The inspiring story of a rag-tag team of amateur American athletes that stunned the sports world comes to life in this dramatization of the first modern Olympic games revived in 1896. Veteran Actor Louis Jourdan stars as Baron Pierre du Coubertin, a relentless visionary who sets out to renew the ancient Olympic games after 1500 years. Dr. William Sloane (David Ogden Stiers) is the Princeton professor who pulls together the first American team with 13 unlikely boys and a meager supply of sports equipment. Competing in events that had never been seen in the United States before the Americans went on to Athens and secured the winner’s post despite almost insurmountable odds.This television miniseries tells the story of the founding of the modern Olympics by focusing on individuals in several countries and their preparations and eventual competition in Athens in 1896. David Ogden Stiers (a familiar face to viewers of M*A*S*H reruns) portrays a Princeton classics professor whose knowledge of the ancient Olympics means he’s given the task of recruiting an American team for the 1896 games. The stories of how some athletes have to be convinced to join the team may seem contrived, but they do reinforce the idea of how fragile the concept of reviving the Olympics was at the time. A young David Caruso (years before he’d swagger through the stationhouse of N.Y.P.D. Blue) portrays a cocky Boston Irishman who walks away from a Harvard scholarship to participate in track events. And if Caruso does veer perilously close to doing an extended James Cagney impression, he serves as a sturdy focal point to the American team. Once in Athens, the focus is very much on the American athletes and their surprising success, and there are some interesting and humorous touches in the plot. For instance, the fledgling American team had enlisted a local blacksmith to render an iron discus, thereby giving them an unexpected advantage when presented with the much lighter “official” discus in Athens. Even if the various plots and subplots about the athletes don’t always hold up very well, the scenes of competition in Athens do provide an entertaining re-creation of the first modern Olympics. –Robert J. McNamara
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April 9, 2008
#1
YOU DID AN EXCELLENT JOB LISTING ALL OF THE MAJOR PLAYERS IN THE MOVIE. HOWEVER, I WOULD LIKE TO KNOW ABOUT EVERY ACTOR AND ACTRESS INVOLVED IN THE MOVIE AND WHO PLAYED WHAT ROLE. THERE IS A LISTING OF PERFORMERS, BUT NOT EVERYONE HAS THEIR APPOPRIATE CHARACTER LISTED BY THE NAME OF THE PERFORMER. I WOULD PARTICULARLY LIKE TO KNOW THE NAMES OF THE PERFORMERS ASSOCIATED WITH NICOS ZIAGOS (SPIRIDON LOUIS). WHO PLAYED HIS MOTHER, FATHER AND ELENI? INFORMATION APPRECIATED.
April 9, 2008
#2
This movie is great! I don’t generally watch sports related movies, but this is about more than sports. It is about our country and the magic of the olympics being able to bring so many countries together. I have made all of my friends watch it, and some have borrowed it to make thier friends watch it too.
April 9, 2008
#3
If you have never watched this show,then you missed out on some very true happenings at the 1st Olympics thr USA competed in!!
I enjoyed it when it was aired on TV on ABC back in the late 70′s and always wanted it on VHS or DVD!!Now I have it and aloit enoy what I still do just as it was on TV..
April 9, 2008
#4
Had VHS tape of the series & even used it with my students. Watched it same afternoon rec’d & enjoyed it as much as years ago. Love the historical & biographical aspects. Very enjoyable!!
April 9, 2008
#5
I am so happy this film is finally available on DVD. This is a wonderful movie about the start of the modern Olympics. It is a movie that all of the family can watch and enjoy. I would recommend this movie to anyone interested in athletics, history, or the olympics. It is inspirational and for me had me cheering from time to time as I became so absorbed in the content of the movie. So sit back, relax and enjoy. The movie is long and has been cut into two parts. Both parts are equally interesting.