Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaIn the late 1930s during racial segregation, a star of the Negro League Baseball, Bingo Long, leaves his team and convinces other stars of the league to join him as free agent players tourin... Leggi tuttoIn the late 1930s during racial segregation, a star of the Negro League Baseball, Bingo Long, leaves his team and convinces other stars of the league to join him as free agent players touring the towns of the Midwest.In the late 1930s during racial segregation, a star of the Negro League Baseball, Bingo Long, leaves his team and convinces other stars of the league to join him as free agent players touring the towns of the Midwest.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 1 vittoria e 1 candidatura in totale
- Louis Keystone - All-Star - SS
- (as 'Birmingham' Sam Brison)
- Emory 'Champ' Chambers, All-Star (3B)
- (as Jophery Brown)
- Rainbow, All-Star (bat boy)
- (as DeWayne Jessie)
Recensioni in evidenza
Charming, irresistible entertainment, and you don't have to necessarily be a baseball fan in order to enjoy it. Granted, it gets nasty at one point (for a PG rated film), and gets somewhat serious as well, but it never becomes so ugly that you can't still stick with it. It gets most of its juice from the dazzling performances of its stars, Williams and Jones. Jones appears to be having a grand old time, and co-star Richard Pryor unsurprisingly steals many of his scenes as a ballplayer who thinks that his key to success is passing himself off as Cuban and joining the white league. (There's a hilarious payoff for him near the end.) There's some more than respectable recreations of the period, a jaunty score (by William Goldstein), and wonderful old-time songs (belted out by Thelma Houston). The fair amount of familiar faces in the cast also includes stuntman Jophery C. Brown, Tony Burton of the "Rocky" franchise, Stan Shaw ("Snake Eyes"), DeWayne "Otis Day" Jessie ("National Lampoon's Animal House"), Mabel King ('What's Happening!!'), Sam Laws ("Hit Man"), Ahna Capri ("Enter the Dragon"), Joel Fluellen ("Porgy and Bess"), and Jester Hairston (John Wayne's version of "The Alamo").
Although it has a rather lengthy running time (at 111 minutes), this movie never feels that long, due to an entertaining narrative and characters, and many scenes that hold ones' attention. It's intelligent, making some points about race relations and the way that athletes are treated, but never gets heavy-handed about it, while remaining engrossing both comedically and dramatically. It doesn't seem to be remembered by many nowadays, which is just too bad.
Ken Foree of future "Dawn of the Dead" fame makes his film debut as a muscle man.
Eight out of 10.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizRichard Pryor's character pretends to be Cuban to join a Major League team. The first black major league baseball player joined in 1905. The team claimed he was Puerto Rican, even though he spoke no Spanish.
- BlooperWhile examples of racism and racial name-calling are seen, there's no evidence of institutional segregation in food service, accommodations or otherwise.
- Citazioni
Leon Carter, All-Star: [after Esquire Joe bowls him over with a slide at the plate] Say, boy - does you do this constantly?
Esquire Joe Callaway, All-Star: No, suh. I does it all the time.
- Curiosità sui creditiThe movie begins with an older version of the Universal Studios logo, as part of the opening news reel.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Forever (1983)
- Colonne sonoreThe Bingo Long Song (Steal On Home)
Written by Berry Gordy and Ronald Miller
Performed by Thelma Houston
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingue
- Celebre anche come
- The Bingo Long Traveling All Stars & Motor Kings
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Monticello, Georgia, Stati Uniti(Historic Downtown Square)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro