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DETAILS

MPAA Rating - R

Length:
    106 Minutes

Genre:
    Comedy

Original Release Date:
    Sep 24, 2002

Director
    David S. Ward

Cast
    Tom Berenger, Charlie Sheen, Corbin Bernsen, Margaret Whitton, James Gammon

 
Movie Summary
Inheriting the Cleveland Indians baseball team from her late husband, covetous ex-showgirl Margaret Whitton wants to move the franchise to Miami, primarily to take advantage of the many personal perks shes been promised by that city. But Cleveland wont yield its lease on the Indians unless the years attendance falls below 800,000. Figuring that chances for this are already good given Clevelands inability to win a pennant, Whitton tries to make doubly certain that the fans wont turn out by ordering the club manager to put together the worst team possible. The new players include hasbeen Tom Berenger, blind-as-a-bat pitcher Charlie Sheen, self-protective free agent Corbin Bernsen, and Wesley Snipes, who is constitutionally incapable of hitting straight. Surprisingly, this band of misfits begins winning games, so Whitton decides to break their spirit by forcing them to fly from game to game in a World War II prop plane, assigning them a rickety old bus for road games, and divesting them of their precious whirlpool. Still, the teams talent and esprit de corps grows, especially after Wild Thing Sheen dons a pair of glasses and is able to see where hes lobbing his 100-mile-an-hour pitches. Once the players are told that Whitton plans to dump them all whether they win the pennant or not, the team defiantly adopts an us against the you-know-what attitude. In a nailbiting 20 minute climax, the Indians face down their hated Yankee rivals in the pennant playoff game. The films conclusion ties up several loose plot ends, notably the off-and-on romance between the irresponsible Berenger and his ex Rene Russo. Though set in Cleveland, Major League was filmed virtually in its entirety in Milwaukee, with the Brewers play-by-play announcer Bob Uecker giving a terrific performance as the Indians drink-besotted color commentator. The film represented not only the fictional comeback of the Cleveland Indians, but the actual comeback of producer/director David S. Ward, whod been in a professional slump for several years. Though containing few surprises, Major League was a box-office smash, inspiring a 1992 sequel, inventively titled Major League II. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide


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