The Hamilton Spectator

Phi-nally, a home-town film

- BARRY WILNER

Putting together a documentar­y of a Super Bowl season is an extensive and exhausting project.

Except when it becomes a labour of love.

For dozens of employees at NFL Films, the 2017 Philadelph­ia Eagles season was particular­ly special. Thus, the DVD that chronicles it and becomes available to the public on Tuesday — PHI-NALLY is how it is dubbed — wasn’t exactly work.

“We are in Mount Laurel, New Jersey, which is about 20 minutes from the Linc,” says Todd Schmidt, who produces such enterprise­s for NFL Films.

“So many of our people are lifelong fans of the Eagles, who have suffered for all those years. And that is something that becomes part of the film; we wanted people out there to understand what some of these people went through during that crazy game and this season.

“I would love for an Arizona Cardinals fan to get the same bang out of this as my 22-year-old son and a lifelong Eagles fan will, and I like to think that the story will do that. This is more than a story of a football season,” says Schmidt.

“It’s about why teams and fans don’t quit, and that’s what Philly fans are like. They may get a lot of criticism, but there’s a reason Rocky means so much and showing the heart to never give up means so much.”

NFL Films had the good fortune of being able to place microphone­s on coach Doug Pederson and quarterbac­k Nick Foles. The exchanges between them not only are insightful football-wise, they provide a window into the aggressive­ness that was so critical to not only upending the Patriots in a classic Super Bowl, but in the Eagles putting together

such a successful season.

Indeed, Philadelph­ia’s 41-33 victory in Minneapoli­s probably made for a much more enchanting story than had the Patriots won. After all, New England taking the NFL title is anything but new, and the Eagles last won it in 1960, when Norm Van Brocklin was the quarterbac­k and Chuck Bednarik was playing linebacker and centre.

So Schmidt opted to open the documentar­y with a shot of Franklin Field on the University of Pennsylvan­ia campus — the site of that 1960 win over Green Bay. And he decided to close the film with the parade witnessed by more than 700,000 “so you get a clear idea of what this meant to the city of Philadelph­ia, the people of Philadelph­ia, and to Eagles fans.”

NFL Films actually makes two 55-minute films annually. The 2017 version of the Patriots’ season “will not see the light of day,” Schmidt explains. But it also would have had plenty of cachet.

“I think every team has a story,” he says, though how many viewers would be interested in, say, the Browns’ 0-16 campaign is debatable.

“Had the Patriots won, it would have been a film of dominance; if they had won they would have been the ’27 Yankees. It would have been magnificen­t if they had pulled out that game, two of the most amazing Super Bowls back

to back. Tom Brady would go down as the greatest magician ever to walk the earth.

“We are storytelle­rs and we would have made the elements we had work well.”

Still, the elements they had on Philadelph­ia’s side certainly seem more compelling. A team loses five key players, including late in the schedule the QB who appeared headed to league MVP honours. It’s an underdog in all of its post-season games despite being a top seed. Its history of falling short is monumental.

And then it wins a classic Super Bowl against an NFL dynasty.

“The Eagles story has a lot more historical context, which is red meat to a storytelle­r,” Schmidt says. “The more context and unique elements of the story, the better the story. So I loved the Eagles story.”

As did so many of his co-workers.

 ?? ROB CARR GETTY IMAGES ?? Nick Foles celebrates with his daughter Lily Foles after the Eagles 41-33 victory over the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LII.
ROB CARR GETTY IMAGES Nick Foles celebrates with his daughter Lily Foles after the Eagles 41-33 victory over the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LII.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In 1960 the Eagles’ Norm Van Brocklin, centre in profile, celebrates with Chuck Bednarik (60) after their 17-13 win over Green Bay.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In 1960 the Eagles’ Norm Van Brocklin, centre in profile, celebrates with Chuck Bednarik (60) after their 17-13 win over Green Bay.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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