PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
5,8/10
1,4 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Equipo de béisbol infantil dedicado a cumplir el deseo de su compañero con padre enfermo. Contra todo pronóstico, llegan a la Serie Mundial en un memorable partidoEquipo de béisbol infantil dedicado a cumplir el deseo de su compañero con padre enfermo. Contra todo pronóstico, llegan a la Serie Mundial en un memorable partidoEquipo de béisbol infantil dedicado a cumplir el deseo de su compañero con padre enfermo. Contra todo pronóstico, llegan a la Serie Mundial en un memorable partido
- Premios
- 1 premio y 2 nominaciones en total
Reseñas destacadas
10kmyxpnr
It's more for older kids and adults with heavy and undeniably inspirational moments. It's about believing in something and allowing it to help carry you through something impossible. The Kelley's were a force every time they were on screen. "Robert" was endearing and honest. "Peanut" was light hearted and balanced the scenes without being too much. The boys had a sweet relationship with each other that felt very real. Luke Wilson portrayed the father as reserved and hands on without being overbearing. Very salt of the earth. The boys individually who played the ball players held their own well. They were very believable in their efforts to support and be there for the Ratliff boys at their young ages. Nothing felt frilly or dishonest. The jokes the players had on the team were cute without feeling out of place. The way the story approached life's hardest realities was refreshing and didn't overreach for what a child's reaction or understanding would be. They let there be so much room for emotions. It was raw and beautiful.
It's 2002. Bobby Ratliff (Luke Wilson) and Jon Kelly (Greg Kinnear) are coaches of a terrible Little League team in Texas. When nobody else wants to compete, they are asked to participate in a game which leads all the way to the Little League World Series.
This is based on a true story and that may be part of the problem. The true story requires the movie to center on Bobby Ratliff's ordeal whereas it is desperately trying to be The New Bad News Bears. They just need to get that girl pitcher. The kids are not able to distinguish themselves. It's the name Rocket, glasses, and skirt chaser. To be clear, that's all I truly remember from the three main kids. Don't even mention the rest of the team. This needs to be their movie, but it is not completely that. Ultimately, it is a problem that cannot be overcome.
This is based on a true story and that may be part of the problem. The true story requires the movie to center on Bobby Ratliff's ordeal whereas it is desperately trying to be The New Bad News Bears. They just need to get that girl pitcher. The kids are not able to distinguish themselves. It's the name Rocket, glasses, and skirt chaser. To be clear, that's all I truly remember from the three main kids. Don't even mention the rest of the team. This needs to be their movie, but it is not completely that. Ultimately, it is a problem that cannot be overcome.
The message of a young team rallying behind a powerful emotional cause that pushes them beyond what they think is possible is always one that I will be drawn to and interested in. The fact that it's a true story makes it very tragic.
However, the film does not at all do such a true story justice. The script is extremely poor and the characters take a long time to connect with. The idea is that the team is supposed to be a really bad baseball team and has no hope at all as a fill in team for a spot in the Little League World Series. There's brief moments of them practicing but we aren't really shown the evolution of the kids as players or really how they've matured as individuals while dealing with the personal matters the one family faces on the team. Yes , they do say lines that suggest they have matured, but without actually seeing it play out much ourselves it feels like the lines are forced in to make the plot work.
There are also many confusing lines along the way that distract or take away from the main message of the movie. In particular the friendship between the coach's feels odd. I'm not sure if it's cast selection or the acting quality. In general the head coach who is an attorney seems to get more screen time than is warranted.
Overall , it's a touching story but maybe a book would have been a better format to tell the story so that people can appreciate the details better.
However, the film does not at all do such a true story justice. The script is extremely poor and the characters take a long time to connect with. The idea is that the team is supposed to be a really bad baseball team and has no hope at all as a fill in team for a spot in the Little League World Series. There's brief moments of them practicing but we aren't really shown the evolution of the kids as players or really how they've matured as individuals while dealing with the personal matters the one family faces on the team. Yes , they do say lines that suggest they have matured, but without actually seeing it play out much ourselves it feels like the lines are forced in to make the plot work.
There are also many confusing lines along the way that distract or take away from the main message of the movie. In particular the friendship between the coach's feels odd. I'm not sure if it's cast selection or the acting quality. In general the head coach who is an attorney seems to get more screen time than is warranted.
Overall , it's a touching story but maybe a book would have been a better format to tell the story so that people can appreciate the details better.
10crewlj
It won't mean the same to those that haven't experienced this in real life but obviously those who actually lived this story I appreciate you sharing this and I'm inspired to play on as I continue to believe and play the game almost 60 years after my little league all star dreams.
Many a championship since then but the confluence of my father's influence and the joy of coaching my son have etched an enormously important memory in my life.
So they won't let me get away without commenting on the movie itself. Luke, Greg, Sarah and all the kids give outstanding performances. The on field action is realistic enough to relate.
Many a championship since then but the confluence of my father's influence and the joy of coaching my son have etched an enormously important memory in my life.
So they won't let me get away without commenting on the movie itself. Luke, Greg, Sarah and all the kids give outstanding performances. The on field action is realistic enough to relate.
Looking for something to see, I was intrigued by the premise of misfit little leaguers. Could this be an updated The Bad News Bears?
Nope. It's a whitewashed family film scrubbed of any edge, predictable beyond belief, and boring.
It was hard to find what the appeal would be for either adults of children.
This a true story that is supposed to be inspiring but instead is a poor tribute to the brave coach the film is honoring.
Greg Kinnear looks bored and tired. Luke Wilson fares better but the sappy script lets him down. The kids make little impression. The film builds no tension and you basically know how it will end after the first 20 minutes.
The film is also weirdly lit, and poorly edited.
I was the only one in the theater on the opening night preview. When a film opens quietly with almost no marketing, there is a reason.
Nope. It's a whitewashed family film scrubbed of any edge, predictable beyond belief, and boring.
It was hard to find what the appeal would be for either adults of children.
This a true story that is supposed to be inspiring but instead is a poor tribute to the brave coach the film is honoring.
Greg Kinnear looks bored and tired. Luke Wilson fares better but the sappy script lets him down. The kids make little impression. The film builds no tension and you basically know how it will end after the first 20 minutes.
The film is also weirdly lit, and poorly edited.
I was the only one in the theater on the opening night preview. When a film opens quietly with almost no marketing, there is a reason.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThe ballpark used in the movie is Labatt Memorial Park in London, Ontario, Canada. It is the oldest continually-operating baseball ground in the world, with a history dating back to 1877.
- PifiasDuring a brief shot of the downtown Fort Worth skyline, the renovated Bank One Tower, now known as "The Tower" was shown.
In reality in 2002, the building was being considered for demolition after severe damage from an F3 tornado the evening of March 28, 2000. The building was renovated over 2003-2004 into the tallest residential building in the city.
- ConexionesFeatured in Studio 5: Episodio fechado 4 septiembre 2024 (2024)
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Ты должен верить
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Labatt Memorial Park, Londres, Ontario, Canadá(baseball diamond and grandstand backgrounds)
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 1.398.975 US$
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- 677.094 US$
- 1 sept 2024
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 1.398.975 US$
- Duración1 hora 44 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39 : 1
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