Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Movie Review: SonicsGate


This is a heart-wrenching documentary about the Seattle Sonics getting relocated to Oklahoma City. I was pleasantly surprised how much I enjoyed this film. It is a bit dry and long but I don't mind those type of films. For the short attention span people, it may bore you to death. There is a lot of lawyer speak and passionate fans expressing themselves in angry and emotional ways.

It started out with a short history which I found interesting. I remembered Kemp, Payton, Schrempf, and George Karl, but learning about Lenny Wilkins, Spencer Haywood, Jack Sikma, Tom Chambers and the other old schoolers improved my overall basketball history knowledge. Where else can you learn about these guys without having seen them first-hand? We find out about the Sonics early championship, and the passion of the sports town. They tell the story behind the incompetent and dishonest ownership groups buying and selling the team.

We find out that Key Arena is not very functional for the NBA business model. With Key Arena not being able to generate revenue to make a profit, even if it were operating at max capacity every night, and the tax payers not wanting to pay for a new arena, the relocation topic becomes almost unavoidable. So the team gets sold to a group from Oklahoma City, with no investors from Seattle in the group, and the former ownership is surprised that the team may be relocated. Hmmmmmm, who would have thunk that?

But the new owner of the Sonics gets caught in a web of lies that basically show the city that he had no intentions of keeping the team in Seattle. He then tries to lie his way out of those lies, which almost never works (especially for me, personally). This leads to court case in which Seattle is trying to keep the team due to the new ownership being full of shit.

This is where one of the real losers of the film steps in. The Mayor of Seattle comes to the rescue of the city. Then he gets promptly turned into the goat (not G.O.A.T.) of the film. He championed the people until a few bucks for the city were waved in his face. Before a verdict was reached in the court case, the mayor settles the case out of court for money for the city. Some people on the documentary think that it was possible the team could have remained in Seattle after the verdict. I'm not so convinced this was the case.

The film also tends to paint David Stern as a prick. It just seems like sour grapes. Just because he wasn't behind the effort for the Seattle to keep their faulty business model, they clip together a bunch of scenes that make him look grumpy and unsympathetic.

Overall, I would recommend the film. I don't have too many other documentaries to compare it to, but I'll give it 4 of 5 stars. The length of the film (2:00) could turn some people off, but my advice is: if it looks interesting to you, give it a shot.

Here is the film in it's entirety

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