/

HOME COURT ๐Ÿ˜Š

HOME COURT is playing at SBIFF (Santa Barbara International Film Festival), and I had the opportunity to see an early look โ€“ hereโ€™s my Spoiler Free take:

HOME COURT reminded me of the classic Steve James documentary, HOOP DREAMS. It’s about Cambodian-American Ashley Chea’s journey as she follows her love for basketball throughout high school. Director Erica Tanamachi does a nice job of balancing Ashley’s on-court capabilities and her family’s struggles as refugees.

I’m a die-hard NBA fan. I watch all 82 games yearly for my favorite team, the Phoenix Suns. With that passion and knowledge of the game, I was disappointed with how basketball was captured. It lacked the excitement a baller would expect when watching any hoops on the screen.

Despite the shortcomings of basketball, the human family dynamics about love, hope, and connection keep HOME COURT worth watching. Ashley’s ability to block everything else and focus on playing basketball is inspiring.

HOME COURT isn’t quite the slam dunk you want in a documentary about basketball. However, it’s a solid team effort that scores just enough to be competitive, thanks to the family dynamics.

Aaron "Dobler" Goldstein

Aaron Goldstein is a Product Manager by day, ludicrous speed content consumer by night. Heโ€™s a LA Film School Alumni and TV Academy / Producers Guild of America member. Aaron is a proud parent and dad joke enthusiast.

Latest from Aaron "Dobler" Goldstein

SEND HELP ๐Ÿ˜Š

Despite a weak script, SEND HELP is worth seeing on the big screen, especially if youโ€™re…