If you're not willing to stand in the rain during a major tournament, you're gonna get bored with these movies.
The Greatest Game Ever Played (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:107
Fresh:67
Rotten:40
Average Rating:6.2/10
Consensus: Despite all the underdog sports movie conventions, the likable cast and lush production values make The Greatest Game Ever Played a solid and uplifting tale.
Runtime: 2 hrs 1 min
Genre: Dramas
US Box Office: $15,283,642
Synopsis: The second film directed by actor Bill Paxton is a marked departure--in both form and content--from his debut, 2001's FRAILTY, a shadowy, gothic tale of murder. THE GREATEST GAME EVER PLAYED is a... The second film directed by actor Bill Paxton is a marked departure--in both form and content--from his debut, 2001's FRAILTY, a shadowy, gothic tale of murder. THE GREATEST GAME EVER PLAYED is a sports movie slash Horatio Alger rags-to-riches tale with undertones of class consciousness and social critique. The story is based on a real-life event--the 1913 U.S. Open golf championship--at which two equally sympathetic young men, both of whom grew up economically and socially disadvantaged, go club to club in one of the most exciting and dramatic athletic events of the early 20th century. The film focuses on the competition between the British star Harry Vardon (Stephen Dillane) and the young American prodigy Francis Ouimet (HOLES star Shia LaBoeuf). Though they hail from opposite sides of the Atlantic, the struggles that the two young golfers have had to overcome are markedly similar; both grew up in hard-scrabble, working-class homes that happened to be adjacent to golf courses, and both were preternaturally disposed to the game. In addition, both must defy the disdain of the golfing gentry. Vardon is already a reigning champion and international darling when Ouimet makes it to his first tournament to battle him. Though enough backstory is provided to connect the viewers to the characters, the meat of the film is the dramatic unfolding of the tournament. With expert editing and fluid camera work, Paxton films close-up views of the golfing action in a manner that recalls the kinetic pool shots in Martin Scorsese's THE COLOR OF MONEY. With each stroke, the competition becomes closer and the mood more tense, culminating in an explosive outcome that, while not unexpected, pulls at the heartstrings as do all good tales of triumph over adversity. [More]
Starring: Shia LaBeouf, Justin Ashforth, George Asprey, Jackie Burroughs
Starring: Shia LaBeouf, Justin Ashforth, George Asprey, Jackie Burroughs, Len Cariou, Peter Firth, Joe Jackson
Director: Bill Paxton
Director: Bill Paxton
Screenwriter: Melissa Carter
Producer: Marc Beauchamps
Studio: Buena Vista Pictures
Reviews for The Greatest Game Ever Played
For those who believe watching golf on TV is equivalent to spending the afternoon watching grass grow, this movie will do nothing to alter your perception of the sport.
The sappy musical score, the pretty photography, the underdog hero -- it basically pillages every sports-themed film you can imagine, but lacks one essential ingredient to make it work: the heart.
...this is a fable meant to rouse, complete with swelling strings. It isn't a movie about real people at all, despite its insistence on using real names.
Actor-director Bill Paxton covers a golf tournament in ways ESPN never imagined.
The Greatest Game never thrills on an emotional level the way the best of sports films -- a Hoosiers, say -- can, but it’s a satisfying entertainment nonetheless.
As a film replay, The Greatest Game is hardly that, but it's at least a pretty good one.
Amiable in tone but hamstrung by the obviousness of a foregone conclusion.
It puts its head down and plays a very strong game on the back nine, and ends up as the gripping and uplifting sports movie it was supposed to be all along.
I am not a golf fan but found The Greatest Game Ever Played absorbing all the same.
Paxton hits the ball squarely in capturing the psychology of his characters, but hooks it into the sand trap of effects and thematic overselling.
This charming film (editing tricks aside), is rich in humor and period detail, and amazingly suspenseful considering we already know the outcome.
Greatest Game succeeds because it has enough history and authenticity to please golf enthusiasts while maintaining enough heart and human drama to appeal to the rest.
It manages to be surprisingly entertaining for a golf movie, but otherwise it has nothing new going on.
I don't want to just take their word for it! Show me what was so special about this guy's game!!
Latest News for The Greatest Game Ever Played
September 28, 2006:
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Ashton Kutcher fans get two chances to see (or hear) their favorite star this weekend as the Hollywood prankster takes on reigning box office champ "Jackass: Number... More...
March 13, 2006:
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Per the Hollywood Reporter, Shia LaBeouf ("The Greatest Game Ever Played") will star in DreamWorks' new thriller, "Disturbia," which will be that studio's... More...
September 29, 2005:
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September 26, 2005:
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