Hardball
review by Cynthia Fuchs, 14 September
2001
A
better person
As
Hardball begins, Conor O'Neill (Keanu Reeves) is hitting
bottom, or somewhere thereabouts. A hard-drinking, tough-talking,
self-hating gambler, he owes money all over Chicago. Everyone is mad
at him, except his buddy-codependent-enabler Ticky (John Hawkes):
they spend their non-betting hours scalping tickets outside sports
arenas or gulping beers at their favorite bar, Sluggers. Conor is so
consigned to his pathetic existence that when an angry bookie sends
a couple of kneecap-busters after him, he turns around and smashes
his own fist through a car window, declaring triumphantly, "No
one can kick my ass better than I can!" He ends up in jail with
a bloody hand. You end up with one of those shots that you've seen a
thousand times: the down-and-out hero behind bars, his head bowed
and his options few.
Luckily
for Conor -- but unluckily for anyone who has already watched a
movie where the (white) adult earns his or her moral salvation by
helping a bunch of underprivileged kids (say, Dangerous Minds,
Music of the Heart, The Mighty Ducks) -- he picks up
the perfect soul-saving gig. He gets to coach a Little League team
in the Cabrini Green housing projects. The kids' background hasn't
made them surly though: they're are all very sweet and really,
they're only looking for a father figure (several have mothers with
speaking lines, but none have dads). Conor gets the job as a
cast-off from childhood friend Jimmy (Ed Burns movie survivor Mike
McGlone), now too rich and obnoxious to be bothered actually
"giving back to the community" in quite the way he's
promised to do. Sitting behind his expensive desk, with his designer
suit and slicked-back hair, Jimmy is thus cast as the unfeeling
white guy, in place to give Conor the job, but more importantly, to
make look a lot "better." Since Conor has already shown
himself to be unreliable, selfish, and obsessive about this gambling
thing, Jimmy-the-plot-device does, theoretically, serve a purpose,
but it's sort of overkill. Conor is so movie star:
he's Keanu Reeves with slightly disheveled hair and a slick leather
jacket.
Conor
meets Jimmy at the field, gets his bag of bats, balls, and mitts,
and meets the kiddies, each of whom is just cute as can be and
conveniently endowed with an identifying "trait" so the
audience won't have much trouble sorting out who's who: Kofi
(Michael Perkins) has a chip on his shoulder and is in special need
of being won over by Coach; his little brother, G-Baby (DeWayne
Warren), is too young to play ball, and so mostly serves as the
team's "mascot" and Conor's trash-talking liaison to the
other boys; Jefferson (Julian Griffith) is adorably sensitive and
(in case you need a literal marker for his vulnerability) asthmatic;
Andre (Bryan Hearne) wears a tough-guy sweatband on his head and
fights with Kofi, but soon is asking Conor to walk him into his
building at night; and the lanky, phenomenally gifted pitcher Miles
(A. Delon Ellis, Jr.) likes to wear his walkman on the mound, so he
can bop to Biggie's "Big Poppa."
Some
ruckus has recently been raised by Chicago Little League coach
Robert Muzikowski and Chicago youth leader Al Carter, the real-life
subjects of the inspiration for the film, Daniel Coyle's nonfiction
book, Hardball: A Season in the Projects. They tell the New
York Daily News that their upset over the kids' representations:
"The kids are being portrayed as juvenile delinquents who
constantly curse. They're actually decent kids who behave
themselves."
Well,
actually, the kids in the film do behave themselves (though the
movie's use of the cursing is irresponsible: apparently, it's very
funny to see short, cute boys unleash a stream of terrible
language), and Conor is the delinquent. Besides that, the young
actors are easily the best part of Hardball. Largely selected
from local Chicago-area casting calls, they bring warmth and
spontaneity to the proceedings, help that Reeves always needs
(think: Sandy Bullock in Speed, or Laurence Fishburne and
Carrie Ann Moss in The Matrix). As per the requisites
of the formula, Conor has a hard time at first: he sulks in the
dugout while the kids play, they distrust him, and he distrusts
them.
Then,
one night he sends Jefferson home alone after dark (though the kids
tell him it's too late and Jefferson asks Conor to walk him home)
and the poor thing gets beaten up by a couple of punks who steal his
backpack. This scene relies on point-of-view shots (with Jefferson's
increasingly labored breathing on the soundtrack), as he peers out
from a hiding place, then makes a break for his building's front
door, only to be tackled to the ground, wheezing and gasping. Cut to
the hospital: Conor comes to visit because he feels really bad. Poor
guy.
In
order to get over it, Conor spends some time chatting up the boys'
do-gooding Catholic school English teacher, Elizabeth Wilkes (Diane
Lane). She, like the kids, is at first suspicious of this guy, who
obviously has neither a clue what he's doing nor much interest in
whether or not they can read. To prove himself to her, he reads A
Wrinkle in Time and pronounces it a good book. Dude.
However
dubious his skills may be as a lover, Conor is a completely lame
coach. In a film full of curious conveniences and ellipses, the most
curious aspect is that it never shows Conor actually coach
a lick. He just sits back in the dugout and crosses his arms,
looking unhappy, until one kid gets on third base during a game, and
Conor yells for him to run all the way home. And oh yes, he tells
Miles to go ahead and wear his walkman while pitching: good work,
Coach. Other than that, the players improve their game on their own.
And, soon enough, Conor and his players are cheering and hugging and
high-fiving.
The
fact that Conor is white means nothing, of course, except that he's
one in a long line of white characters who become "better
people" because they meet adorable, courageous, noble, and/or
doomed minority characters. Hardball is not shy about this
point. During an egregiously manipulative sequence, one of the
players is -- inevitably -- shot by a neighborhood gang on the eve
of the Big Game. The movie tries to make some bizarre emotional
sense of this event by intercutting the shooting with the last game
this character actually plays (moving back and forth in time), in
order to milk the last little teeny bit of emotion from the moment.
Worse, this sequence occurs during Conor's speech at the funeral
service, before an all-black (plus Ms. Wilkes) audience, who tearily
appreciate it when Conor says that the dead kid's display of spirit
on that last day "made me a better person." I know this is
supposed to be poignant, but frankly, it's despicable.
Hardball
is directed by Brian Robbins, who made the solid, independent hiphop
documentary, The Show, which features a memorable live
performance by Biggie Smalls. This may be the motivation for Hardball's
obvious appreciation for the music that inspires its
kid-characters and potential kid-viewers (it has a pump-it,
single-ready soundtrack, including "Hardball," by Lil Bow
Wow, Lil Wayne, Lil Zane, and Sammie). Still, how often does a
mainstream movie take as its anthem a Biggie Smalls song? Still, to
see the bleachers-full of parents (and Ms. Wilkes, again) putting
their hands in the air like they'se true playas, is just a little
too strange.
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Directed by:
Brian Robbins
Starring:
Keanu Reeves
Diane Lane
John Hawkes
Trevor Morgan
D.B. Sweeney
Bryan Hearne
Julian Griffith
Michael B. Jordan
A. Delon Ellis, Jr.
Michael Perkins
Brian Reed
DeWayne Warren
Mike McGlone
Written
by:
John Gatins
Rated:
PG-13 - Parents Strongly Cautioned
Some material may be inappropriate for children under 13.
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