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  • Bad News Bears

    Enter Stage Right, Canada
    July 25 2005

    By Lady Liberty
    web posted July 25, 2005

    Bad News Bears

    * 1/2 out of ****

    I haven't seen the 1979 original, and wouldn't have seen the 2005
    remake, either, if it weren't for the fact that Billy Bob Thornton is
    the star. I'm not a big fan of kids' movies, but I do like Billy Bob
    Thornton quite a bit. The good news for the Bad News Bears is that it
    does have Thornton. Without him, most of the rest would be bad news,
    indeed.

    Morris Buttermaker (Billy Bob Thornton) is a drunken exterminator
    with a big chip on his shoulder. His one threadbare claim to fame is
    the fact that he once pitched - briefly - in the Major Leagues.
    Despite some expertise in the game, it's unclear how it is that
    Buttermaker becomes a coach unless it's that straight-laced lawyer
    Liz Whitewood (Marcia Gay Harden) couldn't find anybody else to
    handle a team of complete misfits.

    Whitewood, whose son Toby (Ridge Canipe) wants to play baseball, has
    sued the local league when some poor players including her son aren't
    allowed to play. That means that the kids nobody else will have are
    placed on a team everybody is forced to accept, and that that team is
    coached by a man who is almost certainly the last choice for the job.
    For his part, Buttermaker will put forth some minimal effort to earn
    the check he clearly needs, but the team is far beyond even the most
    heroic of work ethics.

    Toby has the will, but little talent. Tanner Boyle (Timmy Deters) has
    drive in spades, but he's physically small and carrying a big bad
    attitude. Mike Engleberg (Brandon Craggs) isn't otherwise hopeless,
    but he is fat and out of shape and he knows it. Timmy Lupus (Tyler
    Patrick Jones) actually is hopeless. Prem Lahiri (Aman Johal) just
    wants a stint in summer baseball to show up on his future college
    résumé. Garo Daragebrigadian (Jeffrey Tedmani) wants desperately to
    be like other American kids, but is having a tough time both with his
    own skill level and his disapproving Armenian father. And Matthew
    Hooper (Troy Gentile) is a wheelchair-bound paraplegic!

    Somehow, Buttermaker is expected to coach his team of misfits into
    facing teams consisting of better and more experienced players. Chief
    among the rivals is the Yankees, a team coached by an egotistical car
    salesman by the name of Roy Bullock (Greg Kinnear). The Yankees as a
    whole delight in creaming the opposition, and the Bears are
    completely humiliated in their first time out. Buttermaker has a few
    tricks up his sleeve, however, not the least of which happens to
    Amanda Whurlitzer (Sammi Kane Kraft), the daughter of a woman he once
    dated and a talented pitcher. When local juvenile delinquent Kelly
    Leak (Jeffrey Davies) starts hanging out near the baseball field,
    Coach Bullock sees nothing but trouble. Buttermaker, however, sees
    something different.

    Despite his bad qualities - and there are many - Buttermaker has a
    knack with kids who are also suffering in life. Maybe it's is
    predilection to tell them the unvarnished truth. Or it could be that
    it's his never-say-die attitude. Either way, and despite himself,
    Buttermaker does manage to teach the kids something before the season
    is over. And it's possible the kids teach him a few things, too.

    Billy Bob Thornton is just terrific in Bad News Bears. In fact, if
    the language were stronger, he could almost be Bad Santa with a
    baseball bat. But this movie, though written by the same team as that
    which scripted the very funny Bad Santa, isn't as entertaining.
    Perhaps that's because they held back to avoid an R rating. Whatever
    the reason, the film suffers from an embarrassing lack of real
    laughs. That flaw lies not in Thornton's performance but in the
    lackluster lines he has to say. The acting as a whole is, in fact,
    largely good or better. But good performances can't raise the level
    of such a mediocre script much beyond mediocrity.

    In fairness to the film and to baseball lovers, there are a few real
    game highlights, however. Sammi Kane Kraft is making her movie debut
    here, and it's easy to see why she was selected to play Amanda: Sammi
    is a champion pitcher in real life. Kelly Davies, too, is a gifted
    ball player. To watch them play is, even for a non-fan like me,
    impressive as all get-out. If you don't care about that, though, and
    Billy Bob Thornton isn't enough of a reason for you to see an
    otherwise sub par movie, I'd sit this one out.

    POLITICAL NOTES: In some ways, Bad News Bears is a paean to political
    correctness and the current "self-esteem is everything" attitude so
    prevalent in schools across the country. Even kids in wheelchairs
    should be able to play whatever sport they want; even kids without
    any talent whatsoever should be treated as valued team members. The
    fact that things turn out largely okay in this movie likely bolsters
    those who believe that everybody should be able to participate in
    anything and everything they like. What people need to remember is
    that anything is possible in the movies, and that real life often
    bears little resemblance to the silver screen. In fact, I feel
    strongly enough about this very issue that I recently wrote an entire
    column about it. In summary, let's just say that I don't believe for
    a minute that everybody ought to be able to do everything - no matter
    how much they want to - if they can't, or if everybody else has to
    suffer so that they can. If we teach our children anything, it ought
    to be that everybody has their limitations.

    FAMILY SUITABILITY: Bad News Bears is rated PG-13 for "rude behavior,
    language throughout, some sexuality, and thematic elements." Unless
    you want your eight year-old to begin spouting a whole lot of words
    you'd prefer he not be saying, I'd suggest you buy him a ticket to
    see something else. The film depicts fairly young kids using fairly
    rough language, as well as engaging in some rough physical behavior,
    and it treats it all as a joke. That's fine for older kids who know
    better, but not so good for the younger set. On the whole, I'd say
    the PG-13 rating is just about right.
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