L'histoire remarquable et véridique du parcours improbable de Rickey Hill pour jouer dans la Ligue majeure de baseball.L'histoire remarquable et véridique du parcours improbable de Rickey Hill pour jouer dans la Ligue majeure de baseball.L'histoire remarquable et véridique du parcours improbable de Rickey Hill pour jouer dans la Ligue majeure de baseball.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire et 1 nomination au total
Avis à la une
The trailer showed us a corny Christian themed baseball movies and that's what we got. The story is uplifting, and the movie proves we can have family friendly films. I definitely thought they could have cut it down by 20 minutes, but I still enjoyed it.
I don't think you have to be a Christian to like the movie since they don't demand any beliefs from the audience. It is probably aimed at that crowd though. If you love baseball, ever had to overcome something, or can just feel inspired by Rickey's story then this film is for you.
It's great for the entire family.
It's definitely a very white film. I say this as a white person. I don't think the black characters were portrayed in a bad light, but they were only there to support the white characters. All two of them with lines. This is based on a true story in Texas from the 60's and 70's though, so it might have been this way.
It was also good to see them capture the time and family well, without putting full on child abuse on the screen. We were told enough.
I don't think you have to be a Christian to like the movie since they don't demand any beliefs from the audience. It is probably aimed at that crowd though. If you love baseball, ever had to overcome something, or can just feel inspired by Rickey's story then this film is for you.
It's great for the entire family.
It's definitely a very white film. I say this as a white person. I don't think the black characters were portrayed in a bad light, but they were only there to support the white characters. All two of them with lines. This is based on a true story in Texas from the 60's and 70's though, so it might have been this way.
It was also good to see them capture the time and family well, without putting full on child abuse on the screen. We were told enough.
10emdeeeff
I thought I would like it since it has Dennis Quaid. I actually loved the movie. It's so refreshing to see a realistic movie with good actors and no CG. I thought the story line was interesting and I didn't even realize the movie was over two hours! I'm not usually in for a long movie but this one kept my interest. I just really like Dennis Quaid is this type of role. He was excellent and all the actors were great in their roles. If a movie is going to have a sport in the background I prefer it to be baseball because that's the only sport I like at all. I just loved the character "'Red" and whoever played him was so entertaining. Im 55 and that's how I remember old men acting and comporting themselves when I was a child in the 70s. I enjoyed that the historical setting was quite accurate. I saw some things that were off a little but overall it was excellent.
Based on a true story, it seemed cloyingly maudlin. Whereas a story like Rudy plays out naturally, elements of this seem theatrically pushed into repetitive stark stereotypical juxtapositions. It was longer than it needed to be, and even my wife said the same thing though she enjoyed it more.
The acting, however, is what makes this so compelling. The man playing Rickey Hill as an adult is a man we should expect to see much more. Dennis Quaid seemingly turns every scene -and movie-into powerful performances. One reviewer said the background actors were poor but I sure didn't think so. Everyone turned in great, believable, deep performances, which is why I did not rate it lower.
Settings for the scenes are well done. Look for real major league pitcher John Smoltz as the final game announcer.
Summary: many people will like it for its spirit of facing trials and tribulations, and can be expected to rate it higher, but it just seems overly heavy handed and long attempting to manipulate emotions.
The acting, however, is what makes this so compelling. The man playing Rickey Hill as an adult is a man we should expect to see much more. Dennis Quaid seemingly turns every scene -and movie-into powerful performances. One reviewer said the background actors were poor but I sure didn't think so. Everyone turned in great, believable, deep performances, which is why I did not rate it lower.
Settings for the scenes are well done. Look for real major league pitcher John Smoltz as the final game announcer.
Summary: many people will like it for its spirit of facing trials and tribulations, and can be expected to rate it higher, but it just seems overly heavy handed and long attempting to manipulate emotions.
There are so many cute moments in this movie. I had mistakenly chalked it up to "just a faith-based film" before watching it, since the trailer made it seem like it was one of those true stories of a young kid keeping his faith strong despite massive hardships. When I watched it, however, I was seriously impressed. Yes, the main family is a religious one, and the patriarch Dennis Quaid is a pastor, but it's not really a religious movie. The religious community will love it, but so will anyone else who watches it. From the interesting story to the compelling characters, strong acting, and thoughtful direction, it's a very good movie.
The story revolves around a boy who wears braces on his legs but dreams of becoming a professional baseball player. His father, Dennis, would prefer he stop dreaming and embrace reality, but Jesse Barry (and later Colin Ford) just can't stop practicing, despite his handicap. Although Jesse and Colin give strong performances, Dennis absolutely steals the show. He doesn't play his character as a one-dimensional "disapproving father" or a one-dimensional "pastor who ignores his family". There's nothing one-dimensional about him, and you feel that you know him even when the script hasn't fleshed out his backstory. When Dennis finds out his son can walk without his braces, he cries with joy. His children scrimp and save their pennies to buy him a celebratory hamburger, and he turns what could have been a ridiculously corny moment into seriously fine acting. Later, when Dennis can't afford Colin's medical treatment, a collection basket gets passed around the church. He stands at the pulpit with a forced smile on his face as he watches his neighbors give him money. He's humiliated, ashamed, grateful, humbled, and terribly sorry that his son has to endure such suffering.
If you're in the mood for a more wholesome movie than what Hollywood usually produces these days, you don't have many choices. You've probably turned into the type of person who says, "I'm not a movie person," if others ask what you've watched lately. As a film critic, I can't believe I've given that response. Just as with the demise of the Hays Code in the late 1950s, there has been a distinct shift in the type of film being made over the past several years. I enjoy watching good quality movies with an inspiring and wholesome message, and I thoroughly enjoyed The Hill.
The story revolves around a boy who wears braces on his legs but dreams of becoming a professional baseball player. His father, Dennis, would prefer he stop dreaming and embrace reality, but Jesse Barry (and later Colin Ford) just can't stop practicing, despite his handicap. Although Jesse and Colin give strong performances, Dennis absolutely steals the show. He doesn't play his character as a one-dimensional "disapproving father" or a one-dimensional "pastor who ignores his family". There's nothing one-dimensional about him, and you feel that you know him even when the script hasn't fleshed out his backstory. When Dennis finds out his son can walk without his braces, he cries with joy. His children scrimp and save their pennies to buy him a celebratory hamburger, and he turns what could have been a ridiculously corny moment into seriously fine acting. Later, when Dennis can't afford Colin's medical treatment, a collection basket gets passed around the church. He stands at the pulpit with a forced smile on his face as he watches his neighbors give him money. He's humiliated, ashamed, grateful, humbled, and terribly sorry that his son has to endure such suffering.
If you're in the mood for a more wholesome movie than what Hollywood usually produces these days, you don't have many choices. You've probably turned into the type of person who says, "I'm not a movie person," if others ask what you've watched lately. As a film critic, I can't believe I've given that response. Just as with the demise of the Hays Code in the late 1950s, there has been a distinct shift in the type of film being made over the past several years. I enjoy watching good quality movies with an inspiring and wholesome message, and I thoroughly enjoyed The Hill.
10jakerr07
The Hill hits home (no pun intended) if you grew up in a smaller town. Growing up in the bible belt, I understand that strict, moral parental values are hard to let go of when children want to walk a different path in life.
Rickey Hill and his Father rarely see eye to eye - the conflict of baseball, faith, and their relationship can't seem to coexist. Rickey see's his skills at bat as a gift while his father sees it as a surefire way that he will be crippled forever. It's tough love verses stubbornness on his father's behalf as Rickey time and time again proves that he can fulfill his dream.
It's a rarity these days that we see such a gritty & real father/son relationship on screen and from the first scene, you're rooting for the two to salvage a bond together. Dennis Quaid and Colin Ford have great chemistry and you really believe their father and son dynamic. The child actors playing the younger version of the characters did a great job as well and the time period (late 60s/early 70s) makes for a perfect, All-American setting.
"October Sky" meets "The Natural". A winning baseball movie for the whole family.
Rickey Hill and his Father rarely see eye to eye - the conflict of baseball, faith, and their relationship can't seem to coexist. Rickey see's his skills at bat as a gift while his father sees it as a surefire way that he will be crippled forever. It's tough love verses stubbornness on his father's behalf as Rickey time and time again proves that he can fulfill his dream.
It's a rarity these days that we see such a gritty & real father/son relationship on screen and from the first scene, you're rooting for the two to salvage a bond together. Dennis Quaid and Colin Ford have great chemistry and you really believe their father and son dynamic. The child actors playing the younger version of the characters did a great job as well and the time period (late 60s/early 70s) makes for a perfect, All-American setting.
"October Sky" meets "The Natural". A winning baseball movie for the whole family.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe tryout coach that Ricky talks to is the real Ricky Hill
- GaffesThe film depicts young Rickey Hill in the 1960s hitting rocks in a hay field with round hay bales with net wrap on them in the background.Round bale hay production was not invented until 1972.
- Citations
Pastor Hill: May her fierce spirit guard the foals of spring.
- Bandes originalesLittle Bitty Pretty Things
Performed by Jimmy Cove and the Rovers (aka James Thacker )
Written by James Thacker and Mason Cooper
Produced by James Thacker
Courtesy of Kazen Music Group (by arrangement with SyncSource Music, LLC)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- El camino de Hill
- Lieux de tournage
- Augusta, Géorgie, États-Unis(Georgia Entertainment News)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 7 665 865 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 2 301 931 $US
- 27 août 2023
- Montant brut mondial
- 7 697 028 $US
- Durée2 heures 6 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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