Screwball
- 2018
- 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Billy Corben's true-crime dramedy investigates the MLB's infamous doping scandal involving a nefarious clinician and his most famous client: the New York Yankees' Alex Rodriguez.Billy Corben's true-crime dramedy investigates the MLB's infamous doping scandal involving a nefarious clinician and his most famous client: the New York Yankees' Alex Rodriguez.Billy Corben's true-crime dramedy investigates the MLB's infamous doping scandal involving a nefarious clinician and his most famous client: the New York Yankees' Alex Rodriguez.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 1 nomination total
Jonathan Blanco
- Pete Carbone
- (as Jonathan R. Blanco)
Nicholas Ryan Hernandez
- Anthony Carbone
- (as Nicholas Hernandez)
Jake Alexander Martin
- Gary Jones
- (as Jake Martin)
Abbie Minna Abrams
- Boca Raton CSI
- (as Abigail Abrams)
Andrew Dean Koch
- Ed Maldonado
- (as Andrew Koch)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
As a people who doesn't know the story, i kinda entertained by this. Idk if the information were already known to the public or not. And with the reputation how Miami is potrayed in tv series or memes it makes it even funnier. And how obsessed america about how they looked yet wanted the easy way (w tan & weight looss).
I think it'd be a great movie if Scorsese directing this movie.
I think it'd be a great movie if Scorsese directing this movie.
Billy Corben has alway been a proud historian of South Beach. One might say he should branch out and try other subjects like Alex Gibney or Errol Morris, but why should he? Miami and Southern Florida itself are a wealth of stories to uncover, and it is always interesting to see someone have an unabashed eye for the good and bad of their own back yard.
This time, Corben talks about the Biogenesis scandal, an illicit performance enhancement drug operation that witnessed quite a few baseball players get busted for participating. Baseball was the perfect sport to suck in, especially since the league was woefully behind on testing and many baseball players lived in Florida due to the proximity of the Grapefruit League, a collection of training sights where half the Major League Baseball teams did their spring training. It was clear as day who would ultimately come knocking on the door...the so called future financial guru Alex Rodriguez. You know, the guy that paid obscene amounts of money to cover up his involvement in this case. Also the guy who routinely played high stakes poker with the richest people in the country. That guy. Yeah, he has shows on financial networks now. I guess he keeps forgetting that you should spend tons of money on PEDs to command more contract money. Oh wait, you don't play sports? Whoops. Sorry.
All kidding aside, Corben expertly weaves the tail of how Tony Bosch morphed from an unlicensed doctor into the biggest PED peddler in the country, even going as low as injecting these drugs into high schoolers to maintain his 60,000 dollar a month lifestyle. Eventually, he came up against equally crooked and corrupt individuals, namely Rodriguez and Major League Baseball. Envelopes full of cash, shaky promises and lots of bribes later, the story is one wild ride. And it all started over $4800 being owed to a sad middle aged man that desperately wanted to be liked and be like Sylvester Stallone (who ironically also used PEDs).
I always love the energy of Corben's films as well, and using kids in ridiculous costumes added a new layer of absurdity to a story that was full of them. Even if you are not a big baseball fan, the true crime aspect of this film has a raucous flow to it that will keep you undoubtedly interested.
This time, Corben talks about the Biogenesis scandal, an illicit performance enhancement drug operation that witnessed quite a few baseball players get busted for participating. Baseball was the perfect sport to suck in, especially since the league was woefully behind on testing and many baseball players lived in Florida due to the proximity of the Grapefruit League, a collection of training sights where half the Major League Baseball teams did their spring training. It was clear as day who would ultimately come knocking on the door...the so called future financial guru Alex Rodriguez. You know, the guy that paid obscene amounts of money to cover up his involvement in this case. Also the guy who routinely played high stakes poker with the richest people in the country. That guy. Yeah, he has shows on financial networks now. I guess he keeps forgetting that you should spend tons of money on PEDs to command more contract money. Oh wait, you don't play sports? Whoops. Sorry.
All kidding aside, Corben expertly weaves the tail of how Tony Bosch morphed from an unlicensed doctor into the biggest PED peddler in the country, even going as low as injecting these drugs into high schoolers to maintain his 60,000 dollar a month lifestyle. Eventually, he came up against equally crooked and corrupt individuals, namely Rodriguez and Major League Baseball. Envelopes full of cash, shaky promises and lots of bribes later, the story is one wild ride. And it all started over $4800 being owed to a sad middle aged man that desperately wanted to be liked and be like Sylvester Stallone (who ironically also used PEDs).
I always love the energy of Corben's films as well, and using kids in ridiculous costumes added a new layer of absurdity to a story that was full of them. Even if you are not a big baseball fan, the true crime aspect of this film has a raucous flow to it that will keep you undoubtedly interested.
People confuse celebrity with Integrity.
This is a great documentary that provides "inside baseball"----- no pun intended----- to the Steroid use era. Specifically, It's wonderful to see cheaters such as Ryan Braun, AROD, and Melky Cabrera being publicly exposed. I remember Ryan Braun and how he and his legal team discredited the gentleman who obtained his urine sample. Terrible. AROD has no shame. The sheer number of players involved is staggering and disappointing. This documentary uses a light-hearted style to expose the cheaters and liars who took the American people for a ride, denied their culpability and tried to make others look bad. It's must see viewing to learn that the players who people lionize can be absolute losers when it comes to personal integrity. I hate seeing AROD still involved in MLB, and I can't wait until Ryan Braun leaves the game for good. People haven't forgotten that you clowns betrayed our trust.
This is a great documentary that provides "inside baseball"----- no pun intended----- to the Steroid use era. Specifically, It's wonderful to see cheaters such as Ryan Braun, AROD, and Melky Cabrera being publicly exposed. I remember Ryan Braun and how he and his legal team discredited the gentleman who obtained his urine sample. Terrible. AROD has no shame. The sheer number of players involved is staggering and disappointing. This documentary uses a light-hearted style to expose the cheaters and liars who took the American people for a ride, denied their culpability and tried to make others look bad. It's must see viewing to learn that the players who people lionize can be absolute losers when it comes to personal integrity. I hate seeing AROD still involved in MLB, and I can't wait until Ryan Braun leaves the game for good. People haven't forgotten that you clowns betrayed our trust.
I really enjoyed hard-hitting docs on Lance Armstrong, and the olympic doping scandals, but...this is not that film. This is a silly take on the subject where the narrated action is re-done..with kids dressed up in adult clothing re-enacting the action. It is humorous and makes the doc easy to watch and helped keep my interest. but I feel the filmmaker was probably too close to Bosch, in getting his cooperation, and therefore....never really examined the darker side of his behavior, and mostly gives him a pass. It also goes light on A-rod and pretty much..just highlights that baseball is just ...a game. Not life or death, nor criminal, but just..a game. I feel when someone cheats to get 400 million dollars in contracts..its a serious offense, so...I would have liked a bit more of a harder hitting take on the subject. But it was definitely decent, and an odd-type of documentary with humor that makes it easy to watch, and effective in its own way.
Screwball lives up to it's title. It takes a quite satirical method of telling how the Major League Baseball doping scandal came about. Picking out the poster child of Dr. Tony Bosch as the major performance drug purveyor to the A-List on a tip from a one-time Average Joe user acolyte turned whistleblower over an unpaid $4000 loan. The whole thing was at various times akin to a circus as it unfoldedl In the end it ook down not only the "fake" doctor but a chunk of Major League talent as it tarnished the sport. Actually the comic relief is entertaining, but the dark side is hardly addressed which isn't too surprising as that unsavory part is likely considered damage control/self-preservation of a billion-dollar industry.
Did you know
- TriviaThe film premiered at TIFF (Toronto international Film Festival) in September 2018.
- SoundtracksLlevame al Juego de Beisbol
aka "Take Me Out to the Baseball Game"
Music by Albert von Tilzer, lyrics by Jack Norworth
Performed by 10k Islands
- How long is Screwball?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- 美國職棒禁藥疑雲
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $13,967
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $8,595
- Mar 31, 2019
- Gross worldwide
- $13,967
- Runtime
- 1h 45m(105 min)
- Color
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