Paul McAllister seems to have it all, but his life starts to fall apart. Guided by the wisdom and advice of an old golf pro, Paul learns about playing a good game both on and off the course.Paul McAllister seems to have it all, but his life starts to fall apart. Guided by the wisdom and advice of an old golf pro, Paul learns about playing a good game both on and off the course.Paul McAllister seems to have it all, but his life starts to fall apart. Guided by the wisdom and advice of an old golf pro, Paul learns about playing a good game both on and off the course.
- Awards
- 1 win total
Tanya Christiansen
- Rebecca McAllister
- (as Tanya Christensen)
Andrew Joseph Brodeur
- Jake McAllister
- (as Andrew Brodeur)
Featured reviews
This is a faith-based movie, it has a lot of "1" votes from people who detest faith-based movies, and a lot of "10" votes from fans. But objectively it is neither, probably a "5" or "6" rating is deserved. It is trite and over-simplified in places and interesting and wise in other places. I found it streaming on Amazon, I found it worthwhile.
It opens with an amateur golfer, Eric Close as Paul McAllister, playing in a pro-am. He is having the round of his life, birdies the first, then the second, is nine-under after the first nine, ultimately has a 30-inch putt on 18 to finish his dream round, eighteen under. Then the gallery starts to "hum" in unison, hum-hum-hum ... then he awakes to his smart phone telling him it is time to wake up.
For a person not an avid golfer that may sound very hokey but for me, I could identify. I suspect that type of dream is one all life-long golfers have. Paul, a high-powered international business man arrives late for his actual pro-am tee time, has to play with no warm-up, plays terribly, embarrasses himself. He gets mad, breaks clubs, generally making an ass of himself.
All this just sets up the main story of the movie, Paul is a very flawed man and badly needs a "mulligan", maybe several of them. Mulligans in life, with his son, his estranged wife, his co-workers. And only turning back to his faith can help him get there.
For me, a product of the 1950s and 1960s, the best part was seeing Pat Boone, pushing 90, in the role of the Old Pro, purveyor of great wisdom. Pat Boone as a young man was a talented and popular singer in the 50s and the 60s. As a young man he starred in the 1957 movie "April Love." As time went on he was in many more movies. He is great here in the role of the Old Pro.
It opens with an amateur golfer, Eric Close as Paul McAllister, playing in a pro-am. He is having the round of his life, birdies the first, then the second, is nine-under after the first nine, ultimately has a 30-inch putt on 18 to finish his dream round, eighteen under. Then the gallery starts to "hum" in unison, hum-hum-hum ... then he awakes to his smart phone telling him it is time to wake up.
For a person not an avid golfer that may sound very hokey but for me, I could identify. I suspect that type of dream is one all life-long golfers have. Paul, a high-powered international business man arrives late for his actual pro-am tee time, has to play with no warm-up, plays terribly, embarrasses himself. He gets mad, breaks clubs, generally making an ass of himself.
All this just sets up the main story of the movie, Paul is a very flawed man and badly needs a "mulligan", maybe several of them. Mulligans in life, with his son, his estranged wife, his co-workers. And only turning back to his faith can help him get there.
For me, a product of the 1950s and 1960s, the best part was seeing Pat Boone, pushing 90, in the role of the Old Pro, purveyor of great wisdom. Pat Boone as a young man was a talented and popular singer in the 50s and the 60s. As a young man he starred in the 1957 movie "April Love." As time went on he was in many more movies. He is great here in the role of the Old Pro.
My wife and I LOVED this film. It was well made,well acted,and the choreography was excellent. Pat Boone was FANTASTIC as "the mentor" to a young man who needed some guidance with his life. I HIGHLY RECOMMEND this film as an EXCELLENT way to have a night out with the family and friends. It isn't too preachy,and gets it's message across in a very kind (and sometimes funny) way. I'm not going to give anything away,but if you need a "second chance" at anything in your life...go check this film out...it MAY help YOU.
Toodles.
Toodles.
Why they refer to this as a movie is beyond me. At best it could pass as a cheaply made, boring, below average television production.
C-listed actors in a completely BLAND story, which did do one thing and one thing only: it bored me and it annoyed me because of it's cheap sentiment.
C-listed actors in a completely BLAND story, which did do one thing and one thing only: it bored me and it annoyed me because of it's cheap sentiment.
10newcox
My husband and I went with a group of friends to see this movie and each and everyone of us totally enjoyed it. After the show several of the people said "I sure could use a Mulligan" and I answered who doesn't. It makes you think of how values are placed on the wrong things in life and makes you appreciate how much better life is with God in it. Too bad this movie was not in more movies so more people could see it.
I took my wife to see this movie. We thoroughly enjoyed it. It's underlying Christian message is perfect. Pat Boone was thrilling to dee in the movie, and quite frankly stole the show. Adam Close was a great lead actor, and Charmin Lee was solid as his corporate assistant and friend of his wife. Bring some kleenex tissue, you'll likely need it. Enjoyed seeing the interviews after the movie by the golf community and Ken Blanchard, whom wrote the book that the Mulligan is based on.
Did you know
- TriviaThe movie was primarily filmed in Toccoa, Georgia, specifically at Currahee Club and the Links at Lake Toccoa, with some scenes also shot in downtown Toccoa. The name Currahee was made famous in the HBO miniseries, BAND OF BROTHERS, which chronicled the men of Easy Conpany of the U.S. Army's 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment during World War 2. Part of the miniseries depicts their time at Camp Taccoa, Georgia. Currahee means "We stand alone together."
- Crazy creditsThe end credits contains the following: "Himself .... 'Get in the Hole' Guy"
- How long is The Mulligan?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime2 hours 5 minutes
- Color
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