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・ We Are Tonight (song)
・ We Are Toonz
・ We are Trans-MIssion
・ We Are Twisted Fucking Sister!
・ We Are Undone
・ We Are Legends
・ We Are Legion
・ We Are Leo
・ We Are Limitless
・ We Are Little Barrie
・ We Are Looking at You, Agnes
・ We Are Love
・ We are Making a New World
・ We Are Many
・ We Are Many (film)
We Are Marshall
・ We Are Men
・ We Are Merely Filters
・ We Are Monster
・ We Are Most Amused
・ We Are Motörhead
・ We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together
・ We Are Night Sky
・ We Are Northern Lights
・ We Are Not a Glum Lot
・ We Are Not Alone
・ We Are Not Alone (1939 film)
・ We Are Not Alone (1993 film)
・ We Are Not Alone (Breaking Benjamin album)
・ We Are Not Alone (novel)


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We Are Marshall : ウィキペディア英語版
We Are Marshall

''We Are Marshall'' is a 2006 American historical drama biopic film directed by McG. It depicts the aftermath of the 1970 plane crash that killed 37 football players on the Marshall University Thundering Herd football team, along with five coaches, two athletic trainers, the athletic director, 25 boosters, and a crew of five. It also addresses the rebuilding of the program and the healing that the community undergoes (shown in a post-credits scene).
Matthew McConaughey stars as head coach Jack Lengyel, with Matthew Fox as assistant coach William "Red" Dawson, David Strathairn as university president Donald Dedmon, and Robert Patrick as ill-fated Marshall head coach Rick Tolley. Then-governor of Georgia, Sonny Perdue has a cameo role as an East Carolina University football coach.〔() 〕
It was scored by Christophe Beck and written by Jamie Linden.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Jamie Linden )〕 Dr. Keith Spears was the Marshall University consultant.
==Plot==
On the evening of November 14, 1970, Southern Airways Flight 932, a McDonnell Douglas DC-9 chartered by Marshall University to transport the Thundering Herd football team back to Huntington, West Virginia following their 17–14 defeat to the East Carolina University Pirates, clips trees on a ridge just one mile short of the runway at Tri-State Airport in Ceredo, West Virginia, and crashes into a nearby gully, killing all 75 people on board. The deceased included the 37 players; head coach Rick Tolley and five members of his coaching staff; Charles E. Kautz, Marshall's athletics director; team athletic trainer Jim Schroer and his assistant, Donald Tackett; 25 boosters; and five crew members.
In the wake of the tragedy, University President Donald Dedmon leans towards indefinitely suspending the football program, but he is ultimately persuaded to reconsider by the pleas of the Marshall students and Huntington residents, and especially the few football players who didn't make the flight, led by Nate Ruffin. Dedmon hires a young new head coach Jack Lengyel, who with the help of Red Dawson, the sole surviving member of the previous coaching staff, manages to rebuild the team in a relatively short time, despite losing many of their prospects to West Virginia University. Dedmon travels to Kansas City, where he pleads with the NCAA to waive their rule prohibiting freshmen from playing varsity football (a rule which had been abolished in 1968 for all sports except for football and basketball, and would be permanently abolished for those sports in 1972). Dedmon returns victorious.
The new team is composed mostly of the 18 returning players (three varsity, 15 sophomores) and walk-on athletes from other Marshall sports programs. Due to their lack of experience, the "Young Thundering Herd" ends up losing its first game, 29–6, to the Morehead State Eagles. The loss weighs heavily on Dawson and Ruffin, who had been hurt in the first play of the game. The Herd's first post-crash victory is a 15–13 home win against Xavier University in the first home game of the season.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「We Are Marshall」の詳細全文を読む



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