Gearing Up for The Game

The New York Times reviews “Harvard Beats Yale 29-29.”

new york times reviewer Manohla Dargis likes Harvard Beats Yale 29-29, a documentary film by Kevin Rafferty ’70 that opened in Manhattan just in time for the big game this weekend. Dargis calls the film “preposterously entertaining” even for those who “routinely shun” the “pagan sacrament” of college football. (If you’re in Cambridge for the big game, you can catch the film at the Brattle Theatre.)

Dargis places the legendary 1968 game in its moment in history (the same year as the My Lai massacre and the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy) and writes that the game…

…remains a nail-biter despite the visual quality of the footage, which is so unadorned and so humble—and almost entirely in long shot—it looks like a dispatch from a foreign land. And in some ways it was: Football fans still wore raccoon coats to games and the women in the stands cheering for Yale could not attend the college. The same month, Yale announced it was (finally) opening that door.

Read her review here; read about the film and Rafferty in the current issue of Harvard Magazine here.

Sub topics

You might also like

Springtime with Mass Audubon

Springtime with Mass Audubon

Harvard Goes Dancing

Crimson women’s basketball prepares for the NCAA tournament.

“A Game of Inches”

Harvard women’s basketball prepares for its rematch with Columbia. 

Most popular

Danielle Allen Debates Far-Right Blogger Curtis Yarvin

Popular monarchist debates Allen on democracy.

The New Gender Gaps

What to do as men and boys fall behind

FAS Dean Outlines Preparations for Loss of Federal Funding

“To preserve our mission, we must act now,” Hoekstra says at faculty meeting

Explore More From Current Issue

Lawrence Bacow on the Auschwitz Memorial

President Lawrence S. Bacow reflects on the liberation of Auschwitz

Springtime with Mass Audubon

Springtime with Mass Audubon

Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences on Discipline and Financial Aid

The Faculty of Arts and Sciences discusses classroom conversations, boosts aid, addresses discipline—and faces austerity