you stitch that thing up?
I'm not a veterinarian, but I'll try.
- Let me get it.
- All right.
[chuckling]
[Juanita] Well, girls, I hope this works.
- Morning.
- [Juanita] Morning.
- What's this?
- It's your new football.
Is that right?
We're making two of them,
in case you pop one.
Very fitting for these trying times.
I like it.
Scoot over.
What's that? A science experiment?
That's right, Snoggs, to see
who wants to play and earn a real ball.
Because if you don't want it,
ain't no use in us being out here,
sweating like a bunch of dirt farmers.
Practice over?
I don't know, Doc. It's up to them.
Six-on-six.
Miller, A.P., Fairbanks, Snoggs, DeWitt,
you're with me, and I'm playing tailback.
- Why you get to play tailback?
- Because I'm tall and handsome.
I like your hands-on approach.
In my business,
we call it scouting.
We get the ball first.
Losers steal the grape juice.
[Doc] I'll be damned
if Wheatie doesn't look like a leader.
- Set. Hike!
- [grunts]
[laughing]
Lineman, maybe?
I think you're getting
this scouting thing down.
[Wheatie] Hike!
- [Rusty] All right.
- [Doc] There's a runner!
Talent in each of these boys.
It's our job to find it.
- Think you're up to the task?
- What?
I need you to have
your wits about you, Doc.
Don't you worry about me.
You're supposed to tackle him.
Hike!
Oh, my.
[gasping]
[pensive music playing]
[Doc] Are you all right?
It's just flour. We can wash it out.
[Rusty] Get back to the game, boys.
We can't. Hardy busted the ball.
Don't stand around scratching your nuts.
Go on, hit the tower, all of you, pronto!
It's all right. It's all right.
No, I'm fine, Doc. I'm okay. I'm fine.
[George] Rusty, look at me. You're fine.
[bomb whistling, then explosion]
Hey, it's time.
[gunshots]
We've got to spread out.
[Rusty] George!
Guys!
Stay with me, George.
[Doc] I'm just hoping
we got a quorum of coaches.
[Rusty] Well, once we get in there,
let me handle it, Doc.
- How you feeling?
- I'm good, thank you.
[Rusty] This'll go great.
- Rusty Russell.
- Luther Scarborough.
I heard you took a charity post
at the orphanage.
I thought, surely I must be mistaken,
but here you are.
Luther, good to see you.
Been since the '35 playoffs, right?
- It was a close game.
- Tough loss. For you.
- You did a good job down there.
- [chuckles] Yeah, it got me one of these.
Oh, that's nice. Is that, what, topaz?
Apparently, you boys are
filing a request to join my district.
That's correct, and I better get in there.
Good to see you.
[laughs]
Orphan football.
That's as dumb as letting women vote.
[Rusty] I believe that
if we show faith in these boys,
they'll prove themselves,
much as David did against Goliath.
All I ask is that you give these boys
a chance. A chance to compete.
The Interscholastic League requires
a minimum enrollment of 500 students
to compete in Class A football.
Your home has only 150 children.
Your football team has only 12.
That's right, 12.
Motion is denied.
All right, let's get back
to why we're here today.
Excuse me, Mr. Chairman.
I would like to request a clarification
from the committee, if I may.
- And you are?
- I'm Dr. E.P. Hall.
I'm the Masonic Homes physician
and the team medic.
He's the assistant.
He's a drunk.
- [Rodney] You're the assistant medic?
- Assistant coach. He's head of defense.
Mr. Hall, do you
or do you not have something to address?
Yes, sir, I do.
If I may, I would like
to direct your attention to page 27,
paragraph two of the
league rule book. It states and I quote:
"Any school that does not meet
the minimum enrollment of 500 students
can be admitted with a majority vote
of the coaches in the school's division."
Unquote. Now, sir, I am a firm believer
in doing things by the book,
which in this case, Chairman Kidd,
I do believe
that you participated in its authorship.
Am I in the right?
That's a...
That's a good job, doctor. Indeed, I did.
Accordingly, sir, I would like to suggest
that all of the coaches
here from Division A
vote on our admittance
and we'll accept the results.
- How's that, gentlemen?
- [scoffs]
Good to see y'all.
[Doc] Much obliged, Mr. Secretary.
Is this a joke?
Page 27, paragraph two.
Read it and weep, Luther.
Well, hell, let's vote.
As requested
from our doctor, assistant medic,
all those in favor, raise your hand.
[big band music playing on radio]
[Fairbanks] Hey, guys, they're back.
[Wheatie] They don't look happy.
Doc doesn't have his whiskey.
Y'all are expecting someone
to do something in favor of us?
Ain't gonna happen.
Why you always gotta be
such a downer, Hardy?
I'm just trying to tell y'all how it is.
No one cares about us.
How you doing, boys?
Just go on, say it.
We didn't get in.
Go ahead.
[clears throat]
Well, sir...
- I can't do it.
- What? You said you wanted to do it.
- I said I might do it.
- You told me you were the elder statesman.
You're the head coach.
All right, I'm just gonna
tell it to you straight, boys.
Bad news is...
each one of you is gonna need
to put on about ten pounds,
because y'all gonna be playing
Class A Texas high-school football.
I'll see you on the field.
Good job, huh?
Come on!
- [cheering]
- Huh?
Let's us show Poly
and those city boys what we're made of!
Yeah!
[announcer] The Poly Parrots welcome
Masonic Home in their first game ever.
[Rusty] They gotta put their best 11
up against our best 11.
[Wheatie] Their 11 looks a lot bigger.
- [all yell]
- It's David versus Goliath, all right.
[announcer] This is gonna be entertaining.
[Doc] Chicken, you all right?
I had to use
12-gauge baling wire on mine.
Today, we're going up against a team
that's won two state championships
in the past five years,
so you got everything to gain
and nothing to lose, so play that way.
One more thing.
We win today, we take home the game ball.
So listen to me.
Hit that field
with heart, focus, and conviction,
and you will see good results.
Let's get it done.
Bribery. Now, there's a new motivation.
- To the game ball.
- Let's do it.
[Pop] Mr. Hawk, I'm proud
you got your football team out.
- Yeah.
- You only got 12 players.
Most of them look like horse jockeys.
Y'all got some kind of weight restriction?
Might as well call them the Mighty Mites.
- Can I have that?
- You got it.
Why not? You're the writer.
- Pop.
- Hey, Doc.
- Give me a quote after the game.
- I will.
Mr. Hawk, we're delighted
you're making our game.
Good to see you, sir.
After all the years and all the talk,
we got a football team, thanks to you.
Thanks to you
for bringing this coach in and his wife.
- How's he doing?
- He's doing remarkable.
You've met Juanita.
They're great teachers,
and he's a great football coach.
We finally got a team.
Finally got a team, thanks to you.
- Thanks to you.
- Okay.
[announcer] Only 12 players
on the Orphan team,
and not one can push 200 pounds.
Folks, this is gonna get ugly pretty fast.
Fellas, the visiting team
will call it in the air.
- Masonic Home...
- Orphans.
Orphans, what is your call?
- Heads.
- Heads.
It's tails. Poly?
- We'll receive.
- Poly will receive.
Y'all's parents couldn't find the stadium?
[laughs] Must be pretty stupid.
[announcer] There's a skirmish
on the field as Hardy Brown wallops...
- Come on, Hardy!
- The Poly captain Percy Maywood.
I wouldn't wanna be
on the wrong side of that kid.
- Who was that?
- [Juanita] Hardy Brown.
My daddy says
he's the toughest sumbitch around.
[laughing]
We're not supposed to repeat
what your father says at home.
Can I quote that?
- Oh, no, sir, please don't.
- We'll use "son of a gun."
That is unnecessary roughness.
Fifteen-yard penalty will be enforced.
Hardy, you're out! Come on!
Fairbanks, Wheatie, y'all get in position.
Chicken, you're in.
[Doc] It'll be all right, son.
Leon, knock one down there.
Keep them in the 20.
Line up. Come on, boys.
- What are you thinking, son?
- What are you thinking, son?
[whistle blows]
[announcer] And the Orphans
pound the ball into the air
as it twists in a spiral,
straight into Percy Maywood's hands.
[mellow bluegrass music playing]
Jesus.
Get him.
[announcer] To the 40, the 30, the 20.
And Maywood walks in for an easy score.
What was Coach Russell thinking,
leaving the district champion
Temple Wildcats?
We missed every tackle.
That's all right. Keep going.
I find it embarrassing.
[Rusty] All right, A.P. Good snap, boys.
[announcer] Seems to me
they have no place on this field.
I hope none of them get hurt.
Fumble! Get the...
a fumble that is scooped up by Poly
and returned for a walk-in touchdown.
My Lord,
they're not doing too good, are they?
Stay down in the dirt
where you belong, loser orphan.
- Hey, hey, hey, take it easy.
- Hey, Fairbanks, cut that out!
Come on, now, Frank,
a little scrapping builds character.
- It's good for the boys.
- I don't think it does after every play.
- My knee feels funny.
- Can you walk it off?
- No.
- Doc, check it out.
DeWitt! Come here.
Cheer up, son! It's just the first game!
I need you to take 42
and drive him back, son.
- Yes, sir.
- Don't let him drive you back.
Get out there.
Hardy, you're in. You ready?
These boys need you.
Show them
what you're made of. Get out there.
Come on, boys, you got it!
Glad you could join us, Hardy.
Fairbanks, the ball's coming to you,
to the left this time.
By some miracle, can we please block?
Just give me the damn ball.
Okay, Hardy, you're getting the ball.
On one and...
[boys] Break!
Come on.
Good blocks, now, boys. You got it.
Six-two-one! Hike!
[announcer] And here's the snap.
Brown gets the ball, sweeps to the right,
mowing over a Poly defender.
- Cuts back to the left...
- Go! Go!
And tries to bring life
into the Orphan offense.
Runs over Maywood and into the end zone
on a magnificent run. Touchdown, Brown.
We scored! Yes!
[whistle blowing]
Hold everything, folks.
There's a penalty flag on the play.
Clipping, number 40! No touchdown!
- DeWitt, you dumb son of a bitch!
- Hey, he made a mistake, Hardy!
He's always making mistakes
and you're no better!
- Hey!
- Hey!
[boys shouting]
- Get off him!
- Boys!
- Stop.
- [Doc] Break it up!
Stop it! Get off the field!
- Just stop that.
- Get off the field! Get out of here!
- Go on!
- Damn it.
- Stop!
- Get off the field!
What's the matter with you?
Get out of here!
What are you doing? Are you copying me?
Let me see that.
I put this one here.
That's a funny formation.
What are you two doing?
I think I might have found
my new offensive coordinator.
If I can even put an offense together.
It doesn't sound like you're adapting.
I once heard a wise old coach
say something about
helping his players see
what they can become.
You see how she tells me what to do?
Mm-hm.
You think that's funny?
- No.
- I don't either.
The boogie-woogie shake
Boogie-woogie shake
Boogie-woogie shake
Come on. Are we not gonna talk anymore
just because we got our butts whupped?
Exactly!
[Rusty] All right.
I want to see y'all down on the field.
Let's go. Hustle. Come on.
[pensive music playing]
[Wheatie] What are we doing, coach?
All right,
it's your new offense, Mr. Sealey.
Here's the first change.
A yard in between each man,
all the way down the line.
Okay, Fairbanks, take it three yards back,
get on the same line as Hardy.
I'm gonna have you line up a quarter yard
directly behind A.P. for the snap.
Let me show you how.
- What position does that make me?
- Quarterback.
Quarterback takes the snap.
He's gonna pivot to his right.
Halfback comes forward.
Fake that handoff to Hardy.
Fairbanks will roll right.
I'm gonna pitch it to him,
or if he gets too far out,
fake the pitch, keep it yourself,
take it downfield.
Fairbanks becomes your primary blocker.
You'll be my coach on the field.
Make the decisions.
This is how we'll beat the bigger teams.
You gotta adapt
if you're gonna be competitive.
We don't have the size,
so we gotta utilize
what we do have, speed.
Quick huddles, few time-outs.
Catch them off guard.
Wear their defense down.
That's how we'll do it.
What do y'all think so far?
I think we'll get
our asses kicked here to El Paso.
I don't think it matters
what offense we run.
Won't be good anyways.
Mr. Brown, what do you think?
We had no business
playing Poly to begin with.
We got outplayed and outcoached, coach.
Mr. Brown's right.
And I take full responsibility
for what happened on that field today.
Everything.
But I did learn something.
I told DeWitt
to drive number 77 to hell and back.
And I'm glad I did,
because I got to see
what he's really made of.
And I believe in him.
And now he better believe in himself.
And I get it. It's tough to believe
when all you've known
is hurt and loss and abandonment.
I know because I felt it my whole life.
I'm an orphan.
Just like all of y'all.
I know what it feels like
to not have a mother or a father
cheering you on from the stands.
I look at you boys, and I can honestly say
I'm proud to be an orphan.
I'm not ashamed, and I'm not worthless.
I'm a mighty warrior.
And you'll feel the same way
if you can believe in yourselves
and believe in each other.
You do that, you'll be able to do
what they all say is impossible.
So say it with me. I am worthy.
- [boys muttering] I am worthy.
- Believe it!
- I am valuable.
- [boys] I am valuable!
- I'm a mighty warrior!
- I'm a mighty warrior!
- I'm a mighty orphan!
- I'm a mighty orphan!
Believe as I do.
Because it's true. It's true.
Leon, break it down.
All right, get in here.
Let's get a "Orphans" on three!
One, two, three!
[boys] Orphans!
[boys laughing]
Mr. Hardy, let me have a word with you.
- I ain't gonna yell your stupid chant.
- I'm not gonna make you.
But you do need to make a choice.
Now, I obligated you to be here.
That was my mistake.
You're free to leave anytime you want.
That run of yours today, son,
that was one of the best I've ever seen.
And it's all natural instinct.
Must've felt pretty good.
Why don't you go warm up?
What do you think of the new offense?
Sir, I think you'll piss
a lot of people off, but I like it.
Now, if you excuse me,
I'm freezing my nuts off.
All right.
[Doc] Armed with Betty's drawing,
Rusty was about to
change the game of football forever.
Shift!
[announcer] The Orphan offense is lined up
in a formation I have never seen before.
What the hell is he doing
lining up behind the center like that?
Appears to be a new formation, coach.
I got that.
Looks like cheating to me.
Six-two, split!
- Hike!
- [announcer] Sealey takes the snap.
Pitches it to the outside to Hardy Brown.
He takes it up the sideline.
Brown rumbles down the field.
They fooled the entire defense
on that play.
I'll be damned.
Hardy Brown takes it all the way
for an 80-yard touchdown.
[whistle blowing and crowd cheering]
That's a good start.
Gosh dang, he's fast, coach.
He is. He's fast. You're observant.
Everybody's got a gift. What's ours?
Shift, shift!
Shift. There's a shift.
- We're not looking good, coach.
- Dang it.
- Thataway. Huddle.
- Hike!
[announcer] These fellas have come out
swinging tonight, take no prisoners.
Sweep left, sweep left!
Sideline!
- The Orphans have fooled the Rams again.
- Catch him!
Fairbanks runs into the end zone
untouched and smiling.
- Touchdown.
- Oh, my.
I'm thinking about shooting all
the parents, starting my own orphanage.
Maybe that'll motivate these boys.
I want you to imagine
your opponent is Mr. Wynn.
Thanks, Doc.
- That's a good analogy, Doc.
- We'll see.
[boy] Set. Hike!
[announcer] Speedy Leonard Roach
leveling the halfback.
Nice to meet you, fat-ass.
The Rams
are getting their butts handed to them.
My God, Sealey has it.
Sealey looks like a running duck
as he hits the wide-open pastures.
- They're running outside, coach.
- They are running to the outside.
[announcer]
the five, and touchdown, Orphans.
[cheering]
Good job, boys.
[announcer]
That'll be the dagger right there.
And Coach Russell's underdog Orphans
will get to take home the game ball.
[Doc] Nothing I admire more
than a full-service football team.
And they played a great game today.
They played all right.
Still room for improvement.
Improvement? Didn't we just
whup the tar out of General Mills?
- You mean Mineral Wells?
- You know that's who I meant.
Hey, Doc, we had eight penalties
for over 100 yards.
We can't compete against real teams
playing like this.
We gotta get these boys refocused.
We just win our first game
with your new system,
and suddenly, you're a pessimist.
- I need another drink.
- Oh, now you're mad, huh?
I'm not mad. I'm thirsty.
[Rusty] How's it looking, Leon?
[Leon] Try to turn her over, coach.
I saw Claudette Colbert
do this in a movie once.
We're gonna be here all day.
[Leon] Shit.
You orphans can change the oil in my car
when you get done there.
[all laughing]
Get down here and say that to my face.
- I'm right here, boy. Come on.
- [Rusty] Come on. Load up. Let's go.
You just wait, I'll tear you up.
- You heard him.
- You don't want none of this.
[Luther] You boys need a lift?
No, we're good. How you doing?
Very well. Coach, you need to get yourself
a nice bus like this for these boys.
Yeah, that's nice.
Fella on the radio said
y'all got your first victory.
[Rusty] We sure did.
Everyone beats Mineral Wells.
[Poly players laughing]
See you next season, coach.
If you survive this one.
I like them tiny cowboy boots.
I wanna get some for my daughter.
Where you get those?
[chuckles]
Y'all enjoy that fresh air.
Good to see you.
Doc, you shouldn't have done that.
I know. It was half full.
That's not what I meant.
Come on, get in. Let's go.
Huh.
Kid, you ought to come
work for me at the Star-Telegram.
You'll sell more papers.
[Leon] You know what them Dallas girls say
after a good poke?
No, what?
"Get off me, Dad.
You're crushing my smokes."
[laughing]
[announcer] The Highland Park Scots
are one of the toughest teams in Texas,
and a favorite in the district.
You still write fantasy
for that rag of yours?
Amon Carter.
We ain't the Fort Worth Star-Telegram,
but we're surviving.
[laughs]
What the hell you doing
so far east, anyway?
Lose a bird dog or a wife?
I wanted to see
what all the goddang fuss was about.
I tell you what. I'll make you a wager.
I'll give you your 12 Orphans,
plus 30 points.
- Thirty points? Five dollars.
- Uh-huh.
Between the prince and the pauper?
Pun intended.
Five will get you 50. Done.
- [Rusty] You all right?
- [Chicken] Yes, sir.
Tell you what.
I can't believe what I overheard.
Scots say that they're gonna
beat us by 50 points. Fifty!
They said we're nothing
but some hillbilly orphans,
and that I was a washed-up,
four-eyed, half-blind orphan coach.
- And that hurts my feelings.
- Mine too.
So, what do y'all say we go out there
and show
these silver-spooned Scotties
how us country boys play ball?
And from the moment we hit that field,
from that first whistle, we light them up?
Yeah!
Get out there and take care of business!
Come on, boys! Let's do it.
This is what we worked towards.
Get out there. Attaway.
Reverse psychology. Good one.
Fight, fight, fight, you Mighty Mites!
Run the left, run the right!
Down the middle and through the air!
The Mighty Mites will all be there!
[announcer] The Scots will receive
as the Orphans get ready to kick.
[mellow bluegrass music playing]
Bouncing on the ground
and scooped up
by the Scottie return man,
who turns upfield.
[referee] Fumble!
He's lit up by number 43, Hardy Brown.
[cheering]
Sealey lines up
a quarter of a yard behind center...
All right, boys, come on.
Hike!
Sealey tosses it to Fairbanks.
Takes it down to the ten,
the five, and touchdown, Orphans!
[whistle blowing]
- Touchdown!
- There we go, Doc.
- You sandbagging me, pauper?
- Every chance.
Fifty-three!
[announcer] The Orphans are
running circles around the Scotties.
Look at Snoggs!
Snoggs Roach goes on a wild ride,
as the Scots halfback
drags him for well over five yards
to get the Scots close
to the first-down marker.
Beat us by 50, huh?
- It's a damn rodeo.
- Show some mercy, Snoggs!
[laughing]
- Time-out.
- Highland Park calls a time-out.
Beck covers the guy taking the snap.
Hank, you take the halfback.
Milo, you take the fullback.
Hike!
[announcer] Scots cause a turnover
and have found a solution
in shutting down the Wing-by tackling everybody in the backfield,
no matter who has the ball.
They figured out
how to shut down your Wing-T.
Looks that way, Doc.
Don't worry. My defense will hold them.
[announcer] Well, this is it, folks.
Do or die for the Scots,
who can punch it in for the win.
Not over till it's over.
Shift!
Hike!
Whoa! Yes! Defense!
[whistle blowing]
[announcer] Ladies and gentlemen,
Highland Park has lost.
Thank you, easy money.
Best 50 bucks I ever spent.
Congratulations, coach.
We should've never voted you in.
[announcer] I cannot believe
my eyes, folks,
and I'm just as stunned
as all the Highland Park fans here today.
This one might go down
as one of the biggest upsets
in all of Texas high-school football.
[mellow bluegrass music playing]
[boys] Break!
[boy] Hike!
Wouldn't old Luther Scarborough
have him a heyday
if he saw you out here
coaching these boys on Saturday?
Now, he'd get ahold of the UIL,
get you kicked out of Class A football
faster than I can talk about it.
[Rusty] I'm not coaching.
They're playing on their own, for fun.
I'm eating an apple.
Lot of talk about that Hardy Brown boy.
He hits godawful hard just to be 17.
Well, Pop, that's what people do.
They talk and they gossip.
Or in your case,
write what people gossip about.
What if I wrote your Orphans
going to state this year?
You'd lose a lot of readers,
especially on the Poly side.
I'd be careful.
I won't lose readers.
They'll want you to win.
Everybody'll be behind
a team with nothing, just like them.
Team cobbled together
with a bunch of resilient orphans,
on top of that, an orphan coach.
Quite the backstory.
War hero.
Overcame blindness
to become an all-American.
Sounds like
you already got your story, Pop.
Good talking to you.
And I like your articles. Keep it up.
Y'all remember what to do?
Call this the Snoggs Special.
You got this?
I can do it. I got it.
[Wheatie] On one and...
[boys] Break!
Set.
- I'm gonna smoke you, Chicken.
- You try.
Hike!
Damn it, Snoggs!
If you can't do this,
I'll get Fairbanks to.
- I can do it!
- [Leon] You know what they say?
You play with it too much,
you'll go blind.
Hey, Leon.
Snoggs Special, again.
[Doc] In the depth of the Depression,
people needed something to cling to.
And Pop was right.
The Orphans were just the classic underdog
that the common folk could get behind.
This love affair between Texas
and its band of orphans
was not hard to fathom.
Granted, most folks
were in love with football.
It was just as indigenous
as oil wells and tumbleweeds.
These scrappy orphans
are undersized, outnumbered,
and every damn one of them
plays both ways.
I mean, they are full
of bull piss and vinegar.
That's exactly the kind of
Cinderella story this country needs,
which is why
you should've been the one to break it
and not the Fort Worth Press.
[laughs] I had no idea
you had enough leisure time
to read every paper
in the country, Mr. President.
I don't. But Eleanor does.
By the time
anyone can figure out how to stop it,
I'm sure you will have already thought
of an even better scheme.
- That's what you think.
- It's what I know.
All right, I wanna bring up
one thing about the offense.
[Remmert] Now, hang on. Hang on.
Get away. I want to see C.D.
C.D.! C.D.!
Who's C.D.?
[emotional music playing]
I am.
Oh...
Oh, C.D.
Oh, my boy, I've...
Oh, I've missed you.
Now, let me get a look at you.
Oh, you're so tall and thin.
You...
You look like your daddy.
How old are you now?
I'm 17.
Been here almost ten years now,
since the day you dropped me off.
Oh...
I'm...
I'm so sorry.
I never should've given you up.
It was a mistake.
I...
After your father left,
I just... I didn't know what to do.
What are you doing here, Mom?
Oh... I want you to come with me and Earl
and spend this coming
Thanksgiving with us,
so we can be a family again.
He's very nice, once you get to know him.
So come on.
Come on, baby,
you get your things and let's go.
C.D.?
That's not my name anymore.
It's Wheatie.
Oh, okay.
Well, Wheatie, come on.
Hurry up and grab your things.
Wanda, get the damn kid and let's go.
Now!
Know what? I'm gonna be in the car.
Just come to the car. We're gonna go home.
No.
I am home.
Don't you talk back to me!
I am your mother!
- [Remmert] Now, hold on.
- Get in the car.
- Calm down.
- Come on. Come to the car, darling.
Please come to the car.
- Come to the car!
- I said...
- This is not your home!
- [Remmert] Ms. Sealey!
You let go of me!
- You all right?
- [sobbing]
[Wanda] Well...
if you...
If you change your mind...
You all right?
What are we gonna do
without a quarterback now, coach?
[car engine starts]
[Wheatie breathing heavily]
[grunting]
[yells, then sobs]
You're an orphan now, C.D. Sealey.
Come here.
Hey, you'll be all right.
Mommy!
[Mary Jane] George, look after Rusty.
[George] Rusty, it's time.
[gunfire]
When you run like hell out of here,
you're gonna break right.
We got to spread out.
[man] Attack! Spread out!
[Rusty] George!
[sergeant] Spread out!
[train horn blaring]
[Doc] He spread them out on the field
and let them run. Totally innovative.
[Rusty] Widen out, Snoggs.
They can't do this.
They can't spread out all over the field.
As long as they have seven on the line,
they can spread out however they want.
This ain't football.
You don't just spread out.
[Doc] He did it because his players
were too small to fight toe-to-toe
with the bigger boys
from the bigger schools.
[crowd cheering]
[lively jazz music playing]
[Doc] The spread offense was simple.
The ends break wide
to get open and catch the ball.
Until that time,
passing and catching the football
was something as rare
as Rusty Russell himself.
The spread offense would go on to become
one of the greatest innovations
of the passing game
in modern football.
And Pop was right.
Everyone from El Paso to Brownsville
had taken a fancy
to the perennial underdogs
in their tattered uniforms.
And winning did exactly
what Rusty thought it would for the boys.
Being an orphan,
and one from the Masonic Home,
was something
you could now say with pride.
Naturally, the rough-hewn boys
playing football
would soon be idealized
like the cowboys of old.
That's not your money.
That's the orphans'.
Are you accusing me of stealing? [laughs]
[laughs]
"Why so much grief for me?"
[announcer] Hardy Brown
just might be the toughest kid I've seen
in high-school football in years.
"No man will hurl me down
to Death, against my fate."
[announcer]
Like a ton of bricks, Brown lays into him.
[Hardy] "And fate?
No one alive has ever escaped it..."
[announcer]
The Mighty Orphans win again.
"neither brave man nor coward..."
[announcer] Coach Russell does it again.
The Orphans just might win the district.
[Hardy] "...I tell you, it is born
with us the day that we are born."
Very nice.
[boys clapping]
All right, boys, give me eight wins!
Eight wins! Get it!
[Doc] And just like that,
the Mites were now headed
to the regional championship
to face their old friends at Poly High.
Oh, Doc, did you forget something?
[both laughing]
Thank you, Juanita.
- For everything.
- Oh.
It's the best Thanksgiving
I've had in 20 years.
Felt like family again.
We are family, Doc.
If you ask me, y'all are the best thing
to happen to this place.
Good night.
Night.
[boy farts]
[boy] Sorry.
[boy] Snoggs?
[mellow bluegrass music playing]
[indistinct chatter]
[boy] I got that for you, ma'am.
I didn't know they were showing
Oliver Twist tonight.
Think you're cute?
Leave them, Hardy. They're just bullies.
[reporter on newsreel]
Two-time state champion Amarillo
is home to halfback Myrle Greathouse.
Standing over 6 feet tall
and weighing 240 pounds,
no wonder scouts are calling him
the best high-school player in America.
He's not. Hardy Brown is.
He's a monster, just unstoppable.
Well, hell, they ain't faced us yet.
[Wheatie] Damn right.
- [boy 1] Hey!
- [boy 2] Come on, back up!
- Let's go!
- Back it up!
- I'll see you on Friday!
- [Hardy] I'll see you there!
[lively music playing]
[hawks, then spits]
[vomits]
[all vomiting]
Son of a bitch!
[whistle blows]
Every decision in life
has consequences, boys.
Hit the tower. Hustle!
[Leon] I didn't even do anything.
If I live through this...
I'll kill you.
Do it now.
- Okay.
- [Rusty] Mr. Remmert.
Highland Park coaches pooled together
and bought brand-new game jerseys.
Although I got half a mind
to send them back
after that damn stunt
they pulled last night.
- Did you hear?
- Oh, yeah, I heard. Sorry.
Hey, thanks for these.
- Sorry to hear about your leg.
- Yeah, well.
[laughing]
Oh, man, they burned his leg.
- Yeah, I know. I heard about it.
- Yeah.
So, Doc...
we're the closest thing
to a father these boys have.
We got to set an example.
You got to have some dignity
and stop with this.
What we do, they'll do.
No more.
What the hell are you doing that...
No, it's all right.
I mean it.
There you go.
You'll be okay.
[mellow bluegrass music playing]
You can tell a lot about a man
by the kind of shoes he wears.
[toilet flushes]
What kind of man am I, Luther?
Oh...
You're the kind that wants
to be in charge, but ain't.
That's why you obsess
over your shiny shoes.
They make you feel important...
but you're not.
That's where you're wrong, coach.
Because what I have in this folder
could affect your season.
If that's not important to you,
well, I don't know.
[mumbling] Don't you want it?
[in normal voice] Yeah, I guess he does.
Uh...
I think that your brother-in-law,
Rodney Kidd,
will find that intriguing as well.
Is this legit, Frank?
I don't think it's gonna keep you
from playing them on Friday...
but it should be enough
to end their season.
What do you get?
There's a new principal position
over at Poly.
Maybe I should finally
put these shoes to work.
[tap dances]
Shiny.
[chuckles]
That's real cute, Frank.
[pensive music playing]
[groaning]
Ow! Ow! Ow!
- Get out!
- [Snoggs] I'm sorry!
- [blows landing]
- [Snoggs yells]
[Doc] Hardy Brown did not invent
- the face mask.
- [boy] Hike!
- [whistle blows]
- But he inspired a great need for it.
I told you I'll lay you out, boy.
[announcer] Hardy Brown isn't just
tackling these Poly players,
he's knocking them out of the game.
There's a lot more than
bragging rights at stake here today,
as the winner will go on
to the state championship.
Hike!
- [grunts]
- Come on, Hardy!
- Downfield block!
- [Doc] He's going!
[announcer]
Hardy Brown on the touchdown!
[crowd applauding]
[boy] Knocked him out so hard.
- Time-out. Time-out.
- [whistle blows]
I want you to check 43's shoulder pads.
He's got steel in his shoulder pads.
Coach, you can't be serious.
I'm dead serious.
Check his damn pads.
I need to check
43's shoulder pads, coach.
For what?
Well, coach thinks he's got
steel plates under there.
[chuckles]
Are you kidding me?
- Afraid I'm not.
- Let's do it.
Hey, Hardy!
Come on in here.
- Yeah, coach?
- All right.
Uh, Poly thinks you got steel plates
in your shoulder pads.
You got to take your shirt off.
Ain't no damn way
that those are legal shoulder pads.
[Rusty] Take it easy, Luther.
There ain't nothing under there.
- How old are you, boy?
- Seventeen.
Uh-huh.
We'll see about that.
You mind if we play football now?
Oh, you call what you're doing playing?
I call it cheating.
You're on the wrong side
of the field, Luther.
Get your damn hand off me, you zebra.
Get back out there, son.
Playing great, playing great.
I want you to take that halfback
out of the game permanently.
- You hear?
- Which one?
The one that's been getting
the ball the whole game.
- That one.
- I'll be kicked out.
Do I look like I give a damn? Go.
- Flat pass to Hardy on one.
- [whistle blows]
No, give it to Fairbanks.
Show off for Opal.
- He needs a little sugar tonight.
- Annie wants you to kiss her.
[all laughing]
Okay, you lovebirds.
- To Fairbanks on one and...
- Break!
[announcer] As the clock winds down,
the Mighty Mites
have dominated
every level of the game today,
as they add injury to insult
by running another play on offense.
All right, create a wedge
and make a hole, now.
Six-two, six-two!
Hike!
[Fairbanks yells]
Get your bag, Doc.
Why isn't he getting up?
I'm sorry. I didn't mean it.
- My God.
- [announcer] This doesn't look good,
as Coach Russell and Doc Hall
rush to his side.
- [boy] Doc, over here!
- [Rusty] Hold on, son.
Hold on. Breathe, breathe.
It's okay.
We got a compound fracture.
Carlos, stretcher, on the double!
Listen, son, we got to get you
off the field in a hurry.
Here we go, gentlemen. Quickly.
On three.
One, two, three.
- [screams]
- [Doc] Okay. All right.
Chicken, bring my bag, bring my bag.
[Rusty] One, two, three.
Mighty Orphans!
[Doc] As national attention
bolstered the boys' morale,
it was a bittersweet moment
for the Mites.
[starter pistol fires]
Goliath may have fallen,
but not without its cost.
They were headed
to the state championship
with only 11 players.
[stuttering] "There's a new sheriff
in Fort Worth.
His name is Rusty Russell,
surrounded by his 12 orphaned..."
"Deputies."
Thank you.
"The Mites and their creative new coach
have orchestrated..."
"Orchestrated"? What's that mean?
- Means we whipped their ass.
- [all laugh]
"Orchestrated a new
and exciting brand of football
not seen before."
[Doc] All right, lads,
let's break the huddle.
Douglass needs his beauty rest.
Y'all got work to do.
- See you, buddy.
- Bye.
Take it easy.
You know,
I should be the one laying there.
Oh, hell, Hardy.
Then we wouldn't have a shot
at beating Amarillo.
Besides, Opal thinks
I'm a regular old war hero now.
You know I always have.
All right, you two.
[girls giggling]
[whistles]
Fat-ass is coming.
[wooden bat clacking]
[footsteps approaching]
[clacking]
[suspenseful music playing]
You think you can fool me,
you little pervert?! Come here!
Come on, come on! Get up here!
Get up here!
- Get in this room! Get in that room!
- [grunting]
Get up against that wall!
- [Snoggs] I'm sorry! I'm sorry, Mr...
- [blows landing]
[Wynn] What do you got
to say for yourself?
I'm sorry, Mr. Wynn! I'm sorry, Mr...
- [blows landing]
- [Snoggs grunting]
[Wynn] There, that should do you.
[chuckles] Whoo...
I'm tired, but a good kind of tired.
[laughs]
Gentlemen...
spying on the girls will not be tolerated!
If I so much as hear a snivel
from one of you motherless bastards,
you will all receive a kiss from Bertha.
[bat clacking against bed frames]
Music to my ears.
[DeWitt] Is... Is he dead?
- Hey, Snoggs.
- Hey, Snoggs.
Hey.
[grunting]
Hardy, help.
[Hardy] Hey, Wheatie, go get Doc.
DeWitt, come here. Pick up Snoggs,
carry him back to his bunk.
Take care of him.
[Leon] Where you going?
What the...?
[grunts]
[yells, then whimpers]
- Now you're gonna see how it feels.
- Wait!
You sorry sack of shit.
[sobbing]
[knocking on door]
[Rusty] Come in.
Hey, Dot.
[door opens]
- [Rusty] You seen this?
- [Doc] What?
"Orphan team is accused of breaking
numerous state UIL regulations,
including age violations
and excessive practicing.
Therefore, the Polytechnic team
will advance to the Class A
state championship."
They can't do this.
- Sounds like they just did.
- Coach, they're kicking us out?
What happened to you, Snoggs?
Well, Mr. Wynn decided
to teach Leonard here a lesson.
He's just damn lucky this boy's so tough.
He's a son of a bitch.
- Go on, son. You'll be fine.
- Yes, sir.
I want him found, and I want him arrested!
[Remmert] Calm down, Frank.
I expect
you'll finally be firing this man.
Now, why would Bill
be doing something like that?
Where do I begin?
How about stealing gate receipts?
How about running
a child labor camp for profit?
How about sending Snoggs
to the infirmary?
Think it's fair to these children
that you fill them with hope
of unrealistic dreams?
I'm preparing them for the real world.
And how many of your Mites
are gonna use football
while they're working
on a factory floor in six months?
You beat a boy so badly he couldn't walk.
Now, hold on. Snoggs was caught spying
on the girls' dorm,
- Coach Russell.
- Right.
Yeah, he's a 16-year-old boy.
What do you expect?
I expect everyone to follow
the rules of the home,
including Hardy Brown!
He retaliated with violence against Frank.
[sighs] Damn it, now he's missing.
The little bastard attacked me.
Now, if he sets foot on this property,
I will see to it that he's arrested.
That he's arrested?
Assault...
on one of my staff members
is ground for immediate expulsion.
This is supposed to be a place
to nurture the broken and the weak,
the ones with nothing left.
You throw this boy away,
you break the foundation
of why we're even here to begin with.
When are you gonna stand up
for these children
and do what's right?
Well, judging
by this morning's paper, coach,
you're the last person
who should be pointing fingers.
- Is that right?
- Yeah.
I think you're just smart enough
to know what I think of you.
Yeah. Bye-bye.
They're jeopardizing
everything we built up!
It's time for this to end.
Everything we've worked for...
and sacrificed...
it's been reduced to nothing.
[Juanita] Nothing?
I think this is something.
What is that?
Oh, this? This is just your fan mail.
Been over there for two weeks,
but you've been too busy
to notice anything.
Dayton, Fort Worth, Austin,
Chicago, Los Angeles.
Courage, hope, inspiration, dedication.
All the things that you
and your boys have given
to thousands of people
who now believe in something.
You think all this is nothing?
I think it's quite something.
[emotional music playing]
[Wheatie] You weren't
gonna tell us, coach?
Them lying sumbitches think
we're gonna lie down without a fight?
Where's Hardy?
We got to find him.
Think I might know where he's at.
Yeah.
[Rusty] When I woke up in the hospital,
after the Battle of Saint-Mihiel,
they told me I'd never see again.
And all I could think about...
was how my brother looked when he died,
and seeing the light fade from his eyes.
So I'd try and think back
on all the good times we had,
when we were kids, with Mother.
But then I'd think about how she'd react
when I finally found her
and told her how he died.
And I had to fight
to keep the good thoughts in...
and the bad thoughts out.
What's your point, coach?
My point, son...
is that you can't give up.
You got to believe.
Without hope...
fear and anger...
they'll continue
to dominate you through violence.
Sure gets cheers at games.
At games, sure, but not in life.
It won't let you see
what's out there in front of you:
your talent, your intelligence.
Now, don't throw all that away
because you're blinded by the past.
I saw my daddy...
shot and killed before my eyes,
standing right there.
Blew him in half.
Dead before he hit the ground.
You can't just forget that
because you want to.
Terrible things happen in life.
You and I know that firsthand.
But you got to learn to accept it.
Like your war?
Huh?
I've seen you cower like a trembling baby.
It's got its hooks in you still.
It ain't a choice.
It's like a sickness.
I told Mom that Dad had been shot...
and all she did was pack her bags...
and say she don't want me no more.
Why would any mama
say that to her boy? [sobbing]
It wasn't my fault. I didn't kill him.
I was trying...
It wasn't my fault, coach.
[somber music playing]
No, it's not your fault,
and maybe running
was all that she knew how to do.
And you got a family now.
These boys...
they're your brothers,
and they're counting on you.
I'm counting on you.
[Wheatie] We need you, Hardy.
Soon as y'all done hugging,
we got some administrative butt to whup
before we head to Amarillo.
[chuckles]
Let's go.
[Pop] They've proven theirselves
against all odds,
and to get booted like they did,
chickenshit.
What you think is going on?
What's a hell of a coincidence
is that Luther Scarborough...
His brother-in-law is Rodney Kidd,
who is president of the UIL.
Something don't smell right.
No, that couldn't be more obvious.
Make a hell of a headline for one of us.
What do you think
about being more discreet?
When's the last time
you been fishing? [chuckles]
[mellow bluegrass music playing]
Been a while.
[reporter] In a ruling
that has shocked football fans,
the Mighty Mites of Fort Worth
have been suspended
from the championship.
I feel confident that we will be cleared
of any wrongdoing.
The only thing mighty
about Coach Russell's Mites
is they got 12-month football
going on at that orphanage.
Plenty of rule-bending
going on to disqualify.
[reporter] The Star-Telegram
are urging readers
to display the number 12 in support
of the 12 Orphan players.
Letters of support are pouring in.
Gentlemen, thank you for your time.
Great...
Got to get back to my team.
Get the hell out. I got practice.
[Rodney] Harden Henry Brown,
born September 4th, 1920,
is deemed ineligible to compete
at the high school level,
thus forfeiting the entire year of wins
for the Masonic Home football team,
rendering the team
suspended from the league
and out of the championship.
Mr. Kidd, Hardy Brown's not over age, sir.
According to his official
birth certificate, I beg to differ.
Coach, that is not mine.
May I take a look at that?
- Be my guest.
- Thank you.
[clears throat]
Hardy, would you come up here, son?
Is this your birth certificate?
That's not mine, sir.
Well, son, whose is it,
if your name's Harden Henry Brown?
That was my older brother.
He died a week after he was born.
They named him
Harden Henry Brown II, after my dad.
I'm Harden Henry Brown III,
born December 4th, 1921.
Mr. Kidd, may I have a word, please?
What the hell you doing?
This young man's telling the truth,
and I have the appropriate
certificate to prove that.
County clerk sent me
the wrong one by mistake,
and I realized it when I found this...
the brother's death certificate.
Whoever snuck you this other document,
they made the same mistake.
I think we've heard just about enough,
and especially from you.
We should've shut this down
a long time ago, but we are now.
My decision is final!
The Mighty Mites
are out of Class A football!
- What?
- Bullshit! We have proof!
Mr. Kidd, my players come
from broken families, sir,
or no family at all.
They haven't had much opportunity.
They haven't been as lucky as you.
So if you need to suspend somebody,
suspend me.
Kick me out of coaching.
But don't take away
the hope of these boys here.
It's all they've got.
That's a heartfelt statement.
It really is.
However, we have to draw
the line somewhere.
- Now, I don't...
- [whispers indistinctly]
Can you not see that I'm in a hearing now?
- Sorry, sir. It sounds important.
- I don't care if it's the damn president.
Sir, it is the president.
- What do you mean by "it's the president"?
- The president.
Okay, I'll be out in a minute.
Just a moment, gentlemen.
[clears throat] Sir, this is...
This is Rodney Kidd.
[Roosevelt]
Mr. Kidd, you have probably heard me say:
"The only thing to fear...
is fear itself."
Mr. President, yes, sir, I have.
The allegations against
the Mites seem to benefit,
shall we say, other teams.
I am certain that you
and your brother-in-law
over at Polytechnic High
favor the Mites' ejection.
Wouldn't you agree?
[pensive music playing]
After careful consideration...
the decision to remove
the Masonic... Home from Class A...
has been overturned.
The Mighty Mites will be
in the championship after all.
[crowd cheering]
There's no way I could've known.
[grunts]
The Mites are going to state!
[cheering]
[Juanita] I'm so proud of you.
- [Rusty] Well, we haven't won yet.
- You have in my book.
- Where is he, Bill?
- He's inside.
[mellow bluegrass music playing]
[Wright] Hardy Brown.
Yes, sir?
Well, goddang, son!
Good luck in Amarillo.
- We're counting on you boys.
- Thank you.
- These boys are going to state, counselor.
- Yes, sir.
They gonna kick some Sandie butt.
[sighs]
- Franklin Harry Wynn, you're under arrest
- Red?
For the violation
of child labor laws 232 and 241,
embezzlement and abuse of a minor.
Red, I've known you for 30 years.
What are you doing?
There's no evidence of me
doing anything wrong.
- That's it.
- [Wynn] Red, now, come on.
Give me a break. I mean...
You filthy weasel!
I told you there was gonna be
some changes around here, Frank.
You know, that's music to my ears.
- [Remmert] Have a good game, Doc.
- Thank you. See you when we get back.
[cheering]
[Doc] As the black cloud of the Depression
loomed over the nation,
it certainly didn't stop
the true believers
from following the Mites
all the way to Amarillo.
The Mites were a symbol
of inspiration for everyone.
They were devotion. They were hope.
They were the belief
that winning lives within the heart.
Halftime at Amarillo.
That's right, halftime,
because the first half wasn't pretty.
But somehow my defense
was able to hold the Sandies
to just one touchdown.
I swear to God, I'mma knock his teeth in.
- [boy] Hurts like hell, Doc.
- [Doc] It's all right. Sit down there.
Close your eyes.
- Here we go. Okay.
- [grunts]
Hey, you wanna block?
You're gonna tell me?
We're losing because of you!
- Hey! Hey! Hey!
- I don't know why you can't block more!
- Don't touch me! You haven't done shit!
- Hey.
- Neither have you, Wheatie!
- I can't attack unless y'all protect!
[boy] Get your ass out there
so I can hand it to you!
Coach, Miller's leg.
[Rusty] Put that on.
Maybe we ought to think
about calling this game right now.
There's no dishonor in making sure
that these lads don't get hurt anymore.
Think about Fairbanks.
Don't matter how hard we try, they're
bigger than us. We don't stand a chance.
- They ain't playing fair.
- [boy] Hardy, you haven't said a word.
- [boy 1] They're killing all of us.
- [boy 2] They're too damn big.
[boy] Hike!
[bone cracks]
[boy] You ain't so mighty.
[groans]
[Wheatie] What now, coach?
[bone cracks, grunts]
[boy] He's over there crying like a baby.
- [boy 1] Leave Chicken alone!
- [boy 2] Such a baby!
Scrap of coal would've done
better than you!
- [Snoggs] Getting our butt handed to us.
- [boy 1] Shut up, A.P.!
[boy 2] Why don't you shut up,
hike the ball for once?
I'm a mighty warrior!
[breathing heavily]
I am a mighty warrior.
I never said it.
I didn't believe it.
Didn't believe in y'all.
In this team.
I never believed in myself.
But now I do.
Now I know what that means...
because of all of you,
because of everything
each one of you has taught me.
I look around this room
and I don't see a bunch of...
a bunch of throwaway orphans
like everyone else does.
I see fighters.
I see guys that never give up!
And it makes me so damn proud
to be an Orphan.
Y'all think you're in pain now?
Think about Fairbanks.
He'll never play ball again.
That's real pain.
Ours is temporary.
"No man will hurl me down
to Death, against my fate.
And fate?
No one alive has ever escaped it,
neither brave man, nor coward.
I tell you, it is born with us
the day that we are born!"
We got another half
to kick those Sandie asses!
Now, get in here! Everyone, come on!
Mites on three.
- One, two, three!
- Mites!
[emotional music playing]
Mighty Mites!
- What do you think?
- We need a miracle.
The Mites start the second half,
trailing the Amarillo Sandies,
7 to nothing.
And they've also changed uniforms, folks.
I've been told these jerseys
were sewn together
and the numbers were painted on
by the young ladies at the orphanage.
Turn that damn thing off!
Pipe down in there, Frank!
Six-two, split! Hike!
- Snoggs has got to shuffle that guy off.
- [boy] Hike!
[crowd groans]
Hike!
Come on, boys!
[announcer] For the first time,
the Mites' innovative passing offense
is having minimal effect
against the Sandies.
Coach Russell will need to go into
his bag of tricks to pull this thing off.
Hike!
- Come on! Come on!
- Go!
Go, go, go.
Touchdown, the Mites.
[crowd cheering]
What is going on?
- Yeah!
- [announcer] There you have it.
The Mites are finally on the scoreboard
as number 23, Douglass Lord Fairbanks,
takes it in for the touchdown.
I thought Fairbanks was injured.
That's Hardy Brown in Fairbanks' uniform.
How about we double that bet?
Fifty more on the Mites.
- You're on.
- Damn right, I am.
[announcer] Extra point no good.
Mites 6, Sandies 7.
[woman] Good try, boys!
Yeah. We're proud of you anyways, guys.
- [Pop] Pound for pound?
- [Amon] Yeah.
- I'll take Hardy Brown over Greathouse.
- Well, I'll take him too.
But you know how he's got to do it?
He's gotta hit him as low
as he can, that guy.
He's gotta bite off each one
of his kneecaps first time he hits him,
because that guy's
three times taller than Hardy.
Hike!
[announcer] Another bone-jarring collision
between Brown and Greathouse.
I'm not sure how those
young men can get up after that.
[DeWitt] Get up, boys. Come on.
Son of a bitch is harder
to take down than a steer.
[announcer] As the fourth quarter
winds down, the Mites
are against the ropes.
Perhaps there's a miraculous
ending for the Mites.
Break!
Set. Hike!
Fumble!
[whistle blows]
[announcer] Moseley recovers
on the Mites' 20 with 50 seconds left.
All right, all right, all right.
Come here, Chicken.
We still got one more time-out.
Short pass to Hardy
out of the backfield. You got it?
- Yes, sir.
- All right. Take it in there, son.
That's what they'll be expecting.
I'm counting on it, Doc.
You're better than that.
You cover Hardy Brown
out of the backfield. You hear me?
- Yes, sir.
- Go!
Break!
[Wheatie] Six-two, wide!
Hike!
Time, please. Time.
Get in there.
Snoggs, you and Chicken split right.
We're gonna run the same play again,
only this time, you fake it to Hardy,
you tuck the ball,
you take it yourself. You got it?
- Yes, sir. Yeah.
- [Rusty] Let's do it.
- They'll never expect you to run.
- [Rusty] Leon, break it down. Come on.
One, two, three!
Mighty Mites!
What do you think?
- Huh?
- This is it.
Cover Hardy Brown out of the backfield!
[dramatic music playing]
Six-two-one!
Hike!
[announcer]
Sealey's gonna run it in himself.
He's got open field in front of him.
- See this?! Come on!
- Yes!
Greathouse drives Sealey out
at the Sandies' 49-yard line
- with seven ticks left on the clock.
- Come here, son, come here.
The Mites are gonna need
a miracle to pull this one off.
What's coach want to run?
He said it was up to us.
Snoggs Special.
[all laughing]
You heard Crazy. Snoggs Special on one.
Let's drive these Sandies
back to Fort Worth.
- Yeah!
- Yeah!
You can do this, Snoggs.
Mighty Mites on three.
One, two, three!
Mighty Mites!
[announcer] It's do-or-die for the Mites,
as they're down to their final play.
Come on, boys!
Six-two, wide!
Hike!
Snoggs!
[Rusty] Come on, Hardy!
- Go!
- Come on.
Get him!
- Come on! Come on!
- Go! Go!
Go, Hardy!
Come on!
Push him!
[whistle blows]
- They get that, Doc?
- They don't know yet. They...
- Can't see, Doc.
- No, they're not unpiled yet.
[announcer] Hardy Brown is down, and he's
taken six Golden Sandies with him.
- The referees are clearing the pile.
- Quiet down, everybody. Quiet!
- Is he short?
- I think he's in.
Did he get it?
Come on.
[announcer] Hardy Brown has been
stopped inches from the goal.
The Golden Sandies have won!
That's the ball game! Yes!
Inch.
Sorry, coach.
- Good job.
- You too.
Good job.
Toughest hoss I ever played.
Thank you, Myrle.
Pretty damn tough yourself.
Come on, boys.
Great game, coach. Congratulations.
Thank you. One hell of a ball game.
- Yes, sir.
- Congratulations.
[Doc] A team that started with nothing
left with more
than they could have ever dreamed of.
What the Mites won
couldn't be printed in the papers.
It was a belief in themselves that
would go on to last their entire lives.
[crowd] Mighty Mites!
Mighty Mites! Mighty Mites!
Mighty Mites! Mighty Mites! Mighty Mites!
Mighty Mites! Mighty Mites! Mighty Mites!
Mighty Mites! Mighty Mites! Mighty Mites!
Mighty Mites! Mighty Mites! Mighty Mites!
Mighty Mites! Mighty Mites! Mighty Mites!
Mighty Mites! Mighty Mites! Mighty Mites!
My feet, they...
They just stopped.
I came up short.
You didn't come up short, son.
You came further than I ever dreamed.
You did great.
I look around this bus and I think:
"How lucky are we?"
Pretty lucky, coach.
[cheering]
- Buddy.
- Looking good, brother.
Do they know we lost?
[Doc] What Rusty brought
to the Masonic Home
wasn't just football or academics.
It was the feeling
of finally being a family.
[Rusty] Opal, are you gonna
stand up there with Fairbanks?
- Okay, we'll let that slide.
- Doc, come in this photo. Hey!
- Doc, we need you for the photo.
- [Juanita] Bring Betty.
- I'll be there. Last play.
- [Rusty] Okay.
[Doc] For Rusty, it was about believing.
Believing in something
that against all odds and evidence
might not seem possible,
but somehow would come to pass.
[emotional music playing]
[mellow bluegrass music playing]