‘Bad News’ often too vulgar
The PG-13 advisory for “Bad News Bears” declares that there is “rude
behavior and language throughout” the movie. Believe it. Add
insensitive, crude, racially offensive and politically incorrect to
the warning and you’re closer to the core of this film.
What passes for humor in this movie is completely inappropriate
for young Little Leaguers whose parents might send them to see it.
That said, adults will find there are many guilty laughs peppered
throughout the uneven screenplay, which runs way too long at nearly
two hours.
Billy Bob Thornton plays a former major leaguer with a checkered
past and drunken present.
He now lives in a trailer and makes a meager living exterminating
rats.
He’s hired by a single mom to coach her son and his baseball team
of 12-year-old misfits, losers and delinquents who were rejected by
all the other teams.
The kids are an international potpourri of racial and cultural
stereotypes. They include wimps, bullies, a fat kid and even a child
in a wheelchair. The story follows the rise of this bizarre team from
ridiculous losers to impossible contenders. But it’s the potty mouth
language and wild antics of everyone involved that drive the laughter
when it does occur.
The team is sponsored by a strip club whose dancers lead cheers at
the games. The coach slugs down bourbon at practice until he passes
out on the field.
He takes the kids to Hooters for snacks, where the kids sing along
to Eric Clapton’s “Cocaine” as they ogle the waitresses.
This is all too gross for youngsters. Yet the PG-13 level may be
too tame for older teens accustomed to the vulgarity of “American
Pie” and “There’s Something About Mary.”
Irreverent and disjointed, “Bad News Bears” is definitely funny at
times, but it’s hard to figure out who the target audience is.
* JOHN DEPKO is a Costa Mesa resident and a senior investigator
for the Orange County public defender’s office.
Director should be voted off ‘The Island’
The latest sci-fi thriller, “The Island,” starts out as an
interesting vision of how life might be in the year 2019, before it
reverts to present-day overblown movie excess.
I wonder, is director Michael Bay (“Armaged- don,” “Pearl Harbor”)
capable of making a movie without chase scenes or explosions? Does he
know that he doesn’t have to cut away to a different image every two
seconds? Technically, it’s expertly done but it’s time to mix things
up a little.
Lincoln Six Echo (Ewan MacGregor) and Jordan Two Delta (Scarlett
Johansson) live in a very sterile, regulated environment where
everyone must be “polite, pleasant, and peaceful.” The one excitement
is a daily lottery in which the lucky winner gets to live on “The
Island,” where evidently you can breathe fresh air and live in a
Technicolor paradise.
Jordan finds out that things are not what they seem. Through
scenes reminiscent of “THX 1138,” “Coma,” and “Logan’s Run,” Lincoln
and Jordan escape their habitat and must deal with a very different
reality -- that of action stars. We know this because every so often
they yell, “Run!” or “Go!” and they swap out their sleek white
jumpsuits for black leather. How original.
If Bay and the screenwriters could have ended the movie half an
hour sooner, “The Island” wouldn’t be so bad. It would have ended
with an interesting twist that left room to ponder the moral issues
raised.
Instead, the audience is subjected to exhaustive chase sequences.
What a waste of actors, including Steve Buscemi, Sean Bean and Djimon
Hounsou.
There’s also a lot of product placement in this movie. I could
have perhaps borne the built-in commercials if they could have
rewritten the laughably lousy ending.
* SUSANNE PEREZ of Costa Mesa is an executive assis-tant for a
financial company.
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