Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA lousy minor-league baseball team bursting with diverse personalities gets a new manager: an aging minor-league pitcher.A lousy minor-league baseball team bursting with diverse personalities gets a new manager: an aging minor-league pitcher.A lousy minor-league baseball team bursting with diverse personalities gets a new manager: an aging minor-league pitcher.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire au total
- Lance Pere
- (as Kenneth Johnson)
Avis à la une
The only novelty here is the drama of the announcers. More energy was expended on their dialog than on anything else, with all the rest of the story is automatic. But this is actually done well. The first problem in drama is how to place the viewer. The oldest trick is also the most effective: create a chorus to stand as surrogate and leader for the viewer. A distance from the action is established, but since it is within the play, that distance is vastly less than between the screen and me in my seat.
So here we have a screenwriter working to put new life into a tired cliche. Probably it is not enough, but it is interesting to watch the struggle.
Scott Bakula with his easy going, genuine style carries the movie. Most of the team is forgettable but not annoying and there are some moments of humor in there. Corbin Bernsen has a very small role as the GM, where he's not comic relief this time, as he was in the first 2 movies, but he's a nice guy running a bad ball-club. Ted McGinley is at his best as the arrogant teams manager and he's a perfect Yin to Bakula's Yang.
I wasn't a fan of Major League 2, which lacked the freshness and charm of Major League 1 (though I loved the White Lightning/Black Thunder scene). This one went down a different path leaving the major league team behind and looking at it from the minors and for me it worked, but, it's not a film to go into with high expectations. Another poster he called it "a solid single" and while Major League 1 was a home-run and Major League 2 was disappointing by comparison, this one, we don't expect much so it's OK. 6 stars. 7 if you're dying for a baseball movie and there's one you haven't seen. It's not awful and don't believe the 4.5 ranking. It's better than that, just, not much better.
Corbin Bernson from the frst two films of the series is now the General Manager of the Twins and he hires both men, rivals since their playing days. Bakula is OK, but McGinley is pretty insufferable. The climax is a pair of exhibition games netween the teams.
A few of Bernson's teammates from his playing days with the Indians are back including Denns Haysbert the Santeria worshiping slugger.
A good sprts comedy, not quite as good as the first two of the series.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesRoger Dorn (Bernsen), Pedro Cerrano (Haysbert), Duke Temple (Yeager), and Harry Doyle (Uecker) are the only characters to appear in all three films in the "Major League" series.
- GaffesWhen "Downtown" Anderson is shown batting for the Minnesota Twins and he strikes out, he is wearing number 14. But when he returns to the dugout and is chastised by Carlos Liston, Anderson is wearing number 16.
- Citations
Gus Cantrell: Pops, I got something for you.
[hands Pops a package]
Frank 'Pops' Morgan: [opens package] This is a first-baseman's glove.
Gus Cantrell: That's funny, that's what the guy in the sporting-goods store said it was.
Frank 'Pops' Morgan: I'm not a first-baseman. I'm an outfielder. I been an outfielder my whole life.
Gus Cantrell: Look, Pops, I think it might be better for the team...
Frank 'Pops' Morgan: Wait. Hold on, now. I've been around a long time. Don't give me the best for the team speech. Give it to me straight.
Gus Cantrell: You're too old, you're too fat, you're too slow. Straight enough?
Frank 'Pops' Morgan: Yeah, yeah, that'll do it.
Gus Cantrell: But I like your bat and I need a leader on the field and I think you're my man. What do you say? You wanna give first base a try?
Frank 'Pops' Morgan: Well, you know, whatever's best for the team.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Sven Uslings Bio: Major League: Back to the Minors (2022)
- Bandes originalesLooking Up from a Long Way Down
Performed by Philip Claypool
Written by John Ford Coley & Mark Berger
Courtesy of Curb Records, Inc.
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Major League III
- Lieux de tournage
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 18 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 3 572 443 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 2 087 011 $US
- 19 avr. 1998
- Montant brut mondial
- 3 572 443 $US
- Durée
- 1h 40min(100 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1