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  1. Still, We Believe: The Boston Red Sox Movie is a 2004 documentary/sport film documenting the Boston Red Sox' 2003 season and the team's relationship with its fans. It was directed by Paul Doyle Jr. and was first released on May 7, 2004 at the Loew’s Boston Common Theater in Boston, Massachusetts.

  2. Apr 26, 2004 · With Joe Castiglione, Jim Connors, Paul Constine, Steve Craven. A look at the Boston Red Sox's 2003 season, from Spring Training to their meeting with the New York Yankees in the American League Championship Series, and the team's relationship with their fans.

    • (329)
    • Documentary, Sport
    • Paul Doyle Jr.
    • 2004-04-26
  3. It has been 100 years since the Boston Red Sox won their first World Series and 85 years since they won their last title. What keeps this team's bandwagon so full in the face of such a drought? With unprecedented access, Bombo sets out to see what the team, its new owners, and its wunderkind General Manager will do to reverse this trend in history.

    • 2 min
    • 1560
    • Bombo Sports & Entertainment
  4. Still, We Believe: The Boston Red Sox Movie. Filmmaker Paul Doyle Jr. chronicles the team's 2003 season, from spring training to the AL championship series.

    • (5)
    • Paul Doyle Jr.
    • PG
    • Documentary
  5. May 9, 2004 · A look at the Boston Red Sox's 2003 season, from Spring Training to their meeting with the New York Yankees in the American League Championship Series, and the team's relationship with their fans. Movies

  6. Mar 22, 2005 · STILL WE BELIEVE follows an endearing coterie of fans through the season of our hopes, one that would end in venerable BoSox fashion by a spectacular sequence of crashing and burning. Grady Little would be exiled to North Carolina, his given name rarely pronounced in New England after his American League Championship Series decision ...

    • DVD
  7. Jul 4, 2004 · That tradition is the subject of Still, We Believe, Paul Doyles documentary chronicle of the 2003 Red Sox. The club gave Doyle unlimited access, from locker room to owner’s box, but what he’s really interested in are Boston’s fans.