The Rens were an integral part of the historic Harlem Renaissance explosion of African-American arts, culture and music during the ‘20s and ‘30s. In 1923 Bob Douglas, an immigrant from the British West Indies who ended up in Harlem, established and managed the all-black New York Renaissance Big Five basketball team, named after the Harlem Renaissance Casino and Ballroom (where they practiced on the dance floor), but known by fans as the “Harlem Rens.” In the early part of last century, pro sports were as segregated as any other sector of American life, with all-black teams excluded from competing in national championship tournaments. On the Shoulders of Giants succeeds largely due to the passion of the filmmakers and their fellow basketball enthusiasts, who are determined to preserve and celebrate this inspiring slice of African American history. With ESPN and other networks covering all the minutiae of professional sports, it’s a rare sports documentary that offers any surprises in either content or execution. Available on VOD from Comcast, Time Warner and Cox cable networks through the end of March, Giants should also see overtime on DVD and in educational markets. The documentary, featuring Basketball Hall of Famer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - who co-wrote the project with Anna Waterhouse - sets the record straight with an absorbing narrative and standout interviews with cultural figures and basketball greats. The Harlem Rens were the first all-African American professional basketball team to win a national championship, a distinction that until recently was known mostly to the sport’s insiders. “The story of the greatest basketball team you never heard of” - the subtitle of sports doc On the Shoulders of Giants - couldn’t be more appropriate.
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