10 Great Movies Recommended by Peyton Manning

10 Great Movies Recommended by Peyton Manning


Retired football star Peyton Manning is widely considered one of the greatest quarterbacks ever, and for good reason. On top of being a two-time Super Bowl champion, he holds a number of records, including the most MVPs, the most single-season passing yards, and the most single-season passing touchdowns. What followers of the NFL may not know is that Manning is also a big fan of movies, especially ’80s comedies and sports films.




In interviews, he has praised several sports dramas, and he even used to assign a handful of comedies to new players as a bonding exercise. “I’ve kind of tried to get to know these rookies and try to get on the same page with them,” Manning once said. “But what I’m finding out is we don’t speak the same language because we don’t know the same favorite movies.” His recommendations were aimed at correcting that. Here are some of his favorites which the athlete has mentioned repeatedly. Several of them ought to appeal to football fanatics, in particular.


10 ‘National Lampoon’s Vacation’ (1983)

Directed by Harold Ramis


“I honestly don’t think you’re going to find the Grand Canyon on this road.” Speaking of the films he used to recommend to new players, Manning explained, “In order to get on the same page with me, you need to watch these five movies so we can repeat lines and quotes.” One of he flicks he used to assign for this purpose was National Lampoon’s Vacation, the classic road trip comedy about an ill-fated journey to an amusement park.

Dad Clark Griswold (Chevy Chase) is determined to give his family the perfect vacation experience, but his over-enthusiastic plans are thwarted by a series of hilarious mishaps. While this premise is not groundbreaking, Vacation is warm, nostalgic, and packed with enough jokes to maintain the comedic momentum throughout. This recipe resonated: Vacation was a mega-success, spawning five sequels. Fundamentally, director Harold Ramis does a good job of assembling solid performers and letting them unleash their full powers.Randy Quaid is especially memorable as the zany Cousin Eddie.


9 ‘Fletch’ (1985)

Directed by Michael Ritchie

Chevy Chase as Fletch

“Can I borrow your towel for a sec? My car just hit a water buffalo.” Chase also puts in a top-notch performance in this crime-comedy as an investigative reporter with a quick wit and knack for disguises. His life gets complicated when he is approached by a wealthy man, Alan Stanwyk (Tim Matheson), who offers him a large sum of money to murder him, claiming he is dying of cancer and wishes to avoid a painful death.

The script hands a game Chase countless killer lines and he delivers them with flair.Fletch was another one of the movies that Manning always recommends, even though he admits many of the younger players don’t appreciate them. “Most of these guys have never heard of these movies, and they really don’t think they’re funny because it’s a different kind of humor. It’s ’70s, ’80s, ’90s humor,” he has said. The latest film in the franchise, Confess, Fletch with Jon Hamm, is also worth checking out.


Fletch

Cast
Chevy Chase , Joe Don Baker , Dana Wheeler-Nicholson , Richard Libertini , Tim Matheson , M. Emmet Walsh

Runtime
98

Rent on Amazon

8 ‘Stripes’ (1981)

Directed by Ivan Reitman

Bill Murray and Harold Ramis wearing helmets in Stripes
Image via Columbia Pictures

“I’m talking about something important, like discipline and duty and honor and courage.” Stripes is another comedy that Manning assigns as “homework”. It’s a zany military flick starring Bill Murray as John Winger, a down-on-his-luck cab driver who impulsively enlists in the Army after losing his job, girlfriend, and apartment all in one day. The plot thickens when their unit is assigned to a top-secret mission in Europe, leading to a series of comedic misadventures involving a high-tech military vehicle and a rescue operation behind enemy lines.


Most of the humor stems from the incongruity between Winger’s slacker character and the rigors of army life. He’s the archetypal ’80s burnout: directionless, lazy, apathetic. Murray excels at these kinds of characters, and here he’s on his A-game with both the wordplay and the physical comedy. Director Ivan Reitman, the brains behind Ghostbusters and Kindergarten Cop, effectively combines slapstick humor with a feel-good underdog story, highlighting the surprising camaraderie and resilience of these quirky characters.

Rent on Amazon

7 ‘Caddyshack’ (1980)

Directed by Harold Ramis

Caddyshack (1980) - Carl Spackler (1)
Image via Warner Bros.


“Now I know why tigers eat their young.” Manning’s cinematic tastes clearly lean toward sports comedies and Harold Ramis films, and Caddyshack fits both criteria. The legendary flick unfolds at the exclusive Bushwood Country Club, where a diverse cast of characters collides in a riotous blend of class conflict and ridiculousness. The story primarily follows Danny Noonan (Michael O’Keefe), a young caddy striving to earn a college scholarship by currying favor with the club’s elitist co-founder, Judge Smails (Ted Knight). However, it’s the surrounding chaos that provides most of the entertainment.

Indeed, the real highlights are Bill Murray as the eccentric groundskeeper Carl Spackler, who wages a war against a gopher; Chevy Chase as the laid-back, suave Ty Webb, a font of unconventional advice; and, of course, Rodney Dangerfield as the brash and boisterous nouveau riche golfer boisterous Al Czervik. Some of the jokes feel dated now but, overall, Caddyshack remains enjoyable thanks to the star power of the cast and the breezy, improvisational nature of the jokes and dialogue.


Rent on Amazon

6 ‘The Jerk’ (1979)

Directed by Carl Reiner

Navin Johnson eating pizza from a cup in The Jerk.
Image via Universal Pictures

“He hates these cans!” After establishing himself as a stand-up comic, Steve Martin hit the ground running with his feature debut. The Jerk is an anarchic vehicle for the comedian that plays to his strengths, perhaps more so than anything he’s done since. It sees him taking on the role of Navin R. Johnson, a lovable but dim-witted man who embarks on a journey of self-discovery. He was raised as an adopted son by a poor Black family in Mississippi, leaves home to seek his destiny, and gets up to all manner of shenanigans.


It’s a rags-to-riches-and-back-to-rags story that revels in its own absurdity. There’s no deeper meaning or emotional nuance to the story. The movie is just a roller coaster of undiluted gags, lurching from one zany set piece to the next. This is precisely why it works. Manning included The Jerk among his five all-time favorites, alongside the aforementioned Vacation, Fletch, Stripes, and Caddyshack. “Those are my classics,” he has said.

the jerk

Rent on Amazon

5 ‘The Longest Yard’ (1974)

Directed by Robert Aldrich


“If you’re thinking about winning this game, then you’re as crazy as he is.” Paul Crewe (Burt Reynolds) is a former professional football quarterback disgraced for point shaving. After a drunken joyride in a stolen car, Crewe lands in a harsh Southern prison where the warden, Hazen (Eddie Albert), coerces him into assembling a team of inmates to play a brutal exhibition game against the prison guards. Initially reluctant, Crewe sees an opportunity for redemption and begins training a motley crew of convicts.

The Longest Yard was directed by Robert Aldrich, the filmmaker behind war movies and Westerns like The Dirty Dozen and Ulzana’s Raid. This one is more cartoonish, melding intense action with dark humor. The Longest Yard is certainly over-the-top, but a winning performance from Reynolds compensates for a lot. Not all critics embraced The Longest Yard on release, but it has since become a minor sports classic. “That’ll probably win for best football movie in my book,” Manning said.

Rent on Amazon

4 ‘Remember the Titans’ (2000)

Directed by Boaz Yakin

Herman Boone — ‘Remember The Titans’ (2000) (1)


“Maybe we’ll learn to play this game like men.” In 1971, Herman Boone (Denzel Washington) becomes the head coach of the newly integrated T.C. Williams High School football team in Alexandria, Virginia, much to the chagrin of the displaced white former head coach, Bill Yoast (Will Patton). The community is fraught with racial tension, and Boone faces the challenge of uniting his players into a single, cohesive team.

Remember the Titans could’ve descended into feel-good clichés but, instead, it stays compelling thanks to talented performers and a script that acknowledges the era’s social tensions. Washington is well cast as Boone, especially in the scenes where he subjects the players to his rigorous training regimen. Entertainment Weekly aptly noted that his role is like “Martin Luther King Jr. and Vince Lombardi rolled into one.” Although Manning cited The Longest Yard as his favorite football flick, he added, “There’s some pretty good competition with Remember the Titans and North Dallas Forty.”


remember-the-titans-movie-poster.jpg

Remember The Titans

Release Date
September 29, 2000

Runtime
113

Watch on Disney+

3 ‘North Dallas Forty’ (1979)

Directed by Ted Kotcheff

“You had better learn how to play the game, and I don’t mean just the game of football.” North Dallas Forty is a rawer, grittier look at professional football. Based on the semi-autobiographical novel by Peter Gent, it stars Nick Nolte as wide receiver Phil Elliott. The narrative delves into the brutal realities behind the glitz and glamor of the sport. It focusing on Elliott’s struggles with the physical toll of the game, substance abuse, and the dehumanizing aspects of team management.


Nolte turns in a moving performance as a player whose intelligence and sensitivity set him apart from his more macho teammates. His outspokenness, in particular, soon makes him a target for the owner and coach, who would prefer that the players stay in line. Tensions rise both on the field and off, culminating in a climactic game that refreshingly avoids genre formulas. Some of the monologues get a little melodramatic, and some scenes feel unnecessary, but, in the final analysis, North Dallas Forty succeeds thanks to its authenticity.

Rent on Amazon

2 ‘The Best of Times’ (1986)

Directed by Roger Spottiswoode


“She’s gonna leave me as soon as I fix her car.” The Best of Times revolves around Jack Dundee (Robin Williams), a middle-aged banker haunted by a high school football game in which he fumbled a crucial pass, costing his team the championship. To reclaim his self-respect and the town’s honor, Jack convinces his former teammate and local hero, Reno Hightower (Kurt Russell), to help him organize a rematch against their old rivals, the Bakersfield Tigers.

It’s essentially a small-town comedy, poking fun at this insular, sport-obsessed community that takes its local football team far too seriously. The plot gets a little predictable, but the movie deserves praise for the way it handles themes of nostalgia, aging, and the pursuit of lost youth. The chemistry between Williams and Russell does most of the heavy lifting, but that’s not a problem. Talking about the best fictional quarterbacks in movies, Manning said simply, “We gotta have Kurt Russell from The Best of Times.”

Watch on Tubi

1 ‘Varsity Blues’ (1999)

Directed by Brian Robbins

varsity-blues-cast-featured
Image via Paramount Pictures


“I’m a good boy. I’ve always been good.” Varsity Blues centers on Jonathan “Mox” Moxon (James Van Der Beek), a thoughtful and academically inclined backup quarterback who is suddenly thrust into the spotlight when the star player (Paul Walker) suffers a career-ending injury. Under the oppressive and win-at-all-costs coaching of Bud Kilmer (Jon Voight), Mox grapples with the pressures and moral dilemmas of his new role.

Varsity Blues is a bleaker kind of sports movie. It uses the genre’s stock elements, like tragic injuries, a demanding coach, and a climactic final game, but examines them with a sharp eye. Rather than celebrating these aspects of the sport, it skewers them. Coach Kilmer is presented as a villain and sporting glory is shown to be a poisoned chalice. Mox sees through it all, expressed in his famous line, “I don’t want your life”. Clearly, this resonated with Manning on some level. Continuing his list of the best quarterbacks in film, he said, “We also need to have Mox […] from Varsity Blues.”


Watch on Paramount+

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