The Perfect Game Review

Cast:

Clifton Collins, Jr. as Cesar L. Faz

Cheech Marin as Padre Esteban

Moises Arias as Mario Ontiveros

Jake T. Austin as Angel Macias

Ryan Ochoa as Norberto Villareal

Carlos Padilla as Baltazar Charles

Jansen Panettiere as Enrique Suarez

Carlos Gomez as Umberto Macias

Emilie de Ravin as Frankie

Patricia Manterola as Maria

Louis. Gosset Jr. as Cool Papa Bell

William May as Juan

Bruce McGill as Tanner

David Koechner as Charlie

Frances Fisher as Betty

Directed by William Dear

 
 

Review:

George Orwell’s first rule of writing was “never use a metaphor, simile or other figure of speech which you are used to seeing in print.” The easiest and least satisfying sort of writing is that which is just a hodge podge of well-worn cliches thrown together to imitate the form of a story without understanding what should go under the hood. That sort of thing happens all too often in filmmaking as well, leading well-meaning filmmakers astray from genuinely affecting story-telling to just easy to market lard. William Dear’s “The Perfect Game” isn’t quite one of those, but it flirts with it quite a bit.

That’s not entirely a surprise. Dear (“Harry and the Hendersons”) has spent his career as a journeyman director turning out decently crafted but uninspired pieces of escapism which are more concerned with tugging easy heartstrings regardless of how clumsily they do so. Which pretty much sums up “The Perfect Game.”

In 1957, despite being 10 years after Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier in professional baseball, segregation was still a common fact of life in the game just as it was in America as a whole. A barrier that Cesar Faz (Clifton Collins, Jr.) was never quite able to get beyond in his bid to coach for the St. Louis Cardinals. After years of banging his head against that wall Faz eventually decides to return to Monterrey, Mexico, where he finds a group of pre-teen boys filled with the same dream he once had to play baseball.

Sports films are practically made to play on the emotions and tug on heartstrings. It’s so easy they tend to lure well-meaning filmmakers into doing so through the continuous repetition of trite moments and cliched expressions. And Dear isn’t that well-meaning.

The team is made up of a collection of little boys types: the strong kid (we’re told because of his ability to hit a pinata); the fast kid (we’re told because of his ability to steal and make a clean getaway); the romeo, etc. There are a lot of kids on the team and some sort of shorthand is needed to give them personality and make them stand out, but the filmmakers don’t seem to even be trying that. The only one given any sort of personality is star pitcher Angel (Jake T. Austin) whose father refuses to see him as a person of worth, worn down as he is by poverty and the loss of his first son.

There’s so much cliché involved they often get confused and seem to do little but expend screen time. Emilie de Ravin’s newspaperwoman seems to be in the wrong movie as she often seems to think she’s actually in “His Girl Friday” as she fights with her editor over being forced to cover Faz’s underdogs in their quest to reach the Little League World Series.

All of that in one big gulp, however, surely makes “The Perfect Game” sound a lot worse than it really is. It’s hard not to root for an underdog, especially a relentlessly optimistic one, and the reality is “Game” has a lot of heart. But not much in the way of legs. It stumbles badly over its own good intentions through either a lack of desire or complete inability to use any but the flattest and most familiar terms to bring its story to us.

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