Un abogado egocéntrico de Minnesota es sentenciado a servicio comunitario como entrenador de un equipo de hockey juvenil.Un abogado egocéntrico de Minnesota es sentenciado a servicio comunitario como entrenador de un equipo de hockey juvenil.Un abogado egocéntrico de Minnesota es sentenciado a servicio comunitario como entrenador de un equipo de hockey juvenil.
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Elenco
- Premios
- 2 nominaciones en total
- Fulton Reed
- (as Elden Ratliff)
- Jesse Hall
- (as Brandon Adams)
- Adam Banks
- (as Vincent A. Larusso)
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Not original, but it's done well. It's a feel-good underdog story, made better by some drama between the rival coaches, a star player who has to change teams and a romance between the coach and the single mom of one of the kids. The storytelling is very streamlined and not much time is devoted to any element. But it works. It's fun, and it makes you feel good. Great family movie.
Gordon is a lawyer who has had a little trouble with the lying in his career, therefore, he must do community service. When he sees a group of young pre-teen troubled youths playing a game of hockey, remembering his childhood love of hockey, he volunteers to become their coach in the Pee-Wee games. He starts off on a rocky relationship since he doesn't like kids, but he grows to love them and they do back learning that there is more to a game than just winning, but it'd be nice since they end up in the championships.
I loved The Mighty Ducks, I felt like it was a terrific family film and I'm surprised it wasn't played in my childhood since I was seven years old when it came out, but you know the saying, better late then never, right? I would highly recommend this up lifting story for any family!
7/10
The story centers around a good but unconventional lawyer named Gordon Bombay. After being arrested for drinking while driving, he is placed on community service and is forced to coach one of the city's (Minneapolis) pee-wee hockey teams, which is also the worst team in the league. Pee-wee hockey hits a nerve with Bombay as he was once a remarkable player himself but both losing his father and upsetting his rather abusive coach over a missed shot in a short time span in his childhood caused emotional damage to where he quit the sport.
After a tough start between him and the team, an emotional and motivational encounter with an old family friend (Hans) reignites his love for the sport and he soon begins treating the kids much better, and teaches them how to play properly. This improves the team's fortunes (now going by the Duck's name), as they make the finals, going up against Bombay's old team and coach.
It's pretty easy to see where this movie got its inspiration. However, it still does try to differentiate itself from Bad News Bears, while also trying to pay homage to it, which does keep it from being just a carbon copy.
The big differences here is this being a Disney film and a 16 year age gap between the films, both of which play into this films key differences. The tone, humor and design are vastly different. This being a 90s movie might help this appeal a little more to kids now than Bad News Bears as some 70s films did have a look and style that make them hard to take seriously, in retrospect.
I do like the way the kids are written in this than Bad News Bears. For whatever reason, kids just weren't written the best in a lot of 70s films. Too much adult humor that let you know what age group wrote the story. Steven Brill actually writes the kids well, and Stephen Herek allows a lot of improvisation with the young cast, which helps make them more relatable and realistic.
Where the realism drops off is ironically the adults, which is the polar opposite of Bad News Bears. The story of Bombay's insecurities over Coach Riley and the missed penalty shot takes some suspension of disbelief and the overall dialogue isn't very adult-like, which is most likely due to the Disney influence than anything else.
The Hockey is a huge highlight, Herek does a great job making these pee-wee hockey games really entertaining and the editing is great. The kids body check more than any game I've seen in the NHL but it works.
The acting is actually pretty good. They do manage cast kids that can act, and Emilio Estevez is obviously a great actor and does very well, despite the material at times. I also really like Joss Ackland as Hans.
So overall, anyone who grew up in the 70s might consider this the light version of Bad News Bears but I would argue that time has treated The Mighty Ducks a lot better. What it lacks in originality, it definitely makes up for in entertainment.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaJake Gyllenhaal, who was unknown at the time, auditioned for the role of Charlie Conway, but his parents wouldn't let him do the movie so the producers ended up casting Joshua Jackson.
- Errores(at around 1h 19 mins) When the Ducks are playing the yellow team, Banks is simultaneously shown as being on the bench cheering and on the ice with the puck.
- Citas
[the kids aren't thrilled about being named the Ducks]
Gordon Bombay: I didn't have a choice, we're being sponsored.
Les Averman: By who, Donald and Daisy?
Gordon Bombay: Hey, you don't wanna be Ducks? You'd rather be District Five? Some stupid number?
Peter Mark: Better than some stupid animal.
Gordon Bombay: I'll have you know, Peter, that the Duck is one of the most noble, agile and intelligent creatures in the animal kingdom.
Connie Moreau: But they're wimpy!
Guy Germaine: They don't even have teeth.
Gordon Bombay: Neither do hockey players. Have you guys ever seen a flock of ducks flying in perfect formation? It's beautiful. Pretty awesome the way they all stick together. Ducks never say die. Ever seen a duck fight? No way. Why? Because the other animals are afraid. They know that if they mess with one duck, they gotta deal with the whole flock. I'm proud to be a Duck, and I'd be proud to fly with any one of you. So how about it? Who's a Duck?
Fulton Reed: [pause] I'll be a duck.
Charlie Conway: Yeah, me too.
- Créditos curiososIn the closing Credits, Joshua Jackson's character 'Charlie Conway' is misspelled and listed as "Charlie Conroy"
- Versiones alternativasTwo versions of the movie's soundtrack exist (along with two representations of the music list in the credits, usually paired correctly but not always). In one version, when Charlie wins the game with his penalty shot, Queen's "We Are the Champions" plays for about 70 seconds, then as the bus drives away and the end credits begin, Queen's "We Will Rock You" starts, followed by "We Are the Champions". In another version, the musical score continues uninterrupted throughout the victory scene, and the end credits have "Winning It All" by The Outfield and then "We Will Rock You". (One version of the song list has Rock and Champions, and the other has Rock and Winning.) The US DVD has the Champions versions on its English, French, and Spanish dubs, although the French credits list Winning. The US Blu-ray has the Winning It All version in both its English soundtrack and credits list. One possibility is that Champions was always intended, but the rights couldn't be set up in time for the theatrical release and were arranged by the home video releases (then in an earnest effort to be faithful to the original release the Blu-ray lost it again).
- Bandas sonorasHey Man
Written by Dennis Hill, Joe Phillipy and Greg Higgins
Performed by The Poorboys
Courtesy of Hollywood Records
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- The Mighty Ducks
- Locaciones de filmación
- Peavey Park, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Estados Unidos(Adult Gordon meets the District 5 players)
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 10,000,000 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 50,752,337
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 6,035,133
- 4 oct 1992
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 50,755,845