de facto film reviews 2.5 stars

An older man down on his luck. A kid from the wrong side of the tracks with a checkered past trying to make good. The power of a good coach to make a difference. These are the hoariest of sports movie clichés. Hustle presents them to us again, but in a palatable package.

The older man here is Stanley Sugerman (Adam Sandler), an international scout for the Philadelphia 76ers who has been floating around the outskirts of the NBA for decades. It is made known early on that Stanley had a promising career as a player or coach ahead of him, but that something derailed those plans. Stanley is still around because his boss, team owner Rex Merrick (Robert Duvall) trusts him and believes in him. He is in fact, in the process of being promoted to assistant coach when Rex dies, and his spoiled son Vince (Ben Foster) takes over the team. Vince sends Stanley back out on road. It’s there that Stanley meets Bo Cruz (real-life NBA player Juancho Hernangomez), a streetball superstar who hustles basketball while working a day job in construction to provide for his mother and young daughter.

Hustle' Trailer: Netflix's Adam Sandler-Queen Latifah Sports Film Produced By LeBron James - SHADOW & ACT

Stanley is blown away by Bo’s raw talent and wants to bring him to the NBA. Vince disagrees, so Stanley works his years of connections to try to get Bo a spot in the NBA combine. To keep spirits high, Stanley hides the fact that he is paying all of Bo’s expenses from Bo himself and also from his wife Teresa (Queen Latifah). When Bo runs up against top prospect Kermit Wilts (played by NBA player Anthony Edwards), he is shaken, allowing Kermit to get into his head.

The next section of the film is essentially a long training montage, as we see Bo improve his physical and mental game while his relationship with Stanley grows. The men have troubled pasts and broken dreams in common and an almost parental bond forms between them.

Hustle' Trailer: Adam Sandler Stars in Netflix Basketball Movie - Variety

The performances, particularly from Sandler, are the best part of the film. Stanley is right in the sweet spot for a melding of Sandler’s comedic and dramatic strengths. As has been seen as far back as Big Daddy and more recently in the Grown Ups and Hotel Transylvania movies, Sandler has great dad energy. There is a warmth and vulnerability to him at his best that is very winning. There’s still also enough of an edge to him that the sarcasm and anger he shows at times feel legitimate. This is Hernangomez’s first film, and he’s given quite a bit to do. He acquits himself well. Anthony Edwards gives great antagonist in this, and it feels like he could have a future in movies if given the right roles. Another standout in the cast is Queen Latifah. It’s not a huge role, but she gives Teresa a real feeling of life. She and Sandler are very comfortable with each other on screen, which makes their characters’ marriage feel legitimate and lived in. Foster is essentially given a moustache-twirling villain role, the rich kid boss who is a jerk with no redeeming qualities, but he plays it well. There are also some fun cameos from other NBA players, former players, and ancillary league figures.

The script by Will Fetters and Taylor Materne, as mentioned, is very sports-movie standard. There aren’t any surprises here. A viewer with a working knowledge of the genre will be able to predict where it’s going next at most times. The direction, from Jeremiah Zagar (We the Animals), is solid, with some occasional flair. The basketball action is impressively staged and well-shot. Hustle isn’t giving the audience anything new, but it’s a well-done version of what has come before, elevated by a very good seriocomic performance from Adam Sandler.