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IMDbPro

The Winning Team

  • 1952
  • Approved
  • 1h 38min
NOTE IMDb
6,5/10
1,2 k
MA NOTE
Doris Day and Ronald Reagan in The Winning Team (1952)
BiographieDrameFamilleRomanceSportBase-ball

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueNebraska farmboy Grover Cleveland Alexander achieves baseball stardom before war injuries and alcoholism derail his career, but through his wife's faithful efforts he gets a chance for a com... Tout lireNebraska farmboy Grover Cleveland Alexander achieves baseball stardom before war injuries and alcoholism derail his career, but through his wife's faithful efforts he gets a chance for a comeback and redemption.Nebraska farmboy Grover Cleveland Alexander achieves baseball stardom before war injuries and alcoholism derail his career, but through his wife's faithful efforts he gets a chance for a comeback and redemption.

  • Réalisation
    • Lewis Seiler
  • Scénario
    • Ted Sherdeman
    • Seeleg Lester
    • Merwin Gerard
  • Casting principal
    • Doris Day
    • Ronald Reagan
    • Frank Lovejoy
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,5/10
    1,2 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Lewis Seiler
    • Scénario
      • Ted Sherdeman
      • Seeleg Lester
      • Merwin Gerard
    • Casting principal
      • Doris Day
      • Ronald Reagan
      • Frank Lovejoy
    • 30avis d'utilisateurs
    • 10avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 2 victoires au total

    Photos16

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    Rôles principaux99+

    Modifier
    Doris Day
    Doris Day
    • Aimee Arrants Alexander
    Ronald Reagan
    Ronald Reagan
    • Grover Cleveland Alexander
    Frank Lovejoy
    Frank Lovejoy
    • Rogers Hornsby
    Eve Miller
    Eve Miller
    • Margaret Killefer
    James Millican
    James Millican
    • Bill Killefer
    Russ Tamblyn
    Russ Tamblyn
    • Willie Alexander
    • (as Rusty Tamblyn)
    Gordon Jones
    Gordon Jones
    • George Glasheen
    Hugh Sanders
    Hugh Sanders
    • Joe McCarthy
    Frank Ferguson
    Frank Ferguson
    • Sam Arrants
    Dorothy Adams
    Dorothy Adams
    • Ma Alexander
    Bob Lemon
    • Jesse 'Pop' Haines
    Jerry Priddy
    • Baseball Player
    Peanuts Lowery
    • Baseball Player
    • (as Peanuts Lowrey)
    George Metkovich
    • Baseball Player
    Irv Noren
    • Baseball Player
    • (as Irving Noren)
    Hank Sauer
    • Baseball Player
    Al Zarilla
    • Baseball Player
    Gene Mauch
    • Baseball Player
    • Réalisation
      • Lewis Seiler
    • Scénario
      • Ted Sherdeman
      • Seeleg Lester
      • Merwin Gerard
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs30

    6,51.1K
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    Avis à la une

    6AlsExGal

    Hokey, shallow sports biopic

    The movie tells the story of Grover Cleveland Aexander (Ronald Reagan), a Hall of Fame Major League Baseball pitcher for Philadelphia, Chicago, and St. Louis. His great skill on the mound is hampered after he takes a ball to the head, leaving him with double vision. He later serves in World War One, where he suffers from exposure to mustard gas and subsequent shell-shock, after which he develops epilepsy and a severe drinking problem. His farm-girl wife Aimee (Doris Day) tries to help him through his troubles, but are his demons too strong to allow a comeback?

    The film skims over Alexander's troubles, and Reagan does a poor job of depicting a man at rock bottom. He always looks like, with just a shave and some pressed clothes, he'd be back at peak. Day doesn't have a lot to do, although she sings a Christmas song at one point, and sounds good doing so. This wasn't the worst sports biopic that I've seen, but I gained more insight on the real man from his Wikipedia page.
    7planktonrules

    The first half of this film is reasonably true--the second differs greatly from reality.

    When film began, Grover Cleveland Alexander was a teenager--while Ronald Reagan was almost 40! singing?! This is a biopic about the career of one of the greatest pitchers in major league history, Grover Cleveland Alexander. If you look at the man's statistics, they are staggeringly impressive. Because of this and Alexander's later medical issues, it's not at all surprising they made this film. What is rather surprising, however, is that they chose Ronald Reagan to play the man. When the film began, he was supposed to be a very young man--while Reagan was nearly 40! He did fine in the role, however.

    The first half of the film sticks reasonably close to the facts. If anything, it underplayed the greatness of the man (such as not even mentioning his three consecutive 30 win seasons and winning the triple-crown three times). However, around the middle of the film, the story gets hokey--and deviates very far from the truth. While Alexander did have problems with epilepsy and alcohol following his stint in WWI, the film made it look like his life and career fell apart. It also shows him being out of major league ball for some time until he cleaned himself up--but this just isn't true. He never had a losing season and still had excellent statistics until his final season in ball (when he was 43)--and the lengthy downward spiral in the film just never happened. With a career record of 373 and 208, he clearly was no bum! Overall, "The Winning Team" is a highly enjoyable and highly inaccurate and sensationalized film. While I do recommend it (it's well made and interesting), it seems sad that a great man's life was so distorted just to see a few extra tickets. But, that was pretty common for Hollywood during this era.
    7tinman19602003

    Solid film role for Reagan, well done if dry bio-pic

    In "The Winning Team" Reagan is the great early baseball star Grover Cleveland Alexander. Unimaginitive direction makes this film a little dry, but Reagan's solid performance as the pitcher who has a tragic accident early in his career and yet refuses to quit, is well worth the effort to watch it. Reagan gives a realistic portrayal of the flawed hero who makes a surprising comeback and with the help of his wife, and ignores the ugly rumors that surrounded his occasional blackouts. His performance on the field in the final moments, despite suffering from his affliction reflect the courage that it must have taken the real Alexander to stay at the helm till the ship sailed home. I recommend this film to anyone who likes baseball and certainly to fans of Reagan, who has been often disparaged as an actor, when it was usually the director or the film itself that was really bad. I also recommend Kings Row, Hasty Heart and Law and Order, all of which are solid Reagan films.
    Michael_Elliott

    Good Film Even Without the Truth

    Winning Team, The (1952)

    *** (out of 4)

    Pretty good, if watered down, drama about the career of Hall of Fame pitcher Grover Cleveland Alexander (Ronald Reagan) who started life on the farm but quickly made a name for himself as a pitcher. When his career was apparently over he started to suffer from alcoholism but his wife (Doris Day) gets him back into shape so that he can make a comeback. Once again we have a bio-pic that has been fictionalized but even with this the movie manages to be very entertaining from start to finish thanks to some very good performances. I think there are a few minor issues with one of them being the fact that the studio forced the producer's to cut down on some of the more darker moments. The alcoholism issue is only touched for a few seconds and Alexander's battle with epilepsy is pretty much overlooked. Another minor problem is that this is a movie about Alexander yet a lot of the attention goes to the wife. Day got top-billing but this is certainly Reagan's movie but at the same time there are many scenes that are obviously here just to give Day more scenes and this includes a really bad singing sequence around Christmas time. With all of that said, the rest of the movie is pretty much a winner. Baseball fans are really going to eat up seeing how they were playing back in the day plus we get to view the old-time uniforms and even better is that we get to see some of the old baseball stadiums. There's also quite a bit of stock footage used to try and re-create some moments of the 1926 World Series, which was against the New York Yankees and their Murderers Row. This was Reagan's final film at Warner after fifteen-years worth of service and they certainly let him go out on a high note. I thought Reagan was very believable in the role and manages to look quite natural as a pitcher and he also managed to be very believable in the part of the farm boy. The early scenes with him struggling with his disease were extremely well-done and this ranks as one of the actors better performances. Day is also in top-form even though I think we could have used a little less of her character. Frank Lovejoy gets a good bit as Rogers Hornsby and we get some real-life players including Jerry Priddy, Bob Lemon, Peanuts Lowery and Irving Noren. Frank Ferguson, who most will remember from ABBOTT AND COSTELLO MEET FRANKENSTEIN, plays Day's father here. Again, if you're wanting to truth on Alexander then it's best you go read a book but if you're just looking for some quick entertainment then this film does the job.
    6bkoganbing

    Alex the Great

    In filming the life story of Grover Cleveland Alexander, Warner Brothers made it a story of redemption when in fact it was a story of tragedy. But 1952 movie audiences wanted their happy endings.

    Grover Cleveland Alexander (1887-1950) was possibly the greatest right handed pitcher in National League history. He played for 3 teams, the Phillies, Cubs, and Cardinals and compiled 373 lifetime victories over a 20 year period.

    While still in the bush leagues Alexander sustained a serious head injury when a ball struck him right between the eyes while he was a base runner. He had double vision and headaches for a year. During World War I while an artillery officer the noise of exploding shells compounded a seemingly healed injury with a complication of epilepsy. To anesthetize himself, Alexander took to drinking some of that Prohibition whiskey and became an alcoholic.

    After leaving baseball in 1930 for the next twenty years, Alexander drifted to all kinds of menial jobs, occasionally making headlines with some alcohol related incident. One positive headline was his election to the Hall of Fame in the second round of elections. He was on hand for the dedication of the building in Cooperstown.

    In 1950 Alex was on hand as the Phillies won their second National League Pennant. Alex was the star of the first pennant winning team in 1915. A month later he was found dead in a cheap rooming house.

    That unfortunately is the sad truth of the real Grover Cleveland Alexander. This is not the film you will see.

    Ronald Reagan is just fine and actually comes close to the character of the real Alexander who was a genial and kind man with a terrible drinking problem. This was the final film Reagan made while at Warner Brothers.

    Doris Day in her second film with Reagan plays Amy Arrants Alexander, his loyal, faithful wife. In her memoirs Doris wrote that during the shooting she and Reagan had a few dates and she remembers him best as a good man who was quite a dancer when they went out. This film also qualifies as a musical for in the beginning Doris has a Christmas number, Old St. Nicholas, and Reagan joins her for the last two bars. Ronald Reagan actually did sing in one of his films.

    Today Hollywood would have no problem filming the real story which was quite a love story. Amy Alexander married Alex 3 times and divorced him twice, both those divorces an effort to give him a wake up call.

    But the widow Alexander was an adviser on the film and she got the film made to show the public the husband she wanted them to remember.

    And baseball fans the world over remember Grover Cleveland Alexander as a great baseball pitcher and a decent and patriotic man whose service to his country caused him a lifetime of triumph and tragedy trying to control the pain in his brain. It's a good legacy that doesn't need any embellishment from Hollywood.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      According to TMC, Ronald Reagan had lobbied hard to play the title role in Un homme change son destin (1949) but Warner Bothers didn't want to take a chance on a baseball film and passed on the project. After "The Stratton Story" became a huge hit, the studio picked up the Grover Cleveland Alexander story about another player who made a comeback after being forced from professional baseball.
    • Gaffes
      The film ends with the 1926 World Series, and Grover Cleveland Alexander retired from baseball in 1930, yet he is seen with a number on the back of his jersey, a practice that did not begin until 1931. Because he never wore a number on his uniform, there was no number for teams to "retire" for this great player. Therefore the Philadelphia Phillies retired the block letter-style "P" from their 1915 uniforms to honor Alexander.
    • Citations

      Sideshow heckler: How does it feel to be livin' off the fleas?

      Grover Cleveland Alexander: Well, it's better than havin' 'em live offa me.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Diamonds on the Silver Screen (1992)
    • Bandes originales
      Take Me Out to the Ball Game
      (uncredited)

      Music by Albert von Tilzer

      Lyrics by Jack Norworth

      Played during the opening credits and sung by Doris Day

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    FAQ16

    • How long is The Winning Team?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 24 décembre 1952 (Mexique)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Su ultima victoria
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Wrigley Field - 42nd Place & Avalon Blvd., Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis
    • Société de production
      • Warner Bros.
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 38min(98 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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