The Bedford College football coach cuts a deal with a talented player who also happens to be a convicted bank robber. If he stays out of trouble, the coach will get him paroled.


Honestly, you probably don't need to watch Gridiron Flash. Unless you are some kind of completionist for mid-thirties sports dramas or you just really, really miss the aesthetic of old collegiate bleachers, it is going to feel like a slog. People who like snappy dialogue or actual stakes might want to look elsewhere.Th...


Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Glenn Tryon

Robert N. Bradbury
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"Honestly, you probably don't need to watch Gridiron Flash. Unless you are some kind of completionist for mid-thirties sports dramas or you just really, really miss the aesthetic of old collegiate bleachers, it is going to feel like a slog. People who like snappy dialogue or actual stakes might want to look elsewhere.The whole premise is just wild. The coach thinks the secret to a championship isn't training or strategy, but rather getting a guy out of the clink and putting him in a jersey. It ma..."
Alden Nash, Glenn Tryon, Earle Snell, Nicholas T. Barrows, Louis Stevens
United States

