IMDb RATING
6.4/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
The Chuska Warriors, a Native American high school basketball team from New Mexico, must band together after losing their star player if they want to keep their quest for a state championshi... Read allThe Chuska Warriors, a Native American high school basketball team from New Mexico, must band together after losing their star player if they want to keep their quest for a state championship alive.The Chuska Warriors, a Native American high school basketball team from New Mexico, must band together after losing their star player if they want to keep their quest for a state championship alive.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
Devin Sampson-Craig
- Bryson Badonie
- (as Devin Sampson Craig)
Ernest David Tsosie
- Benny Begay
- (as Ernest Tsosie III)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
Insulting
As a Choctaw Native, I found this movie pandering and self serving. I cannot stand Julie Jones in any movie she is in and I feel that every movie she is in she does a disservice to the film. This movie was dismal and a waste of my time. Smoke Signals is a much better Native American movie. I would pass on Rez Ball.
It's a good sports drama in any context
Netflix brings us a sports drama from director and screenwriter Sydney Freeland that takes us to the Navajo reservation with an emotional basketball sports drama.
The long list of sports dramas in the cinema is varied in terms of memories and quality, and here Netflix gives us a proposal where we can find many of the iconic clichés in action, but which guarantee a fairly emotional and functional pastime like those moments of the most outstanding titles of this subgenre.
The film, while not afraid to follow the tried and true beats of the genre, is the specificity of the film that is handled with total care by its director who knows how to give you just the right amount of sports drama, life drama, Navajo drama and social drama that with all of that makes the perfect mix so that the path to the heroic act works as the main course of the film in a satisfactory way.
With a fairly efficient cast, where Kauchani Bratt stands out in the main role and a satisfactory Jessica Matten in her leading role, they are the most notable point of a cast that in its entirety is quite fulfilling and rewarding.
A proposal that knows how to mix comedy, courage, drama and redemption in a genuinely exciting way that makes us have an entertaining film without having to demand itself, but rather with the solvency of having a sports drama full of everything that one seeks to find within these proposals, but it does so with the desired measure so that nothing is too much and neither is it limited so that it is unsatisfactory, a mix with the precise doses to give a good weekend show.
The long list of sports dramas in the cinema is varied in terms of memories and quality, and here Netflix gives us a proposal where we can find many of the iconic clichés in action, but which guarantee a fairly emotional and functional pastime like those moments of the most outstanding titles of this subgenre.
The film, while not afraid to follow the tried and true beats of the genre, is the specificity of the film that is handled with total care by its director who knows how to give you just the right amount of sports drama, life drama, Navajo drama and social drama that with all of that makes the perfect mix so that the path to the heroic act works as the main course of the film in a satisfactory way.
With a fairly efficient cast, where Kauchani Bratt stands out in the main role and a satisfactory Jessica Matten in her leading role, they are the most notable point of a cast that in its entirety is quite fulfilling and rewarding.
A proposal that knows how to mix comedy, courage, drama and redemption in a genuinely exciting way that makes us have an entertaining film without having to demand itself, but rather with the solvency of having a sports drama full of everything that one seeks to find within these proposals, but it does so with the desired measure so that nothing is too much and neither is it limited so that it is unsatisfactory, a mix with the precise doses to give a good weekend show.
I expected better
For what they spent and all the hype building it up, I expected better.
In the end, it's just another forgettable Netflix film not worth a repeat viewing. Some average cinematography, choppy editing... nothing stands out, except the countless times they have to show Shiprock in the background with a long lens. This is such a native/New Mexican movie cliche that its lost its caché.
Hoosiers this ain't! Don't expect to see Gene Hackman, or really anyone mildly recognizable in this mediocre digital file. Glory Road was even better than this! I won't discourage others from watching, but I will say don't expect much.
In the end, it's just another forgettable Netflix film not worth a repeat viewing. Some average cinematography, choppy editing... nothing stands out, except the countless times they have to show Shiprock in the background with a long lens. This is such a native/New Mexican movie cliche that its lost its caché.
Hoosiers this ain't! Don't expect to see Gene Hackman, or really anyone mildly recognizable in this mediocre digital file. Glory Road was even better than this! I won't discourage others from watching, but I will say don't expect much.
Good sports drama
This is a story about a Navajo basketball team, so I wonder why the writers who write the description blurbs on streaming sites and IMBD can't be bothered to state that the team is Navajo, instead of "Native American". OK, that was my one quibble with the way the film is marketed.
The film itself is well produced and has a good cast. The story is, for the most part, believable. It does seem to be aimed at ticking as many boxes as possible for woke points. What's good is the number of relatively new faces in the cast as well as some familiar actors such as Ryan Begay, Kiowa Gordon, Morningstar Angeline and Amber Midthunder. None of the cast did bad jobs with their roles, IMO, all good work.
The film itself is well produced and has a good cast. The story is, for the most part, believable. It does seem to be aimed at ticking as many boxes as possible for woke points. What's good is the number of relatively new faces in the cast as well as some familiar actors such as Ryan Begay, Kiowa Gordon, Morningstar Angeline and Amber Midthunder. None of the cast did bad jobs with their roles, IMO, all good work.
LIFETIME MOVIE
As an entire package, the movie was not horrible. BUT... The production left everything to the imagination. The cinematography was rushed. The script was so obvious that it looks like it was made to be shown to 3rd graders. The direction was paint by numbers. I have watched my microwave heat stuff up that was more entertaining and defiantly MORE FIRE than this project. It looks like so many corners were cut, they should have just shelved the project altogether. They made it into a lifetime project instead. Better luck next time. The only high point was the female cast was very easy on the eyes!!
Did you know
- TriviaThe plot of the movie is fictional, but it is deeply inspired by Michael Powell's nonfiction book Canyon Dreams: A Basketball Season on the Navajo Nation.
- ConnectionsReferences Windtalkers (2002)
- SoundtracksMade Me Everything
Written by Alex Goose (as Alexander M. Goose), Oluwatobi Ajibolade, Lasanna Harris, Charles S. Amos and Tony Milan
Performed by Oluwatobi Ajibolade (as T0Bi)
Courtesy of RCA Records and Now-Again Records
- How long is Rez Ball?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 51m(111 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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