海角大神

Trouble with the Curve: movie review

( PG-13 ) ( Monitor Movie Guide )

Clint Eastwood returns for a showdown on the diamond.

|
Warner Brothers Entertainment
John Goodman, Amy Adams, and Clint Eastwood (l. to r.) team up in 鈥楾rouble with the Curve,鈥 about an aging baseball scout and his daughter.

Clint Eastwood鈥檚 recent bizarre appearance at the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., may have stolen some of the thunder from his new film 鈥淭rouble with the Curve,鈥 where he plays Gus Lobel, a grousing Atlanta Braves baseball scout whose eyesight is failing. Still, Eastwood is Eastwood, whether he鈥檚 on a convention podium or before the cameras. What you see is pretty much what you get.

And what you get in 鈥淭rouble with the Curve鈥 is standard-issue late-career Eastwoodiana. The growl, the snarl, the crotchetiness are already familiar to us from 鈥Million Dollar Baby鈥 (2004) and 鈥Gran Torino鈥 (2009), his last appearance as an actor.

Gus is first shown reaching into his refrigerator for a can of Spam. This is, by the way, the only kind of spam with which he is familiar. He can barely work a typewriter and has no use for computers, unlike the Braves front office team, which rates young baseball prospects by their computerized stats and rarely ventures into the field for a firsthand look. Gus, by contrast, is deeply old school.

As the film too diligently points out, he鈥檚 not just old school, he鈥檚 old everything. Actually Eastwood, in his 80s, looks a lot trimmer than some of the performers in this film half his age. He may be the only octogenarian actor who has to play聽older聽than his age to be convincing.

鈥淭rouble with the Curve鈥 was not directed by Eastwood, who has helmed his share of fine films, but by his longtime producing partner Robert Lorenz, making his feature-film debut. This perhaps explains why the movie creaks along its timeworn path without any discernible narrative elegance. (The script is by Randy Brown.) But a big plus here is Amy Adams, who livens things up as Gus鈥檚 estranged daughter, Mickey (named after Mickey Mantle).

In line for a partnership at a high-powered Atlanta law firm, Mickey, who was raised by Gus on the road when he wasn鈥檛 shunting her off on relatives, sets aside her ambition to help her father when his poor eyesight puts his job on the line. Gus is scouting a top high school prospect in North Carolina, and Mickey, who knows almost as much about baseball as her father, comes to his (grudging) rescue. The bond-athon that develops between these two battlers is enabled by another scout, Johnny Flanagan (Justin Timberlake), once an Atlanta fastballer brought along by Gus who now hopes to be a broadcaster.

Eastwood has never been a terrific actor exactly, but within his very limited range he knows just what to do. I鈥檝e liked him best when he鈥檚 at his most hard-bitten 鈥 as in 鈥Escape from Alcatraz鈥 (1979) and 鈥淚n the Line of Fire鈥 (1993). I thought he overdid the grumpy old man stuff in 鈥淕ran Torino,鈥 which was widely discussed as a movie about what Dirty Harry might have become if he spent all his time yelling at kids to get off his lawn.

Eastwood has been around a long, long time; and a movie like 鈥淭rouble with the Curve,鈥 like 鈥淕ran Torino,鈥 has a valedictory air to it. It draws on our affection for Eastwood the actor, who is far less complicated than the man who made 鈥Unforgiven鈥 (1992), 鈥淢ystic River鈥 (2003), 鈥淢illion Dollar Baby,鈥 and 鈥Letters From Iwo Jima鈥 (2006) 鈥 films with a complex comprehension of the consequences of violence.

It鈥檚 one of the strangest careers in American film, and one far less predictable than the plot of 鈥淭rouble with the Curve.鈥 Grade: B- (Rated聽PG-13 for language, sexual references, some thematic material and smoking.)

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to Trouble with the Curve: movie review
Read this article in
/The-Culture/Movies/2012/0921/Trouble-with-the-Curve-movie-review
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe