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Varsity Blues

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Varsity Blues (Film)

"Football is a way of life."
Jonathon 'Mox' Moxon

Varsity Blues, a 1999 comedy-drama directed by Brian Robbins (All That, Good Burger) for MTV Films, is one of the great Cliché Storms of the 1990s. It is a sports story that centers around high school football in a small town in rural Texas.

The film revolves around the fictional small town of West Canaan, Texas; its high school football team, the Coyotes; and the team's head coach, Bud Kilmer (Jon Voight). Kilmer has won more than 20 district championships and two state championships; as such, the stadium is named after him, and a giant bronze statue of Kilmer has been erected in the end zone in his honor. However, the questionable lengths he goes to win these championships begin to surface after his star quarterback Lance Harbor (Paul Walker) goes down with a season-ending injury, prompting a conflict between Kilmer and the team's academically-minded backup quarterback, Jonathan "Mox" Moxon (James Van Der Beek).

The film also stars Ron Lester as Billy Bob and Scott Caan as Charlie Tweeder.


This film contains examples of:

  • The '90s: The music, clothing, and hair fully cement this film in the '90s. Right down to Mox's hemp and clay bead necklace.
  • All Guys Want Cheerleaders: Averted by Mox, who actually turns down a cheerleader, his best friend's girlfriend, because he prefers his girlfriend.
  • Alliterative Name: Billy Bob, though it's likely his nickname.
  • Badass Bookworm: Mox, who can make a ref across the field groan in pain from receiving a spiral thrown by him while sitting... As he reads Slaughterhouse-Five. He also gets a full academic scholarship to Brown University just before beating the best team in the conference.
  • Beyond Redemption: The entire team's reaction to Kilmer assaulting Mox in the locker room says this.
  • Big Man on Campus: Lance Harbor is the most popular person at West Canaan High, and the town as a whole. When Mox takes his place, he has a similar level of stardom thrust upon him.
  • Big Eater: Billy Bob is introduced eating a sandwich he keeps dunking in a jar of peanut butter while drinking directly from a bottle of pancake syrup.
  • Big Fun: The husky Billy Bob is very much a life of the party type guy.
  • Big Game: The one where they have to win to clench Bud Kilmer's 23rd District Championship.
  • Blackmail: Kilmer threatens Mox’s scholarship to Brown to keep him in line. Until the final game, that is.
  • Career-Ending Injury: Lance's knee injury was so severe, the doctor said it would take a minimum year and a half to heal, nixing his football scholarship to Florida State.
  • Conflicting Loyalty: There are multiple examples, but a conversation between Mox and his girlfriend underlines his conflict.
    Jules: Then quit!
    Mox: I can't.
    Jules: Then play.
    Mox: You don't understand...
  • Cool People Rebel Against Authority: The players, toward the police and later Kilmer as his lack of integrity comes to the surface.
  • Covers Always Lie: The cover implies Tweeder to be isolated in a brooding world of teen angst while the rest of the cast obliviously parties. Actually, Tweeder is a carefree party monster while the others struggle in various ways.
  • Chekhov's Gun: The Hook and Ladder play that was practiced earlier in the film is used to win the Big Game.
  • Cloudcuckoolander: Mox's brother Kyle seems to adopt and practice a different religious faith in every scene he's in. Eventually exaggerated when Kyle forms his own cult!
  • The Creon: Mox plays this in relation to Lance. As the backup quarterback, one would normally think that Mox would be champing at the bit to get a chance to start and play, but despite being talented, he's perfectly happy to be the second-stringer. He and Lance are both good friends with no competitive friction between them, and the first reaction Mox has to Lance's injury is fear for how badly his friend is hurt.
  • Date Rape/Black Comedy Rape: Charlie Tweeder talks to Mox about how girls are panty-droppers, after you give them some painkillers and alcohol. Subverted by Mox who, rather than laughing about it, covertly calls him a rapist.
    Mox: Tweeder, do you think you'll enjoy prison?
    Tweeder: I don't know... what?
  • Deconstruction: Of the hardass Coach Kilmer pushing his players to their limits. Coach Kilmer is heavily focused on winning and pushes his players as hard as possible to achieve victory, but unlike typical examples of this, Kilmer is a selfish, narcissistic tyrant whose obsession with winning runs so deep that he'll talk his injured stars into taking painkillers and ignoring injuries.
  • Dumb Muscle: His name is Billy Bob.
  • The Dog Bites Back:
    • All of the players react this way to Kilmer's growing abuse and disregard to his player's health and well-being. After seeing him physically assault Mox, the rest of the team refuse to follow him out on the field.
    • Billy Bob in particular, who had been on the receiving end of Kilmer's abuse, stands up to him when the latter orders an injured Wendell to be given a shot of cortisone to deaden the pain in his knee (despite the risk of Wendell receiving a more serious, permanent injury).
      Billy Bob: [to Kilmer] If that needle goes near him, I'll rip your arms off and beat you with them!
  • Down to the Last Play: And the play they run is the trick play that Kilmer yelled at Mox over earlier in the game.
  • Drill Sergeant Nasty: Coach Kilmer, who seems to pick scapegoats and then really lay into them but is generally rough and unforgiving to all his players.
  • Easy Evangelism: Kyle Moxon, dubbed "very spiritual" by his mother, goes from strapping himself to a cross to die for mankind's sins to praying into a fire dressed in Shinto clothing to stereotypical Nation of Islam garb and behavior to starting his own cult.
  • Everyone Has Standards:
    • After Tweeder steals a police car and exposes himself to several women, the Sheriff is appalled by his and the other players' reckless behavior and wants to start clamping down on their shenanigans. Unfortunately, Kilmer bullies him into continuing to look the other way.
    • Despite his questionable methods and the aforementioned bullying to keep his players out of legal trouble, Kilmer doesn't approve of their off the field recklessness either and does call the team out for said. behavior after a loss.
  • Everytown, America: West Canaan, Texas is a fictional but archetypal small country town.
  • Fan Disservice: Billy Bob, for comedy, twice. Once interrupting sex between Lance and Darcy to throw up in a washing machine, and another time getting up on the stage at the strip club, stripping to his boxers and dancing with the stripper.
  • Fanservice Extra: A few of them, including a visit to the strip club.
  • Genius Book Club: Mox is reading Slaughterhouse-Five on the bench, showing him to be an Academic Athlete.
  • Girl Next Door: Jules is a kind, grounded girl who is less caught up in football than many of her peers, making her and Mox a good fit.
  • Gold Digger: Of a sort. Darcy seemingly tries to woo whoever is the Coyote's star quarterback. She confesses to Mox, that it's "not about love, but having a better life" as she hopes to tag along with whatever future success said quarterback might have.
  • Groin Attack:"...And say, 'I'm stupid and I'm about to get hit in the nuts.'"
  • Hangover Sensitivity: When the boys leave the strip club following a night of partying. The hangover lasts into the game that night.
  • Heel Realization: It's ambiguous since there's no dialogue in the scene. After being driven away by the team, Coach Kilmer ends up in his office looking at his old trophies, and catches his reflection in one of them. All we know is he never coached in West Canaan again, and didn't follow up on his threats to mess up Mox's scholarship.
  • Hidden Depths: Darcy may seem like a vapid, gold-digging cheerleader at times, but in addition to her Small Town Boredom, she is also a Straight-A student.
  • Hot Teacher: Taken to the extreme with Miss Davis, especially considering it's a small town. Bonus points for her dancing to Van Halen's "Hot For Teacher". Double bonus because she's the sex ed teacher.
  • How Many Fingers?: The trainer uses this to help diagnose Billy Bob's concussion.
    Mox: No-no-no, it's Billy Bob. It's gotta be true or false. Billy Bob! The man is holding up some fingers, true or false?
    Billy Bob: ...True?
  • Hurricane of Euphemisms: Miss Davis asked for other terms for the male erection... Mox obliges.
    Mox: The male erection? Pitchin' a tent, sportin' a wood, the icicle is formed, the march is on... stiff, stiffie, Mr. Mortis, rigor mortis has set in... flesh rocket, Jack's magic beanstalk, tall Tommy, mushroom on a stick, Mr. Mushroomhead, purple-headed yogurt slinger...
  • I Call Him "Mister Happy": Culminating in:
    Mox: Oh, and Pedro.
    Ms. Davis: ...Pedro?
  • Innocently Insensitive: Mox is honestly unaware of Kilmer's racist behavior towards the black players until Wendell takes him aside and explains it. Thereafter, he decides to do what he can to combat it.
  • Interrupted Suicide: Mox tracks Billy Bob at the field, who is binge drinking and shooting his old trophies before presumably shooting himself; Mox talks him down.
  • It's All About Me: Kilmer's attitude regarding the football program, since he's fully willing to sacrifice the health of high school athletes to further his personal glory as a winning coach, even. if it means costing his players opportunities beyond the high school level.
    • When Lance goes down and is left on the ground screaming in pain, his father says, "Lord, don't do this to me."
  • Jacob Marley Warning: When Kilmer tries convincing Wendell to take painkillers so he can play through injury during the final game, Lance arrives in the locker room on his crutches telling Wendell not to do it because he'll wind up just like him.
  • Jerkass: Coach Bud Kilmer. This page is full of examples of Kilmer being a jerkass. He abuses the kids on his team, discriminates against his black players, makes them play injured and sick, abandons anyone who gets badly injured, encourages his players to injure opposing players, and based on his threat to Mox, it is implied that he’s altered the grades of players who didn’t fall in line with his direction.
  • Jerkass Has a Point: During one game, Mox sits on the bench reading a book instead of watching the action. Kilmer is understandably pissed off about this since Mox is supposed to be paying attention and could possibly have to go into the game if Lance gets injured (which happens the next game).
    • Kilmer also has every reason to rage when his star players are too hungover to play well enough to beat what should have been an inferior team. He might be a colossal jackass, but in this case, his "The Reason You Suck" Speech was rightfully earned by Mox and the crew that went out partying the night before.
      Kilmer: The hard work of so many... sacrificed by the disrespect of few.
  • Kick the Dog: When Lance arrives in the locker room to warn Wendell not to take the painkiller shot, Kilmer has the audacity to dismiss Lance as a "gimp" for suffering a Career-Ending Injury that was Kilmer's fault.
  • Losing Is Worse Than Death: Of course it's easier since it's not his well-being, but that of his players at risk. Unfortunately, this is a bit of Truth in Television with some coaches in high school sports, so long as they treat it as Serious Business. And in Texas, football is as serious as baseball in New York, hockey is for Canada or soccer for Brazil.
    Coach Kilmer: The only pain that matters is the pain you inflict!
    • Notably, this mentality is what kicks off the plot, as Coach Kilmer's, and by extension the town's, fixation on this trope result in his talking injured high-school athletes into taking painkillers and avoiding the hospital so they can still play, with the doctors treating Lance absolutely horrified at the amount of scar tissue they find in his knee, and turning what would be a season-ending injury into a career-ending one.
  • The Main Characters Do Everything: Most notably in the blocked punt scene. Billy Bob asks to be put in on defense and blocks two guys at once, and Tweeder (who's already playing defense, even though he's a wide receiver) blocks the punt. There's also a scene where Mox quits and Kilmer starts to promote Tweeder to quarterback. Again, Tweeder is the star wide receiver. The only player not one of the main characters to be seen doing anything is a receiver named Gonzales catching a single pass during the last game.
  • Meaningful Name: Johnathan "Mox" Moxon as in "moxie".
  • Miracle Rally: With the Coyotes down 17-7 and their halfback injured, Lance puts together an offensive scheme with 5 wide receivers. They score, block a punt, and win on a trick play.
  • Montage: After their wild night of drinking at the strip club, the football game the next day is a montage of the main characters playing terribly and losing because of it, set to AC/DC's "Thunderstruck."
  • Monumentally Important Founder: There is a bronzed statue of Coach Kilmer, for whom the high school stadium is also named.
  • Mr. Fanservice: Plenty of the football players show off their muscles. Tweeder walks naked in the street wearing just a cowboy hat.
  • Ms. Fanservice: Darcy, especially when she pulls out the whipped cream. She's played by Ali Larter, after all.
    • Miss Davis too. Double points for Tonie Perensky being in her 40's at the time of filming, and grabbing a record for being the oldest person to go nude in film at the time.
  • My Greatest Failure: Billy Bob never stops beating himself up for Lance's injury, even though it wasn't his fault that Coach Kilmer made him play while concussed and he passed out.
  • My Sister Is Off-Limits: Averted. Lance is perfectly fine with Mox dating his younger sister.
  • Naked People Are Funny: Two examples.
    • While Tweeder is joyriding a stolen cop car, he skids to a stop right in front of Mox, then strides out with only the deputy's hat to cover his shame.
    • At the gentlemen's club, Billy Bob decides to climb up on the stage and do an impromptu dance, to his teammates' disgust.
  • Narcissist: Coach Bud Kilmer. All he cares about is his personal glory, has a Never My Fault moment with Billy Bob, his most devoted player and expects the team to obey his every command, especially in the final scenes.
  • Never My Fault: Kilmer blames Billy Bob missing a block for Lance's Career-Ending Injury, despite the fact it only happened because Kilmer forced Billy Bob to play through a concussion and Lance's knee was already weakened due to Kilmer making him play through an injury he already had instead of sitting out a game.
  • Not Afraid of You Anymore: During the final game, when Kilmer tries to force Wendell to take painkillers and continue playing, Mox threatens to quit on the spot if Kilmer gives him the needle, ignoring his threats to ruin his college chances. Billy Bob and the rest of the team also stand up to Kilmer, stating the only way they’re playing is without Kilmer.
  • Only Sane Man: Wendell thinks it's not a good idea for the guys to get drunk the night before their game. He winds up being right as they wind up losing partly due to their hangovers impacting their performance.
  • Only Known by Their Nickname: Billy Bob and Tweeder, to name a couple.
  • Ooh, Me Accent's Slipping: James Van Der Beek's Texas accent comes and goes throughout the film and is never quite consistent.
  • Parental Obliviousness: Sam Moxon is this to a T. His son just received an acceptance letter to an Ivy League college, with a full academic scholarship nonetheless, but Sam just wants to talk about the upcoming football game. The sad irony is that despite Sam's obsession with the Coyotes and idolization of Kilmer, Kilmer doesn't think highly of Sam and considered him a "no-talent pussy" whose only redeeming quality as a player was that he never questioned Kilmer's orders.
  • Parental Substitute: Billy Bob thought he’d had a good relationship with Coach Kilmer before the chain of events that led to Lance's injury.
    *crying* "Man, Coach loved me like a son! Treated me like one, too."
  • Plot Hole: So if Moxon never played another game of football after winning the District Final, whatever became of the Coyotes going on to the State Finals?
  • Politically Incorrect Villain: Kilmer sees Wendell and the other black players as nothing more than workhorses to help the team drive the ball downfield before giving the scoring opportunities to white players. Wendell's mom has to do his college recruiting because Kilmer won't help the black players get noticed by scouts.
  • Prelude to Suicide: When Mox learns Billy Bob gave the Moxon Family his pet pig to take care of, he instantly and correctly sees this as a sign of Billy Bob getting ready to kill himself and races to (fortunately successfully) stop him. Even his probably drunk and angry parents immediately recognized the implication.
  • Put Me In, Coach!: "Put me in there! We'll block it." With Billy Bob calling him "Coach Lance."
  • The Quarterback: Lance, then more especially Mox, with his talking Billy down, rousing speech, intelligence and kindness.
  • The Rival: Lance and Mox are close friends, but their respective fathers were rivals back in the day and keep trying to relive their rivalry through their kids.
  • Rousing Speech: Done a couple of times by Kilmer and then by Mox at halftime of the final game after the team overthrows Kilmer.
  • Save Our Team: Inverted; it's only when the team kicks their abusive, uncaring, and narcissistic coach to the curb that they achieve true success.
  • Scary Black Man: The kid who puts the hit on Lance Harbor that injures him looks to be about 6 foot 3 and is ripped to the gills - he looks like an NFL player.
  • Serious Business: Football in West Caanan, Texas - see Losing Is Worse Than Death.
  • Sexiness Score: During the Wild Teen Party at the strip club, the guys find out their Hot Teacher Miss Davis is one of the strippers, and later they drunkenly rate her strip number, with Tweeder giving her a 9.5 and Billy Bob giving her a "fucking 10".
  • Skewed Priorities: Sam Moxon considers playing for the West Canaan Coyotes to be the opportunity of a lifetime and has little patience for anything he sees as a distraction from that. Mox rightly tells him that it's only a lifetime opportunity for him and there's more to the world than their no-name town's high school football team.
  • Small Town Boredom: The reason Darcy Sears sticks with the star players.
  • STD Immunity: Averted, albeit indirectly, when Tweeder looks down his own pants and asks aloud, "...The fuck is that?!"
  • Surprisingly Realistic Outcome: Coach Kilmer's obsession with winning runs so deep that he'll talk his injured stars into taking painkillers and ignoring injuries - which winds up costing Lance his scholarship to college as his knee was so shredded that by the time the doctors got to it, a season-ending injury became a Career-Ending Injury. In particular, Billy-Bob's concussion has become much invokedHarsher in Hindsight in the decades since this movie premiered, as science and medicine have progressed and revealed concussions are much more dangerous long-term than they were thought to be back in the '90s.
  • Team Pet: Billy Bob's pet pig, Bacon. Billy Bob may think that Bacon is a dog.
  • Teenage Wasteland: If you're a Coyote in West Canaan (especially a starter), don't expect the law to apply to you. You are a part of a different society that has its own laws.
  • Threat Backfire: When Mox threatens to quit the team if Kilmer gives Wendell a painkiller, Kilmer covertly threatens Mox’s scholarship again. Mox doesn’t care.
  • Token Minority: Wendell Brown. He is also the only one of the main cast to play college football on scholarship.
  • Unusual Euphemism: See the Hurricane of Euphemisms.
  • Vicariously Ambitious: Mox's father Sam played for Kilmer and the Coyotes when he was a high schooler, but didn't accomplish much as a player. As a result, he constantly tries to push Mox into becoming the star player that he wishes he was, despite Mox having his sights set on goals much bigger than being a small-town high school football star.
  • Villain with Good Publicity: The town loves Coach Kilmer because he wins championships, but also because they're not aware of the lengths to which he goes to do it.
  • Villainous Breakdown: Coach Kilmer starts losing his grip as Mox continues to defy him. When Tweeder and Mox refuse to carry on playing, Kilmer angrily assaults the latter in the locker room in full view of the other players (who pry him off Mox), which costs him his credibility and any respect they had for him. His desperate attempts to rally the team fail as they refuse to follow him.
  • Virgin-Shaming: Mox actually does this to himself when he learns Darcy wants to hook up with him, telling himself that there's no reason why he shouldn't and anyone man would and should. He stays faithful to Julie instead.
  • What Happened to the Mouse?: Mox's narration of Billy Bob and Tweeder in the "Where Are They Now?" Epilogue only speaks of their reactions to winning the big game, so the viewers are left with no knowledge of what became of them after high school.
  • "Where Are They Now?" Epilogue: Mox mentions he's a Brown University graduate, Wendell went on to Grambling State, Lance found his calling as a football coach rather than a player, and that Kilmer left town and never coached football again. It's implied he's now a disgrace, as Mox states his statue still stands at West Canaan High only because "it's too heavy to move."
  • Wild Teen Party: The West Canaan football team throw lots of these, full of binge drinking, casual sex and other debauchery.
  • Worst Aid: Kilmer's policy of giving players injections for injuries is horrific to any medical provider. It's clear that Lance is getting hurt from straining his ACL and he should be getting time off to heal and possibly physical therapy. Instead, he gets a painkiller that makes him feel like his knee is fine and keeps playing. But pain is there for a reason, and he almost immediately destroys his knee the very next time he plays, resulting in a Career-Ending Injury. Likewise, a concussion, even in the timeframe in which the movie is set, would result in being sidelined for at least two weeks, even without medical scans, because the player would have difficult walking straight.
  • You Can Leave Your Hat On: The stripper dancing to "Hot for Teacher"... turns out to be the sex-ed teacher Miss Davis.
  • You Have Failed Me: Coach Kilmer blames Billy Bob for Lance's injury, since Billy Bob collapsed (due to a concussion Kilmer ignored) and missed his block.

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John Moxon takes over from Coach Bud Kilmer and leads his team to victory.

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