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Field of Dreams

Plot

"If you build it, he will come." That's the ethereal message that inspires Iowa farmer Ray Kinsella (Kevin Costner) to construct a baseball diamond in the middle of his cornfield. At first, "he" seems to be the ghost of disgraced ballplayer Shoeless Joe Jackson (Ray Liotta), who materializes on the ballfield and plays a few games with the awestruck Ray. But as the weeks go by, Ray receives several other messages from a disembodied voice, one of which is "Ease his pain." He realizes that his ballfield has been divinely ordained to give a second chance to people who have sacrificed certain valuable aspects of their lives. One of these folks is Salingeresque writer Terence Mann (James Earl Jones), whom Ray kidnaps and takes to a ball game and then to his farm. Another is Doc Graham (Burt Lancaster), a beloved general practitioner who gave up a burgeoning baseball career in favor of medicine. The final "second-chancer" turns out to be much closer to Ray. That "magical" field in Dyersville, Iowa still draws thousands of baseball-happy tourists each year. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Review

Phil Robinson's 1989 masterpiece is the definitive modern-day baseball film. Adapting a W.P. Kinsella story, Robinson magically combines baseball history and folklore with whimsical fantasy, and makes great use of all-American actor Kevin Costner. Costner is right at home playing the Iowa farmer whose backyard becomes a playground for unfulfilled wishes to come to fruition, and is ably supported by Burt Lancaster, James Earl Jones, and Ray Liotta as Shoeless Joe Jackson, whose performances are vital to the spirit of the film. An imaginative, intricately woven fairy tale that works on the spiritual level as well as on the practical, Field of Dreams benefits from Robinson's ability to effortlessly milk both America's love of baseball and the more poignant aspects of American mythology. As another mark of its enduring appeal, the film also permanently wedged the catch phrase, "If you build it, he will come" into the American lexicon, a lofty feat for a baseball movie.



~ Mike DiBella, Rovi

Cast

Timothy Busfield - Mark; Gaby Hoffmann - Karin Kinsella; Frank Whaley - Archie Graham; Dwier Brown - John Kinsella; James Andelin - Feed Store Farmer; Larry Brandenburg - PTA Heckler; Steve Eastin - Eddie Cicotte-P; Beatrice Fredman - Boston Yenta; Lee Garlington - Beulah, Angry PTA Mother; Mike Hodge - Additional Ballplayer; Mary Anne Kean - Feed Store Lady; Robert Kurcz - PTA Heckler; Art La Fleur - Chick Gandil-1B; Michael Milhoan - Buck Weaver-3B; Geoffrey Nauffts - Boston Pump Jockey; Mike Nussbaum - Principal; Fern Persons - Annie's Mother; Joseph R. Ryan - Man in Bar; Anne Seymour - Chisolm Newspaper Publisher; Brian Frankish - Clean-shaven Umpire; C. George Baisi - Man in Bar; Kelly Coffield - Dee, Mark's Wife; Mary McDonald Gershon - PTA Heckler; Joe Glasberg - Costumer; Charles Hoyes - Swede Risberg-C; Don John Ross - Boston Butcher; Howard Sherf - Man in Bar; Jeffrey Neal Silverman - Clean-shaven Center Fielder; Fred S. Martin - Additional Ballplayer

Credit

Leslie McDonald - Art Director, Charles Gordon - Co-producer, Lawrence Gordon - Co-producer, Linda M. Bass - Costume Designer, Phil Alden Robinson - Director, Ian Crafford - Editor, Brian Frankish - Executive Producer, James Horner - Composer (Music Score), Richard Arrington - Makeup, Dennis Gassner - Production Designer, John Lindley - Cinematographer, Nancy Haigh - Set Designer, Callum McDougall - Unit Production Manager, Phil Alden Robinson - Screenwriter, W.P. Kinsella - Book Author

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Next:Field of Fire (1992 Film), Field of Honor (1986 Film)


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