Great swing also.....Jim Carrey should do the sequel......That pitched looked like he was throwing BP to a three year old
Major league 2 is funny cause Harry Doyle steals the show. But beyond that, yeah.
A movie I saw as a kid and haven’t seen since is tiger town. I liked it a lot then. I wonder how it would be now.
For love of the game is pretty good. And vin scully is fantastic.
The phenom is on Netflix and is arming and accurate all at once
There are a ton of 'baseball' movies that are amusing or even interesting to people who technically understand the plot is connected to a vague storyline.
One I recall was a TV puke-storm called "Murder at The World Series" which was a lame-ass drama about some rookie who gets called up from the minors to pitch the W.S. I mean, one phone call to your neighbor who follows the game would tell you that script is missing a key fact or two. The acting and dialogue follows what you should discern is 90 minutes of filler on the network that showed it.
Any of those Disney-inspired 'angels' movies or 12-year-olds who show the Yankees that they ain't really seen a curve ball ... if you want kids to care about baseball, I guess they serve a purpose.
The worst was one called The Rookie, about this guy Steve Nebraska who comes out of Mexico for some reason to pitch for -- who else -- the Yanks in this W.S. game where he throws 81 pitches, all for strikes ... or 9 immaculate innings -- to confound the Cardinals who get cameos from Ozzie Smith and some others.
Seriously, if you plan to produce a movie script and have that talent/backing/clout, why not at least attempt to do something with reality?
I won't get into the life stories of Gehrig, Monte Stratton or the others -- those are movies that Gary Cooper or Jimmy Stewart did probably to complete a contract obligation with the studio. The scripts in those movies just defy decency, even during the 1940s.
I was OK with "Natural" until the final home run was so outlandishly National Lampoon as to be a facepalm moment. I mean, just let it clear the wall. It's the same thing without the phony-ass meltdown of the entire electrical system.
A League of Their Own