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- Duration: 3:01
- Published: 06 Jan 2010
- Uploaded: 15 Jul 2011
- Author: Naomi0111
Name | Major League |
---|---|
Caption | Theatrical release poster |
Writer | David S. Ward |
Starring | Tom BerengerCharlie SheenCorbin BernsenRene RussoWesley SnipesChelcie RossDennis HaysbertBob UeckerJames Gammon |
Director | David S. Ward |
Producer | James G. RobinsonJoe RothMark RosenbergChris ChesserIrby Smith |
Music | James Newton Howard |
Studio | Morgan Creek Productions |
Distributor | Paramount Pictures (US only) |
Released | |
Runtime | 107 minutes |
Country | |
Language | English |
Budget | $11 million |
Gross | $49,797,148 |
Followed by | Major League II |
At spring training in Tucson, Arizona, the brash but speedy center fielder Willie "Mays" Hayes crashes camp uninvited, but is invited to join the team after displaying his running speed. Spring training reveals several problems with the new players. Vaughn has an incredible fastball but lacks control. Hayes is able to run the bases quickly but hits only pop flies, and while Cerrano has tremendous power he cannot hit a curveball. The veterans have their own problems, as Dorn refuses to aggressively field ground balls, afraid that potential injuries will damage his upcoming contract negotiations. On the final day, when Brown is to cut the team down to 25 players, Dorn plays a practical joke on Vaughn, making him believe he was cut, resulting in a locker-room brawl.
After the team returns to Cleveland for their opening game, Taylor takes Vaughn and Hayes out to dinner but comes across his ex-girlfriend Lynn, who is dining with her current beau. Taylor believes he can try to win her love again but is disappointed to hear that she is already engaged.
The Indians' season starts off poorly with Vaughn's initial pitching appearances ending in disaster, his wild pitches earning him the derogatory title "Wild Thing". Brown discovers that Vaughn's eyesight is poor and once Vaughn is given glasses he becomes very accurate. "Wild Thing" becomes Vaughn's nickname, and he becomes the team's ace. The team begins winning and are able to bring their win-loss percentage to .400. Phelps realizes this is not bad enough to stall attendance and decides to demoralize the team further by removing luxuries, such as replacing their airplane with a bus. However, these changes do not affect the Indians' performance and the team continues to improve. Donovan reveals Phelps's plan to Brown who then relays the same news to the players, telling them that if the team plays too well for Phelps to void the lease, she will bring in worse players who will. Taylor says that, since they have nothing to lose, the team should get back at Phelps by winning the pennant. Brown gives the team an incentive by removing one portion of a dress on a cardboard cut-out photo of Phelps taken during her showgirl days for every win the team achieves.
The team plays very well down the stretch of the season, and eventually clinch a tie for the division by beating the Chicago White Sox on the last game of the season. This forces a one-game playoff with the division's co-leaders, the New York Yankees. Prior to the playoff, Taylor continues to try to woo Lynn back and they share a night together. Vaughn learns that he will not be the starting pitcher for the game and goes to a bar to mope, where he encounters Suzanne Dorn. On the television broadcast of the Indians' victory party, Suzanne had seen her husband leave the team's hotel lobby with another woman; she retaliates by luring Vaughn to sleep with her. Vaughn is unaware of who she is until she tells him when she leaves Vaughn and Taylor's shared apartment.
Taylor advises Vaughn to keep his distance from Dorn for most of the game by staying in the bullpen. The game remains scoreless until the seventh inning when Harris gives up two runs. Cerrano comes to the plate in the bottom of the seventh and misses badly on two curveballs. He angrily renounces his voodoo god and proclaims that he will do it himself, and hits a two-run home run off a curveball on the next pitch to tie the game. Harris (a devout Christian) keeps Cerrano's voodoo doll Jo-bu at his side while warming up. At the top of the ninth, the Yankees are able to load the bases and Vaughn is called in, with the crowd going crazy. Vaughn and Taylor are concerned when Dorn comes over to the pitcher's mound, but he only tells Vaughn to strike the next batter out. Vaughn strikes out the Yankees' best batter on three straight fastballs and ends the inning.
With two outs in the bottom of the ninth, Hayes manages to single to first and subsequently steals second. Taylor is next to bat, and after signaling back and forth with Brown, points to the bleachers, calling his shot. However, Taylor bunts instead, catching the Yankees infield off-guard. Despite his weak knees, Taylor gets to first base, and Hayes heads for home plate, catching the Yankees off guard again. Hayes slides safe into home, giving the Indians the win. As the team celebrates, Dorn punches Vaughn in the face but then helps him up to continue the celebration, while Jake finds Lynn in the stands, who raises her left hand to show that she is no longer wearing an engagement ring, indicating that she wishes to be with him.
Phelps made up the Miami scheme and adopted a catty, vindictive persona to unify and motivate the team. As the players believed that she wanted the Indians to fail, she was able to conceal that the team could not afford basic amenities such as chartered jet travel behind a veil of taking them away to spite the players.
Lou does not resign, and Phelps reasserts her authority by saying that if he shares any part of their conversation with anyone, she will fire him.
Producers said that while the twist ending worked as a resolution of the plot, they scrapped it because test screening audiences preferred the Phelps character as a villain.
The film also featured former Major League players, including 1982 American League Cy Young Award winner Pete Vuckovich as Yankees first baseman Clu Haywood, former Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Willie Mueller as the Yankees pitcher known as "The Duke", and former Los Angeles Dodgers catcher Steve Yeager as third-base coach Duke Temple. Former catcher and longtime Brewers broadcaster Bob Uecker played the Indians' broadcaster Harry Doyle. The names of several crewmembers were also used for peripheral players.
Charlie Sheen himself was a pitcher on his high school's baseball team. At the time of filming Major League, his own fastball topped out at 85 miles per hour. His delivery in Major League is frequently noted as far more realistic than others depicted in films.
This movie reunited Sheen and Tom Berenger, who starred together in the film Platoon.
While it is not known if there was any inspiration taken from this source, the attempt by an owner to manipulate a roster to create the worst team possible actually was done with a Cleveland baseball team, in 1899, when Frank Robison, then owner of the National League's Cleveland Spiders, sent almost all of the Spiders' major league caliber players to another team he had simultaneously purchased (owning more than one franchise was allowed in baseball at this time) and thus left the Spiders as effectively a minor league team for the season. It was apparently an act of revenge against the fans of Cleveland after several seasons of falling attendance figures. There was no storybook poetic justice ending to the real life version, however; the 1899 Cleveland Spiders finished 20-134, the worst single season record in baseball history.
Within five years of the film's release, however, the real life Indians had a new stadium (Jacobs Field, now Progressive Field) and had entered into a period of success. From 1995 to 1999, they won five division titles (with two more in 2001 and 2007) and two American League pennants. The Indians lost the 1995 World Series to the Atlanta Braves in six games, and they came within two outs of winning the 1997 World Series against the Florida Marlins, but ultimately fell in extra innings in Game 7.
Despite being set in Cleveland, the film was principally shot in Milwaukee because it was cheaper and the producers were unable to work around the schedules of the Cleveland Indians and Cleveland Browns. Milwaukee County Stadium, then the home of the Brewers, doubles as Cleveland Municipal Stadium for the film, although several exterior shots of Municipal Stadium were used, including some aerial shots taken during a rare sellout game. Both facilities have since been demolished: the playing field of County Stadium is now a Little League baseball field known as Helfaer Field, while the rest of the former site is now a parking lot for the Brewers' new home, Miller Park; the new Cleveland Browns Stadium, a football-only facility owned by the City of Cleveland and used by the Browns, sits on the site of its predecessor.
In the film's climactic one-game playoff with the Yankees, Rick Vaughn, relegated to a relief role, dramatically enters the game to a cover of the The Troggs' hit song "Wild Thing" as the crowd cheers wildly and sings along. Today many real-life closers walk or run in from the bullpen accompanied by loud and imposing hard rock or heavy metal music.
Relief pitcher Mitch Williams, whose speed and control problems were similar to Vaughn's, was nicknamed "Wild Thing" after the film came out. Instead of fighting the image, he switched his uniform number from 28 to Vaughn's 99, and wore it for the rest of his career. According to an interview on the Dan Patrick radio show on October 10, 2008, the number change had nothing to do with the movie Major League. Williams said he had wanted the number 99 for years because of an admiration for the football player Mark Gastineau, who also wore number 99. Williams said that he didn't change his number until 1993 because that was his first chance to get it.
Corbin Bernsen, who played Indians third baseman Roger Dorn, stated in interviews relating to the film (including those for ESPN Classic's Reel Classics series) that Major League had an indirect effect on the real-life Indians, as the Tribe became perennial playoff contenders within five years of the film's release. Since 1994, Cleveland won seven American League Central Division titles (1995-1999, 2001, and 2007), two American League championships (1995 and 1997), and made two World Series appearances (the 1995 loss to the Braves, and the 1997 loss to the Marlins).
During the beginning of the 2006 season, Boston Red Sox pitcher Jonathan Papelbon donned a haircut similar to that of Rick Vaughn's from the movie. Although Papelbon sported a mostly shaved head with a mohawk, he had a "zig zag" pattern in the back, beginning behind the ears and leading down to this neck. He reportedly won a friendly bet with teammate Kevin Youkilis, and in doing so, was forced to cut his hair. Even though he no longer resembled Rick Vaughn, Papelbon continued to enter home games from the bullpen to "Wild Thing" blaring from the Fenway Park sound system, until "I'm Shipping Up to Boston" became his entrance song. In 2008, Papelbon regained the theme music, using "Wild Thing" as his entrance song while running to the mound and using "I'm Shipping Up to Boston" by the Dropkick Murphys once he got there and started throwing his warm up pitches.
To this day, the Indians embrace the Major League franchise as part of their history. On June 15, 2009, the Cleveland Indians held "Rick Vaughn Bobblehead Night" at Progressive Field, giving away a doll based on the Charlie Sheen character. They played the Milwaukee Brewers, for whom Bob Uecker still calls games. Bob Uecker threw out the first pitch.
When Charlie Sheen's eccentric behavior became publicized on early 2011, he has often used his signature terms winning and fastball, where the latter was taken from Major League and used in his Twitter messages.
Category:1989 films Category:Baseball films Category:Cleveland Indians Category:Films set in Cleveland, Ohio Category:Films set in Ohio Category:Films shot in Wisconsin Category:American baseball films Category:American sports comedy films Category:Paramount films Category:Morgan Creek films Category:English-language films
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