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Film: Bad News Bears

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  • Film: Bad News Bears

    Bad News Bears
    By Michael Rechtshaffen

    Hollywood Reporter, CA
    July 15 2005

    Bottom line: Not bad, but this Billy Bob Thornton-Richard Linklater
    remake falls short of News-worthy.

    There's good news and not-so-good news about "Bad News Bears," the
    new take on the beloved 1976 Michael Ritchie-helmed comedy starring
    Walter Matthau as a beer-soaked Little League coach who finds himself
    managing a ragtag team of foul-mouthed underachievers.

    First, the good news: With Billy Bob Thornton and his "Bad Santa"
    writers on board and on-a-roll Richard Linklater (the critically
    acclaimed "Before Sunset" and the audience-acclaimed "School of Rock")
    calling the shots, there was sufficient cause for hope that the picture
    would emerge as something else than yet another pointless remake.

    Fortunately, Thornton, playing an only slightly less caustic version
    of his ill-mannered department store Kris Kringle, remains in fine
    inappropriate form and Glenn Ficarra & John Requa's respectfully
    faithful script and Linklater's typically unforced directing style
    combine to generate many moments of laugh-out-loud comedy.

    But somehow those moments never add up to a fully satisfying viewing
    experience. There's a momentum-killing, start/stop quality to the
    sequences that prevents this underdog story from rounding the bases
    and sprinting for home with the spirited energy of a Jack Black in
    "School of Rock."

    Without that crowd-pleasing boost and with an assault of potty language
    that gives that PG-13 rating a run for its money (at the risk of
    shutting out the younger kids), the Paramount Pictures release likely
    will land more closely in the "Kicking & Screaming" ballpark rather
    than going "The Longest Yard" distance.

    For those with a scorecard, the first "Bad News Bears" inspired a
    pair of inferior follow-ups -- 1977's "The Bad News Bears in Breaking
    Training" and 1978's "The Bad News Bears Go to Japan" -- neither of
    which featured Matthau or were directed by Ritchie.

    The new version is definitely better than the two sequels,
    with Thornton bringing his own curmudgeonly irreverent spin
    to the role of Coach Buttermaker, here a former pro baseball
    player-turned-exterminator who spent all of a couple of innings in
    a big league game.

    Coaxed into taking on the hopelessly inept team of misfits by a
    high-maintenance attorney with her own agenda (Marcia Gay Harden),
    Buttermaker makes a half-hearted go of it, occasionally locking horns
    with Ray Bullock (Greg Kinnear), the self-satisfied coach of the Bears'
    longtime rivals, the Yankees.

    Aside from injecting some of that meaner-spirited, but admittedly funny
    "Bad Santa Jr." dialogue, writers Ficarra and Requa stick very close
    to the original Bill Lancaster script, while adding a few characters
    who better reflect the contemporary cultural landscape.

    Joining the brat and the nerd and the angry fat guy, there's now an
    Armenian, a kid in an electric wheelchair and a Mark McGwire-smitten
    black kid, and, true to its comic roots, the movie proves to be an
    equal-opportunity offender.

    But Buttermaker's lackadaisical approach to life seems to have
    rubbed off on Linklater's direction, which really could have a shot
    of adrenaline to move things along, particularly in the late innings.

    Given that a number of the young newcomers were cast first for their
    athletic ability over previous acting experience, the juvenile
    performances are pretty uneven, especially when held up to the
    original's lineup led by Tatum O'Neal and Jackie Earle Haley.

    Behind the scenes, taking a cue from the '76 version, composer Edward
    Shearmur uses Bizet's "Carmen" to underscore the game sequences,
    but somehow what came across as inspired three decades ago just feels
    odd and rather out of place today.

    Bad News Bears Paramount Pictures Paramount Pictures presents a Media
    Talent Group production in association with Detour Filmproduction
    A Richard Linklater film Director: Richard Linklater Screenwriters:
    Bill Lancaster and Glenn Ficarra & John Requa Based on "The Bad News
    Bears" written by: Bill Lancaster Producers: J. Geyer Kosinski,
    Richard Linklater Executive producer: Marcus Viscidi Director of
    photography: Rogier Stoffers Production designer: Bruce Curtis Editor:
    Sandra Adair Costume designer: Karen Patch Music: Edward Shearmur
    Cast: Coach Morris Buttermaker: Billy Bob Thornton Coach Roy Bullock:
    Greg Kinnear Liz Whitewood: Marcia Gay Harden Amanda Whurlitzer: Sammi
    Kane Kraft Kelly Leak: Jeffrey Davies Tanner Boyle: Timmy Deters Mike
    Engelberg: Brandon Craggs Toby Whitewood: Ridge Canipe Timmy Lupus:
    Tyler Patrick Jones Prem Lahiri: Aman Johal Matthew Hooper: Troy
    Gentile Garo Daragebrigadian: Jeffrey Tedmori Ahmad Abdul Rahim:
    Kenneth "K.C." Harris Miguel Agilar: Carlos Estrada Jose Agilar:
    Emmanuel Estrada MPAA rating: PG-13 Running time -- 114 minutes
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