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'23 Blast': Fact- and faith-based high school football inspirational

23 Blast is the latest entry in an increasingly popular genre: the faith-based "lite" drama. This directorial debut by veteran actor Dylan Baker is less preachy than movies made primarily for evangelical audiences (Fireproof, Courageous, or the original Left Behind: The Movie), but it's still a firm testament to the transformational power of faith.

Mark Hapka is Travis Freeman and Alexa Vega is Ashley in "23 Blast."
Mark Hapka is Travis Freeman and Alexa Vega is Ashley in "23 Blast."Read more

23 Blast is the latest entry in an increasingly popular genre: the faith-based "lite" drama. This directorial debut by veteran actor Dylan Baker is less preachy than movies made primarily for evangelical audiences (Fireproof, Courageous, or the original Left Behind: The Movie), but it's still a firm testament to the transformational power of faith.

Since football and faith tend to go together - the pre-kickoff bended knee is by now a cinematic cliche - films blending the two are becoming as common as football movies about overcoming adversity. This story, based on real events, focuses on the locker-room prayers of Travis Freeman (Mark Hapka), high school junior, gifted wide receiver, and star of the Corbin, Ky., Redhounds.

Travis' life is pretty sweet: He catches passes thrown by his best friend since youth football, quarterback Jerry Baker (Bram Hoover), to the adulation of his requisite blond cheerleader girlfriend. But when an aggressive eye infection leaves him blind, Travis grows understandably despondent. He withdraws to the privacy of his bedroom, where he listens to radio play-by-play of his team's mounting losses. Just as Travis reaches his nadir of self-pity, his coach (Stephen Lang) devises an outlandish plan for him to rejoin the team.

Hapka, a former Days of Our Lives star, does a serviceable job conveying the dejection and anger of a young man suddenly thrust into permanent darkness, and the lantern-jawed Hoover (who is the screenwriter's son) does a serviceable job playing Travis' wilder and less-focused bro. Two better-known supporting players round out the young cast: Alexa PenaVega (Spy Kids) plays Ashley, whose pluck and shy attraction draw Travis out of his funk, and Max Adler (Glee) appears as Cam, a teammate whose desperation for a scholarship leads to pitfalls in Travis' path.

Despite the decent performances, the script by first-time screenwriter Toni Hoover (who reportedly Googled "how to write a screenplay" after deciding to chronicle the story of her blinded football-playing friend) swings from flat to overly sentimental, while Baker's rookie direction is predictable and occasionally confusing. Even the central emotional dilemma, Travis' crisis of faith, is distilled into little more than a display of whether or not he's wearing his leather cross necklace.

23 Blast aims to be a combination platter of Brian's Song, Friday Night Lights, and The Miracle Worker. It definitely doesn't deliver at that level, but it's fine for youth groups and football-loving tweens looking for a tale of courage and determination.

23 Blast ** (Out of four stars)

Directed by Dylan Baker. With Mark Hapka, Stephen Lang, Alexa PenaVega, Max Adler. Distributed by Ocean Avenue Entertainment.

Running time: 1 hour, 38 mins.

Parent's guide: PG-13 (some teen drinking).

Playing at: area theaters.EndText