'Medora'- Andrew Cohn and Davy Rothbart's documentary

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The titular Indiana town is clearly in sad shape, its population reduced to 500 after such devastating events as the closing of its formerly thriving automotive parts factory and brick plant. The local high school has resisted the trend of consolidation and remains independent, but with a student population of just 72 it’s not exactly easy to fill the ranks of its varsity basketball team.
And indeed the Medora Hornets have fallen on hard times as well. Documenting their 2010-2011 season, the film delivers scenes of one losing game after another, with the increasingly morose players unable to respond to the desperate efforts of their volunteer coach.
The filmmakers point a spotlight on several of the players, including Rusty, whose addict mother is in rehab, forcing him to bunk at a classmate’s house until he’s forced to leave after they’re nearly evicted from their trailer park; Robby, who wants to go to college despite his farmer family’s lack of funds; and Dylan, who’s chosen to live with his grandmother instead of his harried single mom and agonizes over whether or not to meet the father who abandoned them years earlier.
Using Walker Evans-style photography to convey the town’s dire economic state -- there are plenty of shots of vacant storefronts and bleak landscapes -- the film features a scene in which the school’s board members desperately try to figure out how to compensate for a budget shortfall of $280,000.
Alternating between vignettes both joyful (the senior prom) and despairing (one of the boys is arrested for drunken driving), Medora paints an evocative portrait of a small town fallen that’s seen much better days. Its plight is made all the more poignant by the inclusion of archival footage and photographs of both the town and the basketball team in long-ago happier times.

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