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This is NFL Films

Episodes

1. Pro Football's Longest Day

2. Run to Daylight

3. American Football League Review

4. They Call It Pro Football

5. Football Follies

6. Lombardi

7. The Man Behind the Men (1968)

8. Big Game America

9. Eyeball to Eyeball

10. The Young The Old and The Bold

11. Try and Catch The Wind

12. More Than A Game

13. Pro Football Pottstown, PA

14. The New Breed

15. The Hunters

16. The Championship Chase

17. Son of Football Follies

18. The Defenders

19. Legends of The Fall

20. The Super Seventies

21. NFL Follies Go Hollywood

22. Crunchtime

23. In The Crunch

24. Strange But True Football Stories

25. Follies Crunches Highlights & Histories

26. The Gift of Grab

27. NFL Quarterback

28. Tough Guys

29. An Era of Excellence: The 1980's

30. High Stakes Heroes

31. Merchants of Menace

32. Search and Destroy

33. Playing With Fire

34. See How They Run

35. The Best of The 1980's

36. Bombs Away

37. Master Blasters

38. Super Sunday - A History of The Super Bowl

39. The NFL's Hungriest Men of The 90's - Volume 1

40. The NFL's Hungriest Men of the 90's - Volume 2

41. Winning Plays and Wacky Wonders

42. Thunder and Destruction

43. NFL Rocks

44. NFL's Hungriest Men of the 90's Volume III

45. Talk of The NFL

46. John Elway's Greatest Comebacks

47. 75 Seasons 1920-1995 (1994)

48. Monday Night Football 25th Anniversary

49. NFL's 100 Greatest Follies

50. The Super Bowl Dream Team

51. Greatest Ever (Vol. 1) Plays

52. Greatest Ever (Vol. 2) Players

53. Greatest Ever (Vol. 3) The Game

54. NFL's Greatest Ever - Volume 4 - The Quarterbacks

55. NFL's Greatest Ever - Volume 5 - The Runners

56. NFL's Greatest Ever - Volume 6 - The Dream Team

57. Quarterbacks on Quarterbacks

58. War Stories

59. Fight to The Finish

60. The Man Behind the Men (1996)

61. Running Backs

62. The Spirit of The Game

63. Talkin' Follies

64. Swearin', Losin', Referees & The Whistle

65. The State of The Game

66. 1998 - The Year in Sound

67. NFL Films Cinematographers

68. Football Lingo

70. Inside NFL Films

71. John Facenda

72. Game Innovations, Integrations, and Lost Strategies

73. 21st Century Follies

74. AFL Moments & Sounds of the 60's

75. Greatest Moments In Super Bowl History (2000)

76. Football and Life

77. Leading A Team

78. Matchup of The Millenium

79. Gatorade, Stick 'Em & Mud

80. Jan 5th, 2003 - The Most Exciting Playoff Day

81. Hall of Fame Induction Speaches

82. Reunion in Canton

83. The Greatest

84. Draft Stories

85. Greatest Super Bowl Moments

86. Stories From The Game

87. Two Minutes To Glory

88. '85 The Greatest Team in Pro Football History

Sources

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This is NFL Films

Much has been made of the Films style. Salon.com television critic Matt Zoller Seitz has called NFL Films "the greatest in-house P.R. machine in pro sports history . . . an outfit that could make even a tedius stalemate seem as momentous as the battle for the Alamo."[5] NFL Films productions follow certain patterns. Film is mostly used, one camera is dedicated entirely to slow motion shots, microphones are present on the sidelines and near the field to pick up both the sounds of the games as well as the talk on the sidelines, and narrators with deep, powerful, baritone voices are preferred. Narrators have generally been from the Philadelphia metropolitan area, with well-known announcers such as Jefferson Kaye, Harry Kalas, John Facenda, Andy Musser, Jack Whitaker, William Woodson, and current announcer Scott Graham all having narrated NFL Films presentations at various points in time. J.K. Simmons was tapped to narrate the company's one-hour recap of the 16-0 regular season of the 2007 New England Patriots, while actor Burt Lancaster was tabbed for narrations during 1969. Burl Ives narrated the 1971 Washington Redskins highlight film. Team-specific films such as year-in-review films have occasionally been narrated by broadcasters or personalities involved with the team in question. Examples include the 1985, 2000 and 2001 Oakland Raiders season reviews being narrated by actor and former Raiders player Carl Weathers. Former Giant Frank Gifford periodically narrated New York Giants season reviews (notably the company's throwback-themed 2013 season recap) until his death in 2015, and ex-Giants teammate Pat Summerall narrated highlight films for many teams until his death in 2013. New England Patriots play-by-play announcer Gil Santos narrated the year-in-review films of the 1974, 1976, and 1978 seasons, and New Orleans Saints films from their inception in 1967 through 1979 were narrated by Don Criqui, who called Saints games for the NFL on CBS in the team's early years, and radio announcers Al Wester and Wayne Mack. The style has been called tight on the spiral, a reference to the frequently-used slow-motion shot of the spinning football as it travels from the quarterback's hand to the receiver. This shot usually consists of showing the quarterback throwing the football, then the camera zooming in to focus on the spinning ball, then, as the ball starts to descend, the camera zooms out, showing the end result of the ball traveling into the receiver's hands. NFL Films also dubs sound bites of local radio broadcasts over key plays, because radio announcers are typically more enthusiastic about their home teams than are network television broadcasters. In addition, NFL Films often uses multiple camera angles (with an emphasis on close-up shots that often exaggerate the speed of the players in real time). The company's films also employ muscular orchestral scores from a wide variety of musicians, notably Sam Spence, Johnny Pearson (whose "Heavy Action" became the theme for Monday Night Football) Frank Rothman, Ralph Dollimore, Udi Harpaz, Malcolm Lockyer, Jan Stoeckart (under his varied stage names such as Jack Trombey), Peter Reno, Paul Lewis, Prameela Tomashek, Dave Robidoux and Tom Hedden. The company's use of KPM Musichouse tracks also notably included Syd Dale; tracks include "Malestrom" for the company's 1968 Minnesota Vikings season highlight reel and also the psychedelic-flavored jazz track "Artful Dodger" on the film recap of Super Bowl V, specifically during the montage which shows Johnny Unitas' 75-yard touchdown pass to John Mackey which was tipped in flight by Eddie Hinton and Mel Renfro before bounding to Mackey. The company also makes prolific use of footage of players and coaches in the locker room after the game. With these techniques NFL Films turns football games into events that mimic ballet, opera, and epic battle stories. Among the company's most famous creations is the poem and accompanying music cue "The Autumn Wind", which have become official themes for the Oakland Raiders.

Date: 01/01/1986
Rating: 10.0
Cast: n/a