Foul-mouthed and
politically incorrect, The Bad News Bears
presents a startlingly funny vision of childhood. In fact, it would be nearly
impossible to include some of the movie’s edgier jokes in a contemporary film,
and that’s a shame—screenwriter Bill Lancaster and director Michael Ritchie
lend believable spark to their story by showing characters trading cruel
epithets about disability and race. This warts-and-all approach elevates The Bad News Bears from being just
another underdog tale in the classic sports-movie tradition; the movie is also
a wicked look at growing up the hard way.
The main adult character is Morris
Buttermaker (Walter Matthau), a former minor-league player now gone to seed—he’s
a rumpled drunk who works as a pool cleaner in Southern California. Buttermaker gets recruited to coach a newly formed
Little League team, the Bears, which comprises rejects from other squads: bad
seeds, minorities, nerds, runts, slobs. A paragon of insensitivity, Buttermaker
is the worst possible person to corral this gang, since he’s as appalled by
these losers as everyone else. To give the team a remote chance of success,
Buttermaker enlists a pair of ringers.
First up is 12-year-old pitcher Amanda
Whurlizer (Tatum O’Neal), whose mother used to date Buttermaker. She’s a
wise-beyond-her-years handful, demanding endless financial perks in exchange
for participating. Next, Buttermaker woos Kelly Leak (Jackie Earle Haley), a
local dropout who zooms around town on a Harley and makes a sketchy living with
small-time scams. Watching the younger kids get schooled by the self-serving
Amanda and Kelly is hilarious, especially since Buttermaker observes the whole
pathetic spectacle with a mix of cynical detachment and whatever-works
ruthlessness.
The contrivance, of course, is that Buttermaker falls in love
with the team because of how hard the kids try to please him, but Matthau’s
unsentimental performance sells the illusion nicely. Better still, Ritchie does
an amazing job with the ballpark scenes, using the strains of Bizet’s “Carmen”
as a leitmotif for the Bears’ outfield ineptitude; these scenes are sly ballets
of expertly staged physical comedy. Ritchie also pays careful attention to vignettes
taking place off the field, ensuring that even minor characters are sketched
beautifully.
It helps a great deal that O’Neal was in the midst of her hot
streak of precocious performances, and that Haley, in his breakout role,
presented a memorable mixture of bravado and insecurity. Even the movie’s main villain,
the super-competitive coach (Vic Morrow) of an opposing team, comes across as a
fully realized individual, since the dynamic he shares with his long-suffering
son speaks to the movie’s theme of what happens when winning eclipses other priorities.
Predictably, the departure of key players behind and in front of the camera led
to diminishing returns for the movie’s first sequel, The Bad News Bears in Breaking Training. Written by Paul Brickman
(who later wrote and directed Risky
Business), Breaking Training is enervated
and overly sweet but basically palatable. The story focuses on Kelly (still
played by Haley) and his estranged dad, Mike (William Devane), who takes over
as the Bears’ coach. Mike tries to rally the team for a big exhibition game at
the Houston Astrodome, and a combination of formulaic plot elements and
unwelcome sentimentality makes Breaking
Training feel second-rate. Wasn’t eschewing the cheap emotionalism of traditional
sports movies the point of the original film? Still, the interplay between the
misfit kids, most of whom are played by the same actors, remains enjoyable, so
group scenes are fun to watch.
In fact, Breaking
Training is a near-masterpiece compared to the final theatrical film of the
original series, The Bad News Bears Go to
Japan. Although original screenwriter Bill Lancaster returned for this
entry, the gimmick of the Bears getting exploited by a slick promoter (Tony
Curtis) feels forced, as does the uninteresting romantic subplot involving
Kelly (once more played by Haley) and a pretty Japanese teenager. Even the
game-time jokes start to feel tired by this point, so Japan is to be avoided by those who wish to leave their memories of
the first picture untouched. The franchise soldiered on when CBS broadcast one
season of a Bad News Bears TV series
in 1979–1980, with Jack Warden playing Matthau’s old role of Morris
Buttermaker. Then, in 2005, the Bears returned for director Richard Linklater’s
pointless remake of the original film, with Billy Bob Thornton becoming the
third actor to play Buttermaker.
The
Bad News Bears: RIGHT ON
The
Bad News Bears in Breaking Training: FUNKY
The
Bad News Bears Go to Japan: LAME
Watching this movie as a jaded adult, I could not help noticing the bizarre and unnerving sexualization of the children in many films of this genre, the 70s "kids" films.
ReplyDeleteIf you watch a lot of 70s flicks, you'll find plenty of "buddy" films: social misfit adult male paired with innocent wide eyed small boy, but sometimes small girl.
In one scene, Amanda (O'Neal) mentions one of her school friends quote "is on the pill, at 13!" as if it's no big deal... O'Neal goes out on a "date" with the cool kid (Kelly) she's what, 12? She looks forward to "getting her first bra" while she waits, alone(!) in a rather deserted spot off the highway selling Maps to Stars Homes. She gets interrupted by her mother's ex husband (Matthau, who drinks WHILE he drives in every scene) as he begs O'Neal to join his rag tag team.
Basically, I felt it was just another one of those typical 70s films that under the radar had sexual scenes and jokes that in real life would be not only inappropriate, but downright creepy-especially the adult drunk man taking O'Neal out without any type of supervision or knowledge of her parents- in fact, where WERE her parents during the entire film!
When I watched these movies as a child, there was just *something* under the radar I could not put my finger on, but left me uneasy. Something sinister, and weird. Watching it now as an adult, I figured it out.
Awesomely politically incorrect (PC wasn't invented yet) and funny as hell. I didn't pick up on anything sinister or weird.
ReplyDeleteIts amazing what some people will find in harmless old movies or television shows. I saw a post on social media once from someone who thought the original 'Star Trek' promoted homosexuality. I'd be very surprised if Gene Roddenberry had that in mind when he wrote the pilot or any subsequent episode.
ReplyDelete