Elmhurst Steve wrote:
It's decent, but not great. They try to make him out to be such a great base-stealer, but in fact his stolen base totals were nowhere near the really great base-stealers, guys like Ricky Henderson or even Tim Raines. They seemed to pay FAR too much attention to trying to make Robinson and his wife look like they just stepped off a photo shoot for GQ, rather than delving deeper into the Negro League experiences he had prior to getting the call from the Brooklyn Dodgers. They could have done with some footage of some of the other stars of the Negro leagues talking about their frustrations concerning not being able to play in the big leagues to that point. Show how they may have reacted when Robinson got his opportunity. Were they thrilled? Perhaps a bit jealous? There were better players that were passed on that probably resented not getting the same call. All in all, a good movie, but nothing special. Harrison Ford stands out though.
I saw it this weekend with my kids. It's PG-13, and we took my 10 year old with. Really, nothing objectionable except multiple repeated cringe-inducing usage of the N-word among other slurs. I think if the studio had to decide about making a PG-13 with that racial slur versus a PG movie without, they made the right choice by far. It really adds impact in several scenes, and makes you realize what assholes people could be (and unfortunately still are.) There's a specific scene in there with a kid attending the game with his dad... the kid is maybe 8 years old, and the dad (along with others in the crowd) start yelling out at him... the kid wants to be like his dad and starts yelling the same things. It's one of those things that I think everyone understands happened, but it really helps crystallize it to see it played out in that way.
It's a Warner Brothers film, and it's hard to sum up that career in 2 hours, but I think they did OK. Steve, it sounds like you were looking for a different movie, one about the Negro leagues during the early MLB Jackie Robinson years. That's not going to be a Warner Brothers movie -- that will be a documentary by someone and maybe you catch it on PBS at some point or it gets a twice a day airing in a 36-plex movie theater. If you are making a movie about Jackie Robinson, people are interested about him joining the majors. They also skipped over a lot of his later career, and I'm sure skipped over a bunch of stuff that happened when he was called up. I thought it told the story fairly well, and kept moving at a reasonable pace. It looked fairly accurate timewise as far as the old fields were concerned, and the old mitts and such (though I don't go back that far -- you'll have to ask JORR for those details.) Contained your standard inspirational sports movie cliche jokes and nonsense to lighten things up, but it was alright on the whole.