Big changes often come with small steps.
The Story:
This
is the story of Branch Rickey (Harrison Ford) and his pursuit of adding a
black baseball player named Jackie Robinson (Chadwick Boseman) to the
Brooklyn Dodgers in 1945.
How's that for a plot summary?
Simple, yet effective.
But it doesn't even begin to summarize what you'll watch on the screen.
Sure, it's a lot of history condensed into a 2 1/2 hour movie, but it flies by and doesn't feel like that long of a movie.
The director/writer Brian Helgeland isn't very prolific, but I've enjoyed his output before (Payback and A Knight's Tale)
The performances are great. Boseman carries the majority of the movie on his back. Dealing with racism with quiet dignity. All Robinson wants is a chance to play ball, and eventually even his critics come around.
Harrison Ford plays gruff in his sleep, and he does a fine job as Branch Rickey.
The tale is an interesting one, as it parallels both Rickey's insistence to put Robinson in the game, and Robinson's efforts to succeed.
Thankfully, as history tells us, he will.
It's amazing, that as much as I don't really care for baseball, I sure love baseball movies.
: )
Final Grade: B+
Rewatchability/Purchase Factor: I could see adding this to the baseball wing of the DVD library. Good stuff.
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