The Bad News Bears
Cast :Billy Bob Thornton, Greg Kinnear, Marcia Gay Harden
Director :Richard Linklater
Studio :
Format :
Released Date :July 22, 2005
DVD Released Date :June 24, 2003
Language :English (Original Language)
Audience Rating :PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
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Customer Reviews
Rating
DateAugust 07, 2005
SummaryBad News Bears is a winner with Billy Bob rocking the house
Content
Billy Bob Thornton (Bad Santa, Friday Night Lights) stars as Butterworth, a rat exterminator who is hired by a mother to coach a league of little brats of the Bears. The kids dont get along with each other but Billy Bob shapens them up and gets them into play mode. They lose the first game horribly but then the kids improve in their skills and get better and better. Thornton gives a great performance in this movie and the kids are really good in their roles as well. Also starring Greg Kinnear (Nurse Betty, Dear God) and Marcia Gay Harden (Mystic River). The original with Walter Matthau is still a good movie and I always loved that movie so when I heard about them remaking it, I kinda had my doubts, basically that's what I do with all the movies they remake, I have my doubts but I really liked this movie and I think Richard Linklater did a good job, because he always does a good job as a director.

Rating
DateAugust 05, 2005
SummaryThis is what America all about!!!!
Content
I have a thing about remakes, but this one didn't bather me at all.
Because of the language, this is not for every kids. On the other hand, I understand from my share of my little league experience that is the way kids behave and talk on and off the field. This movie didn't try to show how life is perfect or pretty. It just shows the way it is through baseball, players, parents, and coaches. This movie is not messing around nor sugercoaded, and that is the charm this movie has. That is what America all about!!! Well, at least used to be?!

Rating
DateAugust 04, 2005
SummaryBad News Bears - Almost Good News Bears
Content
Billy Bob Thornton takes over from Walter Mathau as a misfit little league coach who must make something out of an equally misfit little league team. The movie has its moments, but the inevitable lack of originality and legendary status of the original Bad News Bears works against it. Unless you are a true Billy Bob Thornton fan, I recommend waiting for Comcast or the DVD.

PLAY BALL!!!

Rating
DateAugust 02, 2005
SummaryA Film With a Real Bite To It.
Content
Over the years, the "sports" movie has become a genre unto itself, and good or bad, these films are for the most part well received by a significant cross section of the population who hold the fundamental belief that sports=America=patriotism. And filmmakers know it. That's why most of these films feature thematic variations rooted in the "Win one for the Gipper," "It's not winning, but how you play the game" and "There's no 'I' in 'team'" mentality. How refreshing, then, when one like "Bad News Bears" comes along to provide a much needed perspective on our society's preoccupation with sports in general, and amateur athletics in particular.

Based on the 1976 screenplay by Bill Lancaster and updated by screenwriters Glenn Ficarra and John Requa (who successfully teamed up with Thornton for 2003's "Bad Santa"), the story is about a local little league that has excluded a group of youngsters for failing to live up to their standards of physical prowess (they just aren't good enough to play with the "real" eleven and twelve year old "athletes"), the mother who sues the organization so that her son can play, the resultant team of diverse "misfits" the league must accommodate, and the man hired by the mother to manage that team.

That man in none other than Morris Buttermaker (Billy Bob Thornton), a former professional baseball player who once pitched 2/3 of an inning in the Big Leagues and who now makes a living by exterminating rats. "Boilermaker" Buttermaker likes to drink, frequents the local Hooters and doesn't give a fig about what anyone thinks about him. Not that he's a rugged, iconoclastic individualist; far from it. He's just a guy who refuses to play the game anymore (and we're not talking about baseball here). On the surface, he's probably not the guy you'd choose to be your kid's role model, mainly because of all the things he "isn't." Upon closer examination, however, it becomes apparent that being a hypocrite is among the things he "isn't," and it's very telling as to the man's true character.

On the other side of the fence, meanwhile, there's the manager of the Yankees, Roy Bullock (Greg Kinnear), a real coach's coach, a pillar of the community (he's a car salesman) and the very personification of The Great American Role Model. He's as American as apple pie, and if there's a high moral ground in evidence here, he's on it. And, he is by all that's holy, going to take his team to the championships. His team is going to win, no matter what, because, after all, winning is everything, isn't it? Even if it means expecting your twelve-year-old to play like a Major Leaguer with a multimillion dollar contract, and publicly chastising him when he doesn't.

And therein lies the beauty of this film. Without preaching, without pointing fingers, but simply by presenting a realistic depiction of one of our sacred institutions, the "coach," the true nature of what millions of kids are subjected to in the name of "sportsmanship" year after year in this country is exposed, and with no apology necessary. At the same time it says that kids are worth more, much more, than what the Roy Bullock philosophy has to offer. The Roy Bullocks of the world will tell you that this kind of treatment "builds character." I beg to differ. And it's up to the Morris Buttermakers of the world to level the playing field. And when the rubber meets the road, I'd want my kid on Boilermaker Buttermaker's team rather than Bullock's any day of the week.

Director Linklater assembled a superb cast for this film, beginning with Thornton, who makes Buttermaker a very real, if flawed, flesh and blood human being, quite different from the likeable caricature created by Walter Matthau in the 1976 original version. Kinnear delivers, as well, by capturing the very essence of a character that anyone who has ever been near a little league-- or any sports field-- has known in real life. And in the confrontations between Buttermaker and Bullock, Thornton and Kinnear give it a ring of truth that is beyond anything you'll ever see on any of the "reality" TV shows.

Add to that a credible performance by Marcia Gay Harden as Liz whitewood (the mother who sues the little league), and an amazing group of young actors: Sammi Kane Kraft (Amanda); Ridge Canipe (Toby); Brandon Craggs (Mike); Jeffrey Davies (Kelly); Timmy Deters (Tanner); Carlos Estrada (Miguel); Emmanuel Estrada (Jose); Troy Gentile (Hooper); Kenneth Harris (Ahmad); Aman Johal (Prem); Tyler Patrick Jones (Lupus); Jeffrey Tedmori (Garo); Carter Jenkins (Joey); and Seth Adkins (Jimmy), and you've got a movie that's going all the way to the World Series.

The acerbic humor and biting satire of "Bad News Bears" is without a doubt going to generate some mixed reviews. Some viewers will be offended by this film; others will be outraged. But that's because the truth hurts, and the fact of the matter is, there's a lot of Roy Bullocks out there, and they'll all be expecting a movie that confirms their point of view and sanctions their own sanctimonious belief that the lessons learned on the diamond, the court or the football field are all positive, the stuff that "champions" are made of. Instead, they're going to see a film that has the guts to call a spade a spade, that isn't entirely politically correct and in the end may make it necessary for them to take stock and reevaluate the real world that exists out there beyond the shells of the cocoons in which they've ensconced themselves. And that, my friends, is the magic of the movies.

Rating
DateAugust 01, 2005
SummaryBLAHHHH
Content
movie was ok ...a few funny words from billy bob thornton and some potty mouthed kids....but ultimately this is the same movie as will ferrell's "KICKING AND SCREAMING" which was alot funnier.....so just decide who u wanna see...ferrell or thornton..and go see it
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