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Catching Hell

  • 2011
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
7.9/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Catching Hell (2011)
Sports DocumentaryDocumentarySport

After the Chicago Cubs blow an opportunity to reach the World Series in 2003, Cubs fans blame the team's misfortune on fellow fan Steve Bartman, who interfered with a foul ball and prevented... Read allAfter the Chicago Cubs blow an opportunity to reach the World Series in 2003, Cubs fans blame the team's misfortune on fellow fan Steve Bartman, who interfered with a foul ball and prevented Moises Alou from making a catch.After the Chicago Cubs blow an opportunity to reach the World Series in 2003, Cubs fans blame the team's misfortune on fellow fan Steve Bartman, who interfered with a foul ball and prevented Moises Alou from making a catch.

  • Director
    • Alex Gibney
  • Writer
    • Alex Gibney
  • Stars
    • Alex Gibney
    • Dave Kaplan
    • Bob Costas
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.9/10
    1.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alex Gibney
    • Writer
      • Alex Gibney
    • Stars
      • Alex Gibney
      • Dave Kaplan
      • Bob Costas
    • 15User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Photos6

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    Top cast51

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    Alex Gibney
    Alex Gibney
    • Self
    Dave Kaplan
    • Self - Host, WGN's 'Sports Central'
    Bob Costas
    Bob Costas
    • Self - Broadcaster
    Dwight Evans
    • Self - Boston Red Sox 1972-1990
    Denis Leary
    Denis Leary
    • Self - Actor…
    Bill Buckner
    Bill Buckner
    • Self - Boston Red Sox 1984-1987
    Bob Ryan
    Bob Ryan
    • Self - Sports Columnist, Boston Globe
    Ron Borges
    • Self - Sportswriter, Boston Herald
    Steve Lyons
    Steve Lyons
    • Self - Baseball Analyst
    Scott Turow
    Scott Turow
    • Self - Author, 'Presumed Innocent'
    Wayne Drehs
    • Self - Senior Writer, ESPN.com
    Eric Karros
    Eric Karros
    • Self - Chicago Cubs 2003
    Josh Doust
    • Self - Actuary, Upper Deck Above Bartman
    Jeff Gowen
    • Self - Producer, Fox Sports
    Matt Liston
    Matt Liston
    • Self - Filmmaker, 'Chasing October'
    Dave Placko
    • Self - Reporter, WFLD-TV Chicago
    • (as Dane Placko)
    Jim Cuthbert
    • Self - 15 Rows Behind Bartman
    Laurie Holmes
    • Self - 2 seats from Bartman
    • Director
      • Alex Gibney
    • Writer
      • Alex Gibney
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    7.91.7K
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    Featured reviews

    ccthemovieman-1

    Scapegoats

    I was pretty familiar with both of these stories, but this two-hour special was still very good and a real eye-opener in parts, particularly on Steve Bartman.

    Basically, it's a story of injustice. It's about two men, one a ballplayer in Boston and another, a fan in Chicago, and how one incident unjustly ruined their lives. The ballplayer is Bill Buckner, who let a ground ball go through his legs which contributed - not cost - to his team losing the 1986 World Series to the New York Mets. Most people have seen lots of footage of the amazing comeback of the Mets in that series and know how the media (mainly) made Buckner the scapegoat.

    The bulk of this ESPN story, however, deals with Bartman, the unlucky fan who did what everyone else does at a game: reached with outstretched arms for a foul ball. In a nutshell, the Cubs - whose fans were desperate for the team's first championship since 1908 - lost the game and went on to miss the World Series. They blamed it on this fan because the Cubs left fielder, Moises Alou, made a big stink about it on the field and it would have given the Cubs two outs in the eighth inning while they were holding a 3-0 lead. If they won, they would have advanced to the world series. The opponents, the Florida Marlins, went on to score eight runs in the inning, won the next game, as they won the World Series. Who did the Cubs fans blame? The shortstop who booted an easy double-play ball in the inning? The pitchers who gave up all the runs? Nooooo. They blamed Bartman, a nerdy-looking young man who just there rooting for his beloved Cubs like everyone else.

    The shocking part of the story is the behind-the-scenes footage at the game, the stuff you didn't see in this 2003 playoff game. The abuse this young guy took was unbelievable. You have to see it and hear it to believe it. It's shocking and it's disgraceful. It's a wonder he made it out alive from Wrigley Field and still lives - although in a pretty secret world - in the Chicago area.

    This is one of those stories that a review here doesn't do the story justice. You have to sit and watch "Catching Hell" to get the full impact. It left me speechless.
    metalrox_2000

    Amazing tale of a man who should be forgiven

    Im not sure how ESPN goes about choosing those who direct the documentaries in the 30 for 30 series, but they always seem to find the best.

    The documentary is as much about Bartman as it is the overall reaction of long suffering Cubs fans. Add in the description of how the Cubs securities forces got Steve Bartman out of there alive, and you have a fast moving, very entertaining and informative docudrama.

    And there is plenty of new light shed on the infamous incident. Testimonies from fans that sat near Bartman (many of whom sympathize with the hapless Cubs fan) and learning that Bartman was actually at the game with friends was interesting. However, this pails in comparison when there is focus on the little league team (whose sweater Bartman was wearing that night) that Bartman was coaching at the time, and those young ball players support of their coach.

    If anyone comes out the villain, it's the arrogant Cubs fan who left his seats in the nose bleed section to yell at Bartman, a man who to this day admits that he'd do it again, and blames Bartman for the Cubs lose.

    Moises Alou doesn't come off too good at all. Alou comes off arrogant, and dismissive of the suffering that Bartman went through. Even with Alou's thick accent, you can tell that he still deep down blames Steve Bartman for the Cubs never making it to the world series.

    This film not only manages to shed tons of new details on the incident, but also manages to have the viewer walk away wanting to buy Steve Bartman a beer and pat him on the back, instead of crucifying him.

    And maybe that's what the Cubs (and their fans) need to do. It's time for the Cubs to forgive Steve Bartman the way the Red Sox forgave Bill Buckner.

    PS It was interesting to know that Buckner was wearing a Cubs batting glove on his hand when he missed the bunt from Mookie Wilson.
    8drqshadow-reviews

    A Fair, Even-Handed Review of One of Baseball's Most Difficult Debates

    The oft-delayed "lost chapter" of ESPN's 30 for 30 series, this strives to be more than just a routine examination of the infamous Steve Bartman incident that may (or may not) have cost the Chicago Cubs a shot at the 2003 World Series. With the famously publicity-shy Bartman refusing to take part, the film instead leans on interviews with several of the fans to rub elbows with him that fateful evening and insightful confessionals from the announce crew that called the game, a good portion of the Cubs' starting lineup, the local news team that outed Bartman's identity to the public and several of the security guards that escorted him to safety as the situation escalated. Director Alex Gibney deserves credit for not only painting a broad, fair portrait of a chaotic, emotionally charged situation, but for rightly comparing it to other instances of misplaced blame and shameless scapegoating in pro sports and asking the difficult question of what exactly spins a knee-jerk reaction into a bonafide vendetta. Though the scrutiny of the Bartman play itself is a bit too intense at times, resulting in a run-time that's about 30 minutes too long, it accomplishes much more than a simple reenactment and should leave any serious sports fan wondering how many times they've reacted with the same brainless mob mentality over the years. Smart, challenging and honest; it's what any good documentary should strive to be.
    9Greek_Lantern

    What a dillusional bunch of idiots....an excellent documentary.

    Every single "sports fan" taking part in this documentary was and is a dillusional idiot. So butthurt because a fan supposedly interfered with a ball when their team was up 3-0. Give me a break.
    10view_and_review

    Don't Blame Bartman

    October 14th, 2003 is a day many Cubs fans remember. Up 3-2 in the NL Championship series vs the Florida Marlins, they were primed to head to the World Series. With a 3-0 lead in the eighth inning and with one out, Luis Castillo hit a pop-up that was going foul. Moises Alou gave chase and the ball started to drift back towards fair territory. It never got fully to fair territory, and it never got into Alou's glove either. The ball was grabbed for and deflected by a fan sitting in aisle 4, row 8, seat 113. The Cubs would go on to give up eight runs that inning and lose the game, then they'd lose game seven.

    Perhaps, now that they've won a World Series, it doesn't have quite the same significance or the same sting, but before 2016 that date was a source of angst. Even more than the date was the infamous fan who dared to try to catch a foul ball that was headed in his direction.

    I'm not a Cubs fan, but I'm an avid sports fan, and that incident is singed into my brain. I wasn't even watching that series because my team, the A's, were already ousted by Boston, but after that game six between Chicago and Florida all I heard--all the way over here in California--was about that fan. Then, we learned his name: Steve Bartman, and we'd never forget it. Just like I didn't watch the Boston Redsox lose to the Mets in '86, as a sports fan I knew very well who Bill Buckner was. To think that a fan would become as infamous as a player for keeping his team World Series-less. And to think that a fan would be doxxed by a newspaper (The Chicago Sun Times) who are supposed to follow a code of ethics, is even stranger.

    "Catching Hell" by ESPN Films is such an awesome documentary for me as a baseball fan. They analyze, scrutinize, and break down that play like I've never seen before. They provide so much context that you'll feel like a pitiable Chicago Cubs fan yourself. They also make a considerable effort to apologize and absolve Bartman from any wrongdoing. The documentary is directed by Alex Gibney, one of my favorite documentarians, and he does a spectacular job as always. I have to say, I never felt sorry for Steve Bartman until today. I, like thousands, no millions, of other fans felt he deserved all the animus he got. I hadn't thought about him or that play in a long time, but I almost feel like I owe him an apology as well.

    $1.99 purchase on YouTube.

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    Sport

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      After Winning the 2016 World Series, Steve Bartman received a championship ring from Cubs owner Tom Ricketts and the Ricketts family as a special gift on July 31, 2017. The Cubs said in a statement, "We hope this provides closure on an unfortunate chapter of the story that has perpetuated throughout our quest to win a long-awaited World Series. While no gesture can fully lift the public burden he has endured for more than a decade, we felt it was important Steve knows he has been and continues to be fully embraced by this organization. After all he has sacrificed, we are proud to recognize Steve Bartman with this gift today."
    • Quotes

      Mike Lowell: In the dugout we saw, you know, obviously the Bartman thing and I remember Mark Redman, one of our pitchers, said 'Let's make him famous.'

    • Connections
      Features NBC Nightly News with Tom Llamas (1970)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 10, 2011 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Filming locations
      • Chicago, Illinois, USA
    • Production companies
      • Jigsaw Productions
      • Triple Threat Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 42m(102 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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