Themes: Underdogs, Coaches and Players, Redemption
Main Cast: Billy Bob Thornton, Greg Kinnear, Marcia Gay Harden
Release Year: 2005
Country: US
Run Time: 113 minutes
MPAA Rating: PG13
Plot
A washed-up ballplayer is put in charge of a pack of kids scarcely more mature than himself in this remake of the 1976 comedy hit. Morris Buttermaker (Billy Bob Thornton) is a former major league baseball player whose career and life has hit the skids thanks to his overwhelming fondness for booze and women. Needing a break, his lawyer (Marcia Gay Harden) arranges for Buttermaker to take on coaching responsibilities for the Bears, a Little League baseball team comprised of a handful of hapless losers. As Buttermaker tries to groom his young charges into a winning team, he also gives them a glimpse of his hard-living lifestyle while they gear up to take on perennial rivals the Yankees and their arrogant Coach Bullock (Greg Kinnear. The 2005 version of The Bad News Bears was written by Glenn Ficarra and John Requa, who previously scripted another Billy Bob Thornton vehicle, Bad Santa. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
Review
The first decade of the 21st century has been a fruitful time for director Richard Linklater. After regaining his artistic footing with the back-to-back releases of the animated philosophy class Waking Life and the claustrophobic drama Tape in the same year, he whipped up the biggest box-office hit of his career with the winning School of Rock. He followed that up with a film that displayed the full power of his aesthetic approach and deepened his already weighty themes, Before Sunset -- the best work of his career. The Bad News Bears allows him to ease up on the gas peddle. That is not to say the film is lazy or lacks his remarkable ability to observe characters without judgment. The film is well-directed, solidly written, and the performers (both professional and amateur) are engaging. Billy Bob Thornton delivers another first-rate comedic performance that manages to stay remarkably faithful to the indelible memory of Walter Matthau's work in the original while being different enough that you never compare the two while watching this new version. However, there is something off in the basic conception of the film. Both this film and the original are about skewering American sacred cows. Linklater finds ways to make pointed comments about the War in Iraq that would make Michael Ritchie smile. He obviously admires the original film, occasionally lifting from it entire sections of dialogue (the script is partly credited to the screenwriter of the original film) and even some shots. But a reverent ode to irreverence, however well-crafted, can't help but seem inessential. As solid as Linklater's film is, coming off of his most recent work and with the memory of the perfect original, inessential is how it feels. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
Tyler Patrick Jones - Lupus; Timmy Deters - Tanner Boyle; Brandon Craggs - Engelberg; Sammi Kane Kraft - Amanda Whurlitzer; Jeff Davies - Kelly Leak; Aman Johal - Prem Lahiri; Troy Gentile - Matthew Hooper; Carlos Estrada - Miguel Agilar; Emmanuel Estrada - Jose Agilar; Jeffrey Tedmori - Garo Daragebrigadian; Ridge Canipe - Toby Whitewood; Kenneth Harris - Ahmad Abdul Rahim; Carter Jenkins - Joey Bullock
Credit
David S. Lazan - Art Director, Brad Marks - Associate Producer, Adam Ellison - Associate Producer, Sara Greene - Associate Producer, Joseph Middleton - Casting, Steve Savage - Consultant/advisor, Greg Smith - Consultant/advisor, Bruce Heller - Co-producer, Karen Patch - Costume Designer, Vince Palmo - First Assistant Director, Richard Linklater - Director, Sandra Adair - Editor, Marcus Viscidi - Executive Producer, Ed Shearmur - Composer (Music Score), Randall Poster - Musical Direction/Supervision, Bruce Curtis - Production Designer, Rogier Stoffers - Cinematographer, Richard Linklater - Producer, J. Geyer Kosinski - Producer, Geyer Kosinski - Producer, Edward Tise - Sound/Sound Designer, Webster Whinery - Stunts Coordinator, Bill Lancaster - Screenwriter, Richard Linklater - Screenwriter, John Requa - Screenwriter, Glenn Ficarra - Screenwriter, Erik Henry - Visual Effects Supervisor, Beth Sterner - Supervising Sound Editor, Brana Michelle Rosenfeld - Set Decorator