I think it helps for the actors to feel like the spaces are lived in and real it helps for me and it helps for the audience. We really wanted to make sure everything was as authentic as we could possibly make it. Part of making something feel real is steeping it in the specificity and details that are intimate to someone who lives in a place, is from a place. It was like, “Well, you should make it real.” That’s sort of my ethos in all things: How do you make it real? How do you get the audience to suspend their disbelief? In some ways, it means more now that I’m hearing people talk about their feelings about it. Will Fetters, one of the writers, we got to a place where there was an authenticity there that was something I could latch on to. There were details in the script that I felt could be enhanced and evolved, and Adam was open to working on the script with me. I just started to dream it up a little bit. wouldn’t it be cool if we could cast real players? And Adam had mentioned that. So I started to think - if I always wanted to do a sports movie and if one just fell in my lap and it’s set in Philadelphia where I’m from. ![]() In the plotlines it’s all about the will - do you have the will to do this thing that seems impossible? That’s what making films is like, they seem impossible. Now I find a kinship with what we do as filmmakers. When I was a kid, I really loved sports movies. Then you think about it a little more and decide to do it. So Adam Sandler calls you about a movie and you don’t think the project is a good fit for you. And the mix of so many real-life elements with Zagar’s naturalistic filmmaking touches has caused many viewers to wonder if the film is based on a true story. When he discovers Bo Cruz (Juancho Hernangómez), an unknown player living in Spain, Stanley risks everything to get him on the team.Īside from Utah Jazz player Hernangómez, the film is stuffed with other real current and former NBA players, including Anthony Edwards, Boban Marjanovic, Kenny Smith and Julius “Dr. The film, from Sandler’s Happy Madison Productions, stars the comedian as Stanley Sugerman, a scout for the Philadelphia 76ers who spends most of his time scouring the globe for the next NBA sensation, away from his wife, Teresa (Queen Latifah), and daughter Alex (Jordan Hull) while desperately wanting to become a coach. “Hustle,” which has been firmly atop Netflix’s most-watched movies list since it launched last week, is just the latest example in a string of unexpected turns that’s included “The Meyerowitz Stories,” “The Week Of,” “Murder Mystery” and “Uncut Gems.”ĭirected by Jeremiah Zagar, whose previous film “We the Animals” was nominated for five Spirit Awards, Sandler’s breakout basketball dramedy was written by Taylor Materne and “A Star Is Born” co-writer Will Fetters. For the last few years it’s felt like Adam Sandler has been rewriting the rulebook of what he does onscreen.
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