Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Do People Only Like Their Sports' Movies Sympathetic?

I noted that 42 despite tepid reviews did okay at the box office. MONEYBALL, an excellent but cynical look at baseball last year or the year before, did not do all that well despite the star power of Brad Pitt.

Are we especially nostalgic about sports movies and only embrace ones that show the sport the way we would hope it to be rather than how it is? My favorites take a more jaundiced look at sports. HOOP DREAMS, for instance.

Baseball movies seem the most nostalgic. What are your favorites? Which ones offer a full picture?

26 comments:

  1. Anonymous9:14 AM

    You're right, lots of good baseball movies. Here are 10 favorites:

    Field of Dreams
    Bang the Drum Slowly
    Bull Durham
    Pride of the Yankees
    Eight Men Out (certainly unpleasant)
    The Stratton Story
    It Happens Every Spring
    The Bad News Bears
    The Bingo Long Traveling All Stars & Motor Kings
    A League of Their Own

    The worst sports movies ever:

    The Babe Ruth Story (William Bendix)
    Safe at Home!

    As a big Yankee fan I had to see this when it came out in 1962. Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris played themselves, very very badly.

    Jeff M.

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  2. Hadn't really thought about it before. Two of my favorites are North Dallas Forty and Any Given Sunday, both of which are pretty cynical, I think.

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  3. the most cynicism seems to come with football and boxing movies.

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  4. Sports feed fantasies so I suspect you're right about the positive endings being preferred over downers. But an exception might be the original Brian's Song.

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  5. Football and boxing are the primary US sports about hurting each other, though hockey always tries to high-stick its way into that club. MMA gaining currency as Real Life wrasslin'.

    Bendix was fine, as I remember him, in KILL THE UMPIRE...not in scary thug nor hagiography mode so much as a less goofy variation on Riley.

    Among the most clear-eyed sports films I recall:
    PERSONAL BEST
    DOWNHILL RACER
    FAT CITY
    SLAPSHOT
    the somewhat hagiographic telefilm BABE (haven't seen it since it was new)
    HEART LIKE A WHEEL

    among the worst:
    THE BETSY (despite the swimming pool scene)
    WHEN WE WERE KINGS (if the fetishistic worship of every backstage sweating frame of James Brown they could find wasn't enough, they so tellingly coupled that with repeated insult to Miriam Makeba)

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  6. I thought the ROCKY series was overdone. Do they actually fight like he does in the ring? I have never been to a real boxing match. On the other hand, THE CHAMP, I think, is the most sympathetic film about boxing I've seen.

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  7. Anonymous10:39 AM

    Ah yes, who could ever forget the swimming pool scene in THE BETSY?

    Not I.


    Jeff M.

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  8. I was oddly happified to learn a year or so back that Ms. Beller and Thomas Dolby wed, some years after their most intensely public lives, and apparently have had a good or at least a lasting marriage.

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  9. One of my favorite movies features a bicycle race: BREAKING AWAY.

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  10. saw that again not long ago and it holds up.

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  12. http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/culturebox/2013/05/likable_and_unlikable_characters_in_fiction_claire_messud_and_meg_wolitzer.html

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  13. Anonymous2:13 PM

    My favorite sports movie is Bull Durham which is wise about baseball AND life. It also features one of my all-time favorite quotes: "The world is made for people who aren't cursed with self-awareness." How often I have had recourse to quote that line. Sigh.

    Deb

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  14. THat seems to be a very common discussion right now, Todd.
    I wondered where that line came from Deb. Thanks.

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  15. Fantasies of meaningful "genre" will do that to one.

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  16. Caddyshack!

    How about Casey's Shadow?

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  17. Wow1 They both are distance hums for me. Horse racing movies? Are they more about gambling than sports?

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  18. Anonymous4:55 PM

    The only part of CADDYSHACK I really liked was Rodney. Other non baseball sports movies I like:

    Brian's Song (original only)
    Slap Shot
    Breaking Away


    Jeff M.

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  19. More horse-racing films should be about cruelty to horses, but NATIONAL VELVET through SECRETARIAT are largely about the horses and their keepers, as opposed to GUYS AND DOLLS...

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  20. BEND IT LIKE BECKHAM was certainly pleasant/reasonably true to life.

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  21. How come no one mentioned Idol of the Crowds where John Wayne plays a chicken farmer who tries to save his farm by playing hockey? Try to top that one. I have to admit I haven't seen it, but I do have a borrowed VHS copy that I will watch at the cottage where we still have a player.

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  22. WOW!! Let us know if it's any good.

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  23. The best boxing movies tend to be the cynical ones:

    Requiem for a Heavyweight
    The Set-Up
    The Harder They Fall

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  24. There is a surprising lack of good soccer (ouch, I hate that word - you yanks are just WRONG) movies. BEND IT LIKE BECKHAM, sure. SHE'S THE MAN is also quite good - except for the actual football (ha!) scenes. I haven't seen THE DAMNED UNITED but I have heard good things about it.

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  25. There are of course many documentaries out there. I guess I'm partial but I just love the footage from the 1912 Olympics in Stockholm, some of which can be found on youtube. Things were so much simpler back then.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CvN6DD8fMJ4

    And speaking of 1912, there's this about the remarkable Jim Thorpe:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qlur2JYDYhg

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  26. For soccer movies, The Damned United was great.

    Seabiscuit was a good enough horse racing movie too.

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