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| Readers: Best baseball movie moments From the Page 2 mailbag | ||
Continuing our movie theme of the past couple of weeks, Page 2 asked readers to send us the best moments from baseball movies.
After going through more than 400 e-mails, we've listed Page 2 readers' top 10 choices below. Be sure to vote in the poll at right to crown the all-time best moment from a baseball movie. Here's the readers' list:1. Ray Kinsella (Kevin Costner) plays catch with his father (Dwier Brown) in "Field of Dreams" (86 letters) Every time I see it I call my dad and try to arrange a catch. Hell, that scene alone is the sole reason that I can't wait to have a son (I am only 20). Nothing in life is as magical as having a catch with your father, especially when you are no longer a child. If my friends ever ask me what is so great about baseball, I point right to that scene and tell them of the pure joy and love that is expressed by a father and son as they quietly throw a ball back and forth. Glenn Schneck Jr. Orlando
I have owned my copy since it came out on video, and after all these years and hundreds of viewings, it still makes me misty-eyed. For every son who ever fought with his dad, this is the defining moment of reconciliation. We all reconcile eventually, but never so dramatically. For every son who ever lost a father, it is the moment we all wish we had.
2. Lt. Frank Drebin (Leslie Neilsen) performs the national anthem (as Enrico Pallazzo) and then umps the Mariners-Angels game in "The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad!" (62 letters)
The perfect ending to a storybook movie. The chips are down, it's the bottom of the ninth, two out, two strikes against you, haven't hit the ball yet that day, and -- to make matters worse -- you just broke your lucky bat. The only thing left to do is swing for the fences, and then some.
That movie always brings back so many memories about the stadium and the city it was filmed in, Buffalo's old War Memorial Stadium, or "the Rockpile," as it was affectionately known to us. Great memories in that ballpark, and from that film, but none better than watching the greatest player ever in his greatest triumph. It's the kind of thing you dream about as a kid and long for as an adult.
4. The young Moonlight Graham (Frank Whaley) steps over the foul line and turns into the doc (Burt Lancaster) in "Field of Dreams" (32 letters)
You are correct that "The Natural" had many memorable moments, but how could you leave out Roy Hobbs knocking the cover off the ball? It was so amusing watching the outfielders having problems retrieving the ball as it unwound itself into a pile of string. "That's not a ball, we want a real ball!" Anthony Burd Medford, Mass
6. Ham Porter (Patrick Renna) tells the crosstown rival's star player he plays baseball like a girl in "The Sandlot" (13 letters)
7. Kelly Leak (Jackie Earl Haley) gets thrown out to end the championship game, and Tanner Boyle tells the Yankees what to do with their trophy in "Bad News Bears" (12 letters)
The best sports scene from the best sports movie. There was a lot of heavy "stuff" going on there -- cursed gloves, live roosters, jammed eyelids, you name it. And remember, candlesticks always make a nice gift. OK, let's get two. Jim Stoddard Reno
9. Buck Weaver (John Cusack) watches an aged Joe Jackson (D.B. Sweeney) play semipro ball at the end of "Eight Men Out" (7 letters)
10. Ricky "Wild Thing" Vaughn (Charlie Sheen) enters from the bullpen in "Major League" (5 letters) |
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