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Saturday, September 29, 2012

TROUBLE WITH THE CURVE


Warner Bros.

 Rated PG-13

 Running time: 111 Minutes



 Click below to watch the Trouble with the Curve trailer.

 

In Warner Bros. Trouble with the Curve, Clint Eastwood is an aging baseball scout, who had signed up some of the best ball players in the business, trying to convince everyone - including his lawyer daughter Amy Adams - that he can still scout baseball talent.

While in his last few movies, star and producer Eastwood has been playing characters who of course are old - this is the film that I have seen one of Eastwood's movie play up the fact that Clint Eastwood as being old the most. Directed by Eastwood's longtime associate Robert Lorenz in Lorenz's directorial debut - Eastwood came out of acting retirement for this role, and I think the role most suits him. This is the first time since In the Line of Fire that Eastwood has not both directed and starred in a movie.

The Trouble With the Curve mostly concentrated on Eastwood's decreasing eyesight and his possibly not being able to perform his job anymore, especially as Eastwood tries to scout a new high school "green power hitter" Joe Massingill in a small town in North Carolina as Eastwood and Adams stay in a local motel. The concern of Eastwood's boss and best friend John Goodman and Eastwood's daughter Amy Adams over Eastwood's condition showed their love for Eastwood, despite the dysfunctional father-daughter relationship Adams and Eastwood have throughout most of the movie, as Adams leaves home to go with her father Eastwood to look after him. Even young baseball scout Justin Timberlake's admiration and respect for Eastwood's experience added to Eastwood's aging and his inability to adapt to the changes in the business of Major League Baseball. Despite the high tech aspect of baseball, the fact that everyone still travels in cars instead of airlines while scouting shows that the game of baseball really still has not changed.

The juxtaposition between Adams and Eastwood's jobs on the line hit home to me for both father and daughter as smarmy General Manager wannabe Matthew Lillard, with his computerized tracking system of players, wants Eastwood with his old-school scouting experience of scouting real players out of the organization - and Adams is threatened by another lawyer taking her presentation her client as well as the lawyer taking her spot as a partner in her lawyer's firm.

This is a nice role for Timberlake. Timberlake is such a nice guy in the movie as a young baseball scout for another team that gruff Eastwood practically pushes his relationship-challenged single daughter Adams at his young prodigy Timberlake. I guess it was keeping baseball all in the family as Adams grew up with baseball - and has learned quite a lot from Eastwood - and also assists Eastwood in scouting and recruiting talent, despite not always being with her single father Eastwood as she was growing up. It was great to see Robert Patrick as the owner of Eastwood's baseball team the Atlanta Braves - but we really did not get to know Patrick as the owner, which I think is a shame. The other aging baseball fans were also a delight to see. Actually, I am not sure if they were fans or were scouts as well since I did not recall seeing them take notes.

There was definitely an older crowd for this movie when I saw the film. I am sure most of them were there for Clint Eastwood rather than were actual baseball fans. That is how I felt about the audience for Eastwood's Space Cowboys, where the audience were more of a fan of Eastwood rather than of NASA. While I understand movie reviews have been mixed for Trouble With the Curve - as a fan of both Eastwood and baseball, I enjoyed this sports movie. It would be a shame if more of the younger generation do not see Trouble With the Curve.

Rated PG-13 for violence, language, sexual situations. Running time: 111 minutes.

Pancho
All people smile in the same language.

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