Drumline (2002)
Drumline (2002) Profile Photo

Drumline (2002)

Genre
Comedy, Musical, Drama
Release Date
December 13, 2002
Studio
The 20th Century Fox
Official Site
http://www.drumlinemovie.com/
Genre
Comedy, Musical, Drama
Release Date
December 13, 2002
MPAA Rating
PG-13
Duration
118 minute(s)
Production Budget
20
Studio
The 20th Century Fox
Official Site
http://www.drumlinemovie.com/
Director
Charles Stone III
Producer
Timothy M. Bourne, Wendy Finerman, Jody Gerson
Screenwriter
Tina Gordon Chism, Shawn Schepps
Starring

For fans of America's show-style marching bands, halftime is game time.

A squad of players, some 300 strong and armed with musical instruments, takes over the field, commanding attention with their stirring, spectacular display of choreography and musicianship.

The football contest's controlled mayhem makes way for the blaring sound of trumpets and the heart-thumping rhythm of drums. Their sounds are rousing and rhythmic, exhilaratingand entertaining, flamboyant and funky. As the bands pulsate and parade onto the gridiron, they are, for many, the real attraction of the game.

As as team, they sport their own stars: a tuba player, a clarinetist, or a trumpeteer. Like a quaterback leading his team to victory, the drumline, a troupe of talented percussionists whose cadenced rhythm rocks the rafters of any dome, bring crowds to their feet with their daring feats of music and athleticism.

Into this rigorous, ritualistic world comes a kid from a different culture. Devon Miles, a young, gifted hip-hop drummer on the school's renowned marching band's drumline. Devon, sporting a talent that is both raw and undisciplined, has one problem : He marches to the beat of his own drum.

Surmounting overwhelming odds, he snares a spot as a starter, much to the disdain of a resentful senior class band member, Sean Taylor, who dismisses the freshman's skills as bogus. When Taylor discovers something amiss about Devon's abilities, he alerts Dr.Lee, the school's demanding, dedicated band director, who suspects that the upstart talent may have duped the school into awarding him his scholarship. That situation threatens not only Devon's future at the scholl but, more immediately, his spot on the band's drumline just before the heralded Big Southern Classic, one of the region's most popular musical competition, spotlighting some of the area's best college bands and the winner-take-all jackpot of $100,000 for the school.

Now, with so much money, and possibly his own job, at stake, can Dr.Lee afford to pass up such a prize by keeping his star drumer onthe sidelines?