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Bad News Bears (2005) Movie Information:
Bad News Bears (2005) Directed by:
Richard Linklater
Bad News Bears (2005) Written by:
John Requa, Bill Lancaster, Glenn Ficarra
Bad News Bears (2005) Cast:
Billy Thornton, Greg Kinnear, Marcia Harden, Timmy Deters, Seth Adkins, Ridge Canipe, Brandon Craggs, Jeff Davies, Karen Gordon, Carter Jenkins
Bad News Bears (2005) U.S. Distributor:
Paramount Pictures
Bad News Bears (2005) U.K. Distributor:
UIP
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Bad News Bears (2005) Synopsis:

Morris Buttermaker, a former pro baseball player, was ejected from the game for attacking an umpire and now works as an exterminator. More interested in boozing and broads than baseball, Buttermaker is lured back into the game by Liz Whitewood, an attorney whose class action suit has forced the Little League to accept all players, regardless of their abilities. As the new coach of the Bears, the most losing team in Little League history, Buttermaker has his work cut out for him. Initially, he's only in it for the paycheck, but he and his inept players have a transformative effect on one another that is wholly unexpected, and completely remarkable.

Bad News Bears (2005) Movie Review:

Based off of the 1976 film of the same name, The Bad News Bears is yet another slender summer remake that’s only real breath of freshness is the performance by Billy Bob Thornton.

The film is directed by the very straightforward, yet talented filmmaker Richard Linklater, who seems to have a terrific balance between his studio (School of Rock) and his indie projects (Before Sunset). The film is predictable and similar to the original, which finds a one time baseball player, now drunk womanizer named Morris Buttermaker (Thornton), who takes on a band of troublemaking and foul-mouthed little leaguers and turns them into a real team, sort of.

With the help of a local lawyer (Marcia Gay Harden), Buttermaker who is a full time pest control worker becomes the coach of a team of misfit kids just for the paycheck. The kids are all foul-mouthed and each troubled by certain issues. One has angry problems, one is overweight, two can’t speak English, one is shy, and even one is handicapped. At first Buttermaker does not care at all about the kids, he brings them along to help him kill rats and passes out drunk on the pitching mound while throwing batting practice. The Bears team of course has a rival with the league’s best team, the Yankees. The Yankees stubborn coach,Roy Bullock (Greg Kinnear), also develops a hated relationship with Buttermaker. However as terrible as the Bears are, the more time they spend with one another, the more they solidify as a team. In need of additional help, Buttermaker recruits the flame-throwing daughter of an ex-flame to pitch for the team and a slugging juvenile to play shortstop. As with the original, the film is rude and at times dark, but it does turn into a soul-searching film for Buttermaker and each of the kids.

As with the original Bad News Bears, this version exposes harsh behavior with children continuously cursing, which merits its PG-13 rating. After a while, the cursing just becomes repetitive, and nothing close to shocking. What does keep this film afloat is Billy Bob Thornton himself. It is as if his character of Morris Buttermaker knows a lot about baseball and is the semi-kinder brother of his character from Bad Santa. Thornton just has a wonderful comedic balance with his delivery of each of his lines, which are so demeaning that one can not help but laugh. His performance never seems artificial, even with his change of heart during the second half of the film.

Director Richard Linklater worked from a script that was co-written by the writers of Bad Santa, so it seem they are in tune with Thornton’s tactics. The script is so predictable in nature that the film’s serves as nothing fresh, except for its performances. The characters each have their moments, but there are explanations that are touched on, but never fulfilled, such as the questioning of if Buttermaker is the pitcher Amanda’s father, or what was his real history with her mother. There is even a moment in the film where Amanda says that her mother is coming to a game, but nothing ever evolves from this one line.

Linklater knows how to work with kids; he proved that with School of Rock. He gets the goods out of his kids in this film as well, but the script just lacks the bit of spark and originality that made School of Rock so entertaining. As with most of Linklater’s choices, the whole film is very simple, to where there is nothing terribly horrible with this film, but nothing extravagant either. The Bad News Bears is at times funny, but it is not a laugh fest.

It is a shame that The Bad News Bears is just another one of those summer remakes that studios seem to keep revisiting. This film has the spirit of the original, but not the spontaneity or genuineness. It is really worth seeing just for Thornton’s performance, which is like a PG-13 version of his outstanding work in the dark comedy Bad Santa.

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Bad News Bears (2005) review written by: Bailey Henderson

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