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'Sunset Park' (R)

'Sunset': Less Than We Hooped For

By Rita Kempley
Washington Post Staff Writer
April 26, 1996

In "Sunset Park," a moronic Cinderella story about a losing basketball team turned around by a new, unexperienced female coach, Rhea Perlman proves that white women can't jump either. Set in an inner-city high school, this wholly derivative flick combines the on-court hoopla of "Hoosiers" with the white saintliness of "Dangerous Minds."

Perlman is annoyingly spunky as Phyllis Saroka, a phys-ed teacher who applies for the higher-paying coaching job even though she knowns nothing about the sport. The squad takes umbrage at her incompetence and is initially uncooperative. But Phyllis wins the team over after connecting with its star player, Shorty (rapper Fredro Starr), and a hyperactive bench warmer, Busy-Bee (De'Aundre Bonds).

If they teach her basketball, she promises, she'll teach the talented but undisciplined young men teamwork, both on and off the court. In the process, the coach also finds new purpose in her own empty life. She may look like Mr. Kotter, but Phyllis is just another Chips off the old block.

Sunset Park is rated R for language and drug use.

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