Synopsis
A loose remake of the 1931 Richard Barthelmess vehicle of the same name, The All-American stars Tony Curtis as college football star Nick Bonnell. When his parents are killed in a traffic accident while taking a bus trip to see him play, Nick quits football cold. Later on he accepts a scholarship at a small college, but still refuses to resume his gridiron activities--at least for a while. Never the life of the party to begin with, Nick runs afoul of his snooty fellow students and is kicked out of school. Somehow or other, however, he manages to show up during the crucial fourth quarter of the Big Game. Lori Nelson plays requisite heroine Sharon Wallace, who helps draw the taciturn Nick out of his shell, while Mamie Van Doren does what Mamie Van Doren usually does. While the football sequences are exciting, the film is a bit hard to take at times, especially when the 20-plus college freshman Nick is advised by his professors to grin and bear it when he's hazed by the much-younger upper classmen. At the time The All-American was released, much was made of the fact that producer Aaron Rosenberg and director Jess Hibbs had both been USC All-American footballers.
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Movie News
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Sir Anthony Hopkins, All-American
LOS ANGELES, April 12, 2000 -- Is it because taxes are lower in the U.S. than in the U.K.? Does he loathe the British tabloids? Or is it because he really, really liked playing Nixon? Whatever the reason, Anthony Hopkins gave up the Union Jack for the stars and stripes and became a U.S. citizen here today.
Without any hoopla or fanfare, the 1992 Oscar winner ("Silence of the Lambs") was stealthily ushered through a back entrance in and out of a downtown federal courthouse for a short (and very private) swearing in by a judge in the late afternoon. Hopkins evaded a throng of reporters who wanted to ask him about his citizenship switch.
According to certain sources, John Travolta and Steven Spielberg attended the ceremony as witnesses.
Even Hopkins' publicist wasn't able to shed much light on the Welsh actor's motivations.
"I believe it's because he's lived