Una estrella de béisbol envejecida que usa el apodo de Mr. 3000, descubre muchos años después de su retiro que no llegó a los 3,000 hits. Ahora, a los 47 años, ha regresado para intentar alc... Leer todoUna estrella de béisbol envejecida que usa el apodo de Mr. 3000, descubre muchos años después de su retiro que no llegó a los 3,000 hits. Ahora, a los 47 años, ha regresado para intentar alcanzar esa meta.Una estrella de béisbol envejecida que usa el apodo de Mr. 3000, descubre muchos años después de su retiro que no llegó a los 3,000 hits. Ahora, a los 47 años, ha regresado para intentar alcanzar esa meta.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado y 5 nominaciones en total
- T-Rex
- (as Brian J. White)
- Skillett
- (as Dondre Whitfield)
- Eddie Richling
- (as Scott Brooks)
- Young Woman
- (as Jaqueline C. Fleming)
Opiniones destacadas
I always find myself captivated by the baseball scenes. Something about the "will to win" plot of just about all sports movies is what I can't get enough of. This movie was no different.
If you liked the Major League series, Mr. Baseball, *61, Babe, Bull Durham, Field Of Dreams, The Natural or even Angels In The Outfield, A League Of Their Own, The Fan and The Naked Gun (The baseball scenes made the movie as funny as it was), then there's no doubt you'll like Mr. 3000 as well. I give 8 of 10 stars.
The last-place Brewers are desperate for attendance (at least their owner, played by Chris Noth, is), and they lure Stan back to the ballpark to retire his number. While compiling a list of each of his 3,000 hits, it is learned that three of the hits were counted twice and he only has 2,997 hits, thus cancelling his ticket to Cooperstown. Stan will have none of this, and returns to the Brewers, whose owner figures he'll be a welcome distraction from the standings. Ross faces an uphill battle from the team he publicly derided prior to his return, even finding himself on the receiving end of a seemingly endless tirade of trash talk from a mascot dressed as a BRATWURST. The movie even paid an homage to the "sausage races" that occur in Milwaukee during the seventh inning stretch (a race between four mascots in various sausage uniforms).
The usual suspects (ESPN, etc.) make cameos, and Stan's on-again, off-again love interest (an ESPN reporter played by Angela Bassett) enjoys his company but finds him unsuitable for commitment to anything but his mirror. Stan has a full life and several close friends who accept his narcissism as part of the package that drew the fans to the ballpark all those years. The fans seem willing to forgive Stan everything because he came through for the team all those years, and even empathize with his plight to recapture his primary glory in life, taken from him through a mathematical error not even his. Paul Sorvino manages his best Earl Weaver impersonation as manager Gus Panas, but I was never a fan of that shtick when Earl did it.
The film has no real bad guy (other than Stan's ego), but they add an "It's A Wonderful Life" element to the film in the form of T. Rex Pennebaker (sp?), the brash young slugger you build championship teams around. T. Rex is a lot like Stan used to be, thus giving Stan pause, for like Stan used to, T. Rex walks the walk as he talks the talk. To his credit, T. Rex gives his all even for a last-place team, even if it's only to boost his stats.
Stan, who left the Brewers in a pennant race nine years ago, now tries to be a team player as he pursues the elusive three hits. He tries to show he has matured and loves the game, and assumes a mentoring role for a talented yet very undisciplined, young team, but the "old Stan" does not go away quietly, and in a way that's good, because for as egotistical as Stan is made out to be, it is obvious that he loves people, the spotlight, and genuinely wants to be liked. He just assumes that everyone is out for themselves the way he is out for himself.
If you tried to write the ending to this film, it wouldn't be surprising if you were not too far off from how they wrote this one. The movie doesn't even try to be unpredictable, and this is another strength, because there's really only one or two ways a movie like this can end.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe film drew record crowds to Miller Park, home of the Milwaukee Brewers. Scenes were often shot between innings.
- ErroresIn 1995, Stan takes his 3,000th hit ball from a boy in the stands. The same boy is in the stands 9 years later, after Stan rejoins the Brewers.
- Citas
Big Horse Borelli: You know, a lot of people said that Stan only looked out for himself, that he wasn't a team player. But I'm here to tell you, if you get 3000 hits, you don't have to be a team player. If you have a lifetime .314 average, you don't have to be a good guy. If you lead the league in batting for three years, you can be the biggest jerk in the world!
- Créditos curiososAt the end of the credits there is a short clip of the Brewer's No. 4 hot dog dancing.
- ConexionesFeatures El Conejo Equipo (1946)
- Bandas sonorasHearst a Package
Written by Frank Garl, Christian Garl, Danny Pelfrey
Courtesy of Garl Communications, Inc.
Selecciones populares
- How long is Mr. 3000?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 30,000,000 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 21,811,187
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 8,679,028
- 19 sep 2004
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 21,839,377
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 44 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1