Eight Men Out | Jace Alexander, Gordon Clapp | My favorite baseball movie
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Eight Men Out
Eight Men Out
Jace Alexander
,
Gordon Clapp
MGM (Video & DVD), 1999
average customer review:
based on 56 reviews
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highly recommended
Eliot Asinof's detailed book
Eight
Men
Out
illustrates how the system of American sports collapsed in 1919, the year the Chicago White Sox threw the World Series. Filmmaker John Sayles worked on his script years before the 1988 film (or before he had the rights to make the film) as a labor of love. Sayles's adaptation proves one can make a historically accurate film in the day and age of artistic license. And what a story. Although many know about the "Black Sox," made famous--again--in the 1989 hit film Field of Dreams, the details of the saga are far less known. The center of Dreams, Shoeless Joe Jackson (portrayed correctly by D.B. Sweeney as illiterate and left-handed in Eight), is not the core of this film; it's ace pitcher Eddie Cicotte (Sayles favorite David Strathairn), who took the money, and third baseman Buck Weaver (John Cusack), who did not. The film fits nicely into Sayles's (Lone Star) strong suit: the ensemble drama. We are introduced to bickering owners, famous crooks, high-minded judges, lowlife gangsters, investigative reporters (played by Studs Terkel and Sayles himself), and, most of all, players who are at the breaking point when it comes to low salaries and degrading rewards. While some may feel the film is not as visceral as it should be, there is a great amount of verisimilitude when watching finely tuned athletes telling their bodies to play poorly--heartbreak on the nation's diamond. Beautifully detailed (like Sayles's previous labor-drama, Matewan), Eight Men Out gives us powerful lessons in which everyone lost: players, gamblers, and especially the fans who love the game. --Doug Thomas
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Five star new edition!
The new edition is a nice upgrade, since it includes several behind the scenes docu
men
taries which give a lot of background regarding the choice of actors, interviews with the director and actors, and info regarding the sets and filming of the movie. The picture looks very sharp, and the soundtrack is 5.1. If you are a fan of this film, you will find the new edition well worthwhile.
My favorite baseball movie
I just read Roger Ebert's review of this movie and was amazed that he said you have to be a baseball insider to understand it. ???? I'm certainly not an insider, not even an avid fan, but I had no trouble following the story. In fact, I thought it was told with unusual clarity and elegance. And the actors were perfectly cast. Each seemed to slip into his role as comfortably as an old shoe. They weren't actors playing ball players. They were ball players. The movie flowed perfectly as the gamblers first approached a couple of the more receptive players. You could easily see the others being slowly drawn into the fix by the lure of easy money. You could also see, even before the players did, that they were nothing more than suckers themselves. They would not get the money - ever. Go to bed with criminals expect to get robbed. Roger Ebert was concerned ab
out
the way the "fix" unfolded, saying it was far too obvious. Of course it was! That's why they were caught!
Some of the other reviews here justify the actions of these players, based on the way their owner treated them. Man! That's certainly 2008 logic. They commited a serious criminal act! What's so hard to understand. Are we now at a point where unfair treat
men
t legitimizes criminal actions? Yeah, many of the owners were most likely rotten. Yeah, the players were not treated fairly but NO, that doesn't justify their actions, including the ones who were guilty by omission. They let themselves down, they let the league down, but most of all, they let the fans down (Remember, "Say it ain't so, Joe?") Judge Landis was a tyrant but he did the right thing.
The last scene, where a much older Bucky Weaver sits in the bleachers of some nameless sandlot ballpark watching his old team mate, Joe Jackson, play is heartbreaking and sums up the movie perfectly.
The bottom line is: this movie is a wonderful example of intelligent story-telling and film-making. I'm not a big fan of Sayles usually but he knocked this one out of the park.
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Best baseball movie ever.
This is the best baseball movie ever. I am not a sports fan, so that is saying volumes ab
out
the movie. I am a John Salyes fan though. I have been ever since I met the crew of a movie he made in my home town in West Virginia. Excellent writing, great acting, and great film making.
A great movie about baseball's most fragile moment
Until the nineteen seventies, major league baseball players were held in a form of bondage. They could be bought, sold, traded largely against their will and their salaries were fixed artificially low. The reserve clause in their contracts bound them to that team and prevented them from playing for anyone else with
out
explicit permission. If a player's salary was low, their only recourse was to not play, which was a drastic and self-destructive step.
The treat
men
t of players in the early twentieth century was often even worse, and there was no more ruthless owner than Charles Comiskey. His salary structure for his quality players was much lower than what existed in the rest of major league baseball. He even let his players take the field in dirty uniforms in order to save on laundry bills. Over and over again he lied to his players and failed to pay them promised bonuses. Therefore, baseball historians rightfully blame him for creating the circumstances that led to the 1919 Chicago White Sox team throwing the World Series. That ruthless desire to save money at all costs on the part of Comiskey is captured in this movie.
The inner machinations of the players on the 1919 team are also captured very well. Only a few players were guilty of acts of commission designed to throw the series, others simply knew about it and said nothing to team officials. There was also a great deal of internal dissension on the team, which further inflamed the players. All
eight
of the players who knew of the conspiracy were banned from baseball for life, even though they were acquitted at trial.
The two people who were most unfairly treated were Shoeless Joe Jackson and Buck Weaver. While both knew about the scheme to throw the series, both played very well in the series, hitting over .300 and playing flawlessly in the field. The Jackson character is played very well in this movie; by all accounts he was a naïve man who really didn't understand the ramifications of what was going on around him. Weaver tried defending himself as best he could against the charges and tried to get reinstated, but the commissioner was adamant against clemency.
A great deal of time is taken in this movie to set the historical backdrop of the 1919 World Series, which is necessary. While the White Sox players did throw the series, in this movie they are presented in a sympathetic light, as men who were poorly treated and just wanted a chance to earn what they felt was their right to have. It is a very good movie about the history of baseball.
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