Showing posts with label Amy Adams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amy Adams. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 12, 2022

Trouble with the Curve: More than a Baseball Flick

"Baseball, it is said, is only a game. True. And the Grand Canyon is only a hole in Arizona. Not all holes, or games, are created equal."--George Will

Last week my friend Phil and I were talking about baseball movies. We listed favorites and commented on also-rans. We also each learned about a few films we'd not yet seen. One of these, for me, was the 2012 release Trouble with the Curve, starring Amy Adams, John Goodman, Justin Timberlake and a crotchety Clint Eastwood. 

Eastwood (Gus) is an aging baseball scout for the Atlanta Braves whose eyesight is beginning to deteriorate. Adams is Eastwood's estranged daughter, a hard-working attorney on the verge of becoming a partner at a law firm. Gus named her Mickey after his favorite baseball player, Mickey Mantle. 

The setting is ten years or so into the "moneyball" era. If you remember Moneyball, the film based on the Michael Lewis book by the same name, you'll recall that it took place in that transition period when computer algorithms began displacing the traditional system of sending out scouts to find new talent. It became an almost total reliance on data. Gus is a throwback whose perceived value is questionable to the younger scouts who live by the data. 

The backstory here is that Gus lost the wife he loved when Mickey was six. For reasons that come out later in the film, Gus and his daughter have an unresolved issue to deal with. 

Pete Klein, a longtime friend, is concerned enough about Gus that he intercedes and asks Mickey to help her father in an important scouting assignment. She reluctantly agrees because she's in the middle of a major project which may have a bearing on her becoming the first female partner at the legal firm she works for.

Well, Mickey knows baseball because baseball was her father's life and in choosing to join her father on a North Carolina scouting trip she...

As it turns out, the film is a father-daughter story with a baseball setting. It's also a feel-good with a measure of predictability. Nevertheless, it's a worthy baseball movie that you ought to see, in the event you missed it when it was released.

I like seeing John Goodman in a "normal" role, as opposed to those over-the-top characters he played in Flight and Inside Llewyn Davis. Goodman shows the value of longtime friends who notice and care about what we're going through.

As an aside, I couldn't help but think of Bill Belichick as I watched Mickey step up and show how much she knew about baseball by growing up with her father. Bill Belichick's dad was a football coach, and by age eight little Billy was learning how to assess defenses by watching game films. He was a student of the game from a very early age.

I suppose we should mention Justin Timberlake (Johnny). He's a scout for the Red Sox. Boston has the first pick in the MLB draft and Johnny is evaluating the same stud power hitter that the Braves are. One of the subplots is Mickey's personal love life. There's a lawyer with the firm who has a serious interest in her, but she's remaining non-committal, for reasons that come out later. You can tell that there's more electricity developing between her and Johnny as the story moves along. Will it end the way her other relationships have floundered?

Not that we care all that much. It's not high drama, just a comfortable ride with some characters we have grown to like and enjoy being with as they work out their problems.

Watching Trouble with the Curve did bring back a few baseball bmemories. When I played ball in the Babe Ruth League our team had a pitcher that some scouts from the Pittsburg Pirates were paying attention to. And another time, when I was playing varsity ball in high school, I faced a pitcher from Piscataway who was being scouted for MLB potential. When Ron Fulop, our first baseman, hit a triple off one of his fastballs, this "superstar" pitcher got rattled. I was up next and he whizzed four adrenaline-injected, supersonic pitches shoulder height and higher. I drew a walk. 

I never did find out if either of those guys made it to the majors. 

For a great read about how a kid from Panama became the greatest relief pitcher in baseball history, read The Closer. Here's my review of this inspiring baseball story.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

The Fighter (Film Review)

This weekend I finally had a chance to see The Fighter, a film that gained a lot of attention during Oscar season earlier this year. Within minutes I knew why: Christian Bale.

THIS REVIEW MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS

O.K., Hollywood must like making boxer films because they've produced their share. Six Rocky flicks, Cinderella Man, Raging Bull, Million Dollar Baby, Ali... each with its own twist, and The Fighter is no different in this respect. Like the others, it's the story of an underdog going against all odds to reach the top, in this case Light Welterweight Champion of the World.

The film is based on a true story, which makes me want to pull my punches here a little because the family it's about is still around. I commend them for allowing this story to be told because The Fighter does not put this family in a very good light.

The story is about "Irish" Micky Ward who does succeed in achieving the crown. But it's also a story about Dicky Ecklund, his half brother who once stood toe-to-toe with Sugar Ray Leonard and believes he knocked Leonard down. Ecklund is a a completely tragic character. A crackhead living in a dream world, believing he really was a somebody and was going to make Micky a somebody.

Christian Bale is superb in the role, and so unlike the Batman he has played, or the magician. His hyper and gaunt appearance at the opening immediately laces you to your seat for this story. The next surprise is Amy Adams (as Charlene), who caught out attention in Junebug and whom we all fell in love with in her Enchanted innocence. We liked her in Julie and Julia, too. So what a surprise to find such a foul-mouthed Brooklyn barmaid here.

Throw Melissa Leo into the mix as the hysterical overprotective mom who in this story is so lacking in self-awareness.... and you have the main four characters, all at odds with one another as they spar to control Micky's destiny.

The movie has the feel of documentary and then within the film there is a real documentary being made throughout, of Dicky Ecklund's story. The whole time he believes it is a documentary about his own comeback as a fighter. But the real documentary is something much darker, a story about the effects of crack.

Bale deserved the Oscar nomination he received, but all the characters were pitch perfect. I suspect, however, that some of the language in this film will make it unsuitable for many, but it has "real life" written all over it. I was impressed.

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