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The Longest Yard Poster

The Longest Yard

It's survival of the fiercest and funniest
1974 | 121m | English

(22720 votes)

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Popularity: 5 (history)

Details

A football player-turned-convict organizes a team of inmates to play against a team of prison guards. His dilemma is that the warden asks him to throw the game in return for an early release, but he is also concerned about the inmates' lack of self-esteem.
Release Date: Aug 21, 1974
Director: Robert Aldrich
Writer: Albert S. Ruddy, Tracy Keenan Wynn
Genres: Comedy, Drama
Keywords prison, american football, georgia, sports, quarterback, palm beach
Production Companies Paramount Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $43,000,000
Budget: $2,900,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Burt Reynolds Paul Crewe
Eddie Albert Warden Hazen
Ed Lauter Captain Knauer
Michael Conrad Nate Scarboro
James Hampton Caretaker
Harry Caesar Granville
John Steadman Pop
Charles Tyner Unger
Mike Henry Rassmeusen
Jim Nicholson Ice Man
Bernadette Peters Miss Toot
Pervis Atkins Mawabe
Tony Cacciotti Rotka
Anitra Ford Melissa
Richard Kiel Samson
Tony Reese Levitt
Michael Fox Announcer
Dino Washington Mason
George A. Jones Big George
Chuck Hayward Trooper I
Mort Marshall Assistant Warden
Joe Kapp Walking Boss
Pepper Martin Shop Steward
Ray Nitschke Bogdanski
Sonny Sixkiller The Indian
Robert Tessier Shokner
Ernie Wheelwright Spooner
Joe Dorsey Bartender
Gus Carlucci Team Doctor
Jack Rockwell Trainer
Sonny Shroyer Tannen
Ray Ogden Schmidt
Don Ferguson Referee
Alfie Wise Trooper II
Steve Wilder J.J.
Wilbur Gillian Big Wilbur
Wilson Warren Buttercup
Joe Jackson Little Joe
Howard Silverstein Howie
Donald Hixon Donny
Gerald Michael Atkins Con / Football player (uncredited)
Malcolm Atterbury Bit Part (uncredited)
J. Don Ferguson Football Referee (uncredited)
Lance Fuller Secondary Role (uncredited)
Harold Morris Minor Role (uncredited)
Bill Rampley Guard / Football Player (uncredited)
James Hooks Reynolds Con Football Player (uncredited)
Philip Wende Guard (uncredited)
Name Job
Robert Aldrich Director
Albert S. Ruddy Story
Hal Needham Stunt Coordinator, Second Unit Director
Gordon Daniel Sound Editor
Raphael Bretton Set Decoration
Joyce Selznick Casting
James M. Halty Stunts
Denny Arnold Stunts
Guy Del Russo Makeup Artist
Ron Wright Second Assistant Director
Jim Foglesong Sound Recordist
Fred Faust Sound Mixer
James Dowell Vance Production Design
Thol Simonson Special Effects
Frank Orsatti Stunts
Mickey Caruso Stunts
Pat Studstill Stunts
Steven R. Stevens Casting
Clifford C. Coleman Assistant Director
Howard Beals Sound Editor
James Fritch Sound Editor
Tom Ellingwood Makeup Artist
John Wilkinson Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Tracy Keenan Wynn Screenplay
Frank De Vol Original Music Composer
Joseph F. Biroc Director of Photography
Michael Luciano Editor
Gary McLarty Stunts
Glenn R. Wilder Stunts
Louie Elias Stunts
Chuck Hayward Stunts
Name Title
Albert S. Ruddy Producer
Alan P. Horowitz Associate Producer
Organization Category Person
Golden Globes Best Supporting Actor Burt Reynolds Nominated
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 21 35 15
2024 5 22 35 14
2024 6 20 36 10
2024 7 22 42 12
2024 8 18 31 12
2024 9 19 32 12
2024 10 18 37 8
2024 11 16 38 12
2024 12 14 21 9
2025 1 16 22 11
2025 2 11 18 3
2025 3 5 15 1
2025 4 2 6 1
2025 5 2 6 1
2025 6 2 3 1
2025 7 1 2 1
2025 8 2 2 1
2025 9 3 4 2
2025 10 3 6 2

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Reviews

John Chard
9.0

Football and prison is a recipe for brutal mirth. Disgraced former pro football quarterback Paul Crewe is sent to prison after a drunken night to remember. The prison is run by Warden Hazen, a football nut who spies an opportunity to utilise Crewe's ability at the sport to enhance the prison guar ... ds' team skills. After initially declining to help, Crewe is swayed into putting together a team of convicts to take on the guards in a one off match, thieves, murderers and psychopaths collectively come together to literally, beat the guards, but Crewe also has his own personal demons to exorcise. This violent, but wonderfully funny film has many things going for it. Directed with style by the gifted hands of Robert Aldrich, The Longest Yard cheekily examines the harshness of gridiron and fuses it with the brutality of the penal system. The script from Tracy Keenan Wynn is a sharp as a tack and Aldrich's use of split screens and slow motion sequences bring it all together very nicely indeed. I would also like to comment on the editing from Michael Luciano, nominated for the Oscar in that department, it didn't win, but in my honest opinion it's one of the best edited pictures from the 70s. Taking the lead role of Crewe is Burt Reynolds, here he is at the peak of his powers (perhaps never better) and has star appeal positively bristling from every hair on his rugged chest. It's a great performance, believable in the action sequences (he was once a halfback for Florida), and crucially having the comic ability to make Wynn's script deliver the necessary mirth quota. What is of most interest to me is that Crewe is a less than honourable guy, the first 15 minutes of the film gives us all we need to know about his make up, but much like One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest the following year, The Longest Yard has us rooting for the main protagonist entering the home straight, and that is something of a testament to Reynolds' charm and charisma. The film's crowning glory is the football game itself, taking up three parts of an hour, the highest compliment I can give it is to say that one doesn't need to be a fan of the sport to enjoy this final third. It's highly engaging as a comedy piece whilst also being octane inventive as an action junkie's series of events. A number of former gridiron stars fill out both sides of the teams to instill a high believability factor into the match itself, and the ending is a pure rewarding punch the air piece of cinema. 9/10

May 16, 2024
Geronimo1967
7.0

On the face of it, the warden "Eddie Albert" maybe wasn't having his brightest idea when he decides that his prisoners should play a game of American football against his guards, but when a former pro is sent down for eighteen months after an altercation with a Citröen and the harbour, he has just t ... he man to put together an opposing team. "Crewe" (Burt Reynolds) is offered preferential treatment for himself - and that might well mean early release, and for his team and so he and fellow inmate "Nate" (Michael Conrad) start recruiting. Obviously, there are no storage of volunteers but what starts off as a bit of glorified prank starts to mean something a little more to the team, and to "Crewe" himself as he must balance his selfish promises to the governor with the aspirations of a team that finally have some sense of purpose in their lives. With that conflict building as the game grows ever closer, just what will "Crewe" decide to do? It's all a little predictable on that last front, but Reynolds turns in quite a charismatic performance and Albert an equally dastardly one as the drama comedically illustrates the futility of imprisonment as a method of reintegrating folks into society. There's an entertaining mix of stereotypical inmates from which to choose from, and plenty of action towards the end giving us quite a sense of how perilous this ball game can be coupled with some entertaining shunts, bumps and black eyes.

Nov 25, 2024