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Bull Durham - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bull Durham

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bull Durham

Bull Durham movie poster
Directed by Ron Shelton
Produced by Mark Burg
Written by Ron Shelton
Starring Kevin Costner
Susan Sarandon
Tim Robbins
Robert Wuhl
Trey Wilson
Jenny Robertson
Distributed by Orion Pictures Corporation
Release date(s) June 15, 1988 (U.S. release)
Running time 108 min
Language English
IMDb profile

Bull Durham is a 1988 American movie about love and baseball. It is based upon the minor league experiences of writer/director Ron Shelton. Bull Durham stars Kevin Costner, Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins. It depicts the players and fans of the Durham Bulls, a minor league baseball team in Durham, North Carolina. Also featured are Robert Wuhl and Max Patkin, the "Clown Prince of Baseball."

This film is number 55 on Bravo's "100 Funniest Movies".

Contents

[edit] Summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Costner stars as "Crash" Davis (named after Lawrence "Crash" Davis, an actual player for the Durham Bulls in the 1940s and 50s), a veteran of countless years in the minor leagues unwillingly sent down to single-A Bulls for a specific purpose: to educate a hotshot rookie pitcher "Nuke" LaLoosh (Robbins, playing a character loosely based on Steve Dalkowski) about being a major-league talent, and to get Nuke to control his haphazard pitching. Crash immediately begins calling Nuke by the degrading name of "Meat", and they get off to a very rocky start.

Thrown into the mix is Annie (Sarandon, the character named for the "Baseball Annies" groupies), a life-long spiritual seeker who latched onto the "Church of Baseball" and has, every year, taken on a prospect with the Bulls to be a lover/student. Annie flirts with Crash and Nuke but Crash walks out, noting he's too much a veteran to 'try out' for anything, although before leaving he and Annie share some sparks of mutual interest.

Annie and Crash then work, in their own way, and with a lot of animosity from Crash, to shape Nuke into a big-league pitcher: Annie by playing mild bondage games, reading poetry to Nuke, and getting the rookie to think in alternative ways; Crash by forcing Nuke to learn "not to think," by letting the catcher make the pitching calls (memorably at two points telling the batters what pitch was coming after Nuke had shaken off Crash's calls), and lecturing to Nuke about the major leagues with both the pressure in facing big league hitters that can hit Nuke's "heat" (fastballs) and the pleasure of enjoying life in 'The Show' that Crash briefly lived for "the twenty-one best days of my life" and has tried desperately for years to get back to. Meanwhile, as Nuke matures the relationship between Annie and Crash grows, until it becomes obvious that the two of them are right for each other, except for the fact that Annie's with Nuke now...

Along the way, Annie asks Crash what he believes about life, and Crash delivers a spectacular harangue (see "Quotes", below)..

After a rough start to Nuke's career, he becomes a dominant pitcher by mid-season thanks to the coaching of Annie and Crash. By the end of the movie, Nuke is called up to 'The Show' and the Bulls, now having no use for Nuke's personal mentor, release Crash. This incites jealous anger in Crash, who is frustrated by Nuke's failure to recognize all the talent he was blessed with. Nuke leaves for the big leagues, effectively ending his relationship with Annie, and Crash overcomes his initial jealously to leave Nuke with some final words of advice.

Eventually Crash, an experienced and skilled hitter, joins another team and breaks the minor league record for most career home runs, achieving a personal milestone that he has striven for. Annie wants to tell The Sporting News about it, but Crash swears her to silence. Crash then retires as a player and returns to Durham to begin a life with Annie. He tells her that he will accept a baseball coaching job. Foreshadowing suggests that he'll succeed both in this coaching role and in his life with Annie. Both characters end one phase of their lives and begin another. We see Nuke one last time, being interviewed as a major leaguer, where he recites some answers to questions which he practiced earlier in the movie with Crash.

[edit] Cultural impact

Bull Durham became a minor hit when released, and is now considered one of the best sports movies. It became a major career moment for the lead cast members. Costner especially would later play baseball players and fans in other movies, especially Field of Dreams. After Durham came out Hollywood began releasing more sports, and especially baseball, movies after the genre had slipped from view.

Many quotes and scenes have become popular, including the scene where the team's manager berates the players as 'lollygaggers' in the shower, Crash's reciting to Annie a list of things he believes in (including a belief that Oswald was a lone gunman), the scene where Crash creates a "rain-out" so his teammates can have a day off a grueling road trip, and the pitching mound scene where the entire team gathers to discuss how to fix all the curses and bad luck they're having, as well as figuring out what to get a fellow teammate for his impending wedding.

Most of all, it revived interest in minor league baseball, which had been stagnating in small-town areas for decades, to where minor league teams achieve decent attendance and are even subject to relocation/bidding wars between communities. The Durham Bulls team itself in real-life has become one of the most famous minor-league teams in the United States (topped only by the Birmingham Barons during the years Michael Jordan tried baseball), and has moved from A (Class A) level to Triple-A (players who are one call away from 'The Show') status, complete with a larger stadium built in the 1990s to accommodate the growing crowds and the shift to AAA as a minor league affiliate to the Tampa Bay Devil Rays (during the film's time period, the Bulls were with the Atlanta Braves).

[edit] Quotes

  • "This... is a simple game... you throw the ball... you hit the ball... you catch the ball!" –Joe Riggins
  • Crash (upon finding out why he was traded to the Bulls):
"My AAA contract gets bought out so I can hold some flavor of the month's dick in the bush leagues, is that it?! Well, fuck this fucking game! You know what, I quit. I fuckin' quit!..."
(leaves the clubhouse office, slams the door. Pauses, shakes his head in disgust, and re-opens the office door)
"Who do we play tomorrow?"
  • "Why's he calling me meat? I'm the one drivin' a Porsche!" –Nuke LaLoosh
  • Nuke brags about his signing bonus and the high-end stereo in the new car he bought with the money.
Crash: "Christ, you don't need a quadrophonic Blaupunkt! What you need is a curveball! In The Show, everybody can hit heat!"
Nuke: "How would you know? Have you been to the Majors?"
Crash: "Yeah, I've been to the majors. I was in the majors for 21 days once - the 21 greatest days of my life. You know, you never handle your luggage in the show, somebody else carries your bags. It was great. You hit white balls for batting practice, the ballparks are like cathedrals, the hotels all have room service, and the women all have long legs and brains.!"
  • Nuke:"How come you don't like me?"
Crash:"Because, you don't respect yourself, and that's your problem. But you don't respect the game, and that's my problem."
  • "Don't think: you can only hurt the ball club." –Crash Davis
  • "Your shower shoes have fungus on them. You'll never make it to the bigs with fungus on your shower shoes. Ya think classy, you'll be classy. You win twenty in the show, you can let the fungus grow back, the press'll call you "colorful". Until you win twenty in the show, however, it just means you're a slob." –Crash Davis
  • "Well, I believe in the soul, the cock, the pussy, the small of a woman's back, the hanging curve ball, high fiber, good scotch, that the novels of Susan Sontag are self-indulgent, overrated crap. I believe Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone. I believe there ought to be a constitutional amendment outlawing AstroTurf and the designated hitter. I believe in the sweet spot, soft-core pornography, opening your presents Christmas morning rather than Christmas Eve and I believe in long, slow, deep, soft, wet kisses that last three days. Goodnight." –Crash Davis
  • Batboy hands pine tar rag to Crash Davis, who is thinking about Annie and having trouble concentrating...
Batboy: "Get a hit, Crash!"
Crash: "Shut up!"
  • "Relax, alright? Don't try to strike everybody out! Strikeouts are boring, and besides that, they're fascist. Throw some ground balls, it's more democratic." –Crash Davis
  • (During a player's conference on the mound): "...candlesticks always make a nice gift, and uh, maybe you could find out where she's registered and maybe a place-setting or maybe a silverware pattern. Okay, let's get two!" –Larry
  • Crash argues a close play at the plate, and is ejected from the game.
Radio announcer: "Crash Davis has been ejected, and frankly, folks, he used a certain word that is a no-no to umpires!"
Millie (listening to radio with Annie): "Crash must've called the guy a cocksucker."
Annie (sighing): "Mmmmm, he's so romantic!"
  • Crash Davis, frustrated with Annie:
Crash: "Who are you, anyway? Do you have a job?"
Annie: "I teach English part-time at Alamance Junior College!"
(The owner of the real-life Bulls also owned the Burlington team, of Alamance County).
  • "This is a simple game. You throw the ball; you hit the ball; you catch the ball" -- Nuke LaLoosh, to reporter in "The Show".
  • "Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose, sometimes... it rains. [pause] Think about that." –Nuke LaLoosh
  • "Walt Whitman once said, "I see great things in baseball. It's our game, the American game. It will repair our losses and be a blessing to us." You could look it up." –Annie, last line of the film. Oddly, Whitman never exactly said this: the quote combined two separate statements the writer mentioned regarding baseball.
  • After Nuke declines to take the first swing at Crash, Crash tauntingly tosses Nuke a baseball.
Crash: "Alright then, hit me in the chest...with that."
Nuke: "I could kill you."
Crash: "Oh yeah? From what I hear, you couldn't hit water if you fell out of a fucking boat."
  • Crash: "C'mon, Meat. You know you're not gonna hit me, because you've already started to think about it. Eh? Thinkin' about how embarrassing it would be to miss in front of all these people, how somebody might laugh. C'mon, 'rook. Show us that million dollar arm. Cause I got...yeah, I got a good idea about that five cent head of yours."
  • Nuke throws the ball at Crash, and misses badly.
Crash: "Ball four."
Nuke then charges at Crash, who drops him with one solid punch to the face. Crash bends over to help Nuke up off the ground.
Crash: "I'm Crash Davis, I'm your new catcher, and you just got lesson number one: don't think. It can only hurt the ball club."
  • Nuke has just shaken off Crash's pitch sign. Frustrated, Crash tells the batter what pitch Nuke is going to throw. The batter then hits a home run.
Crash (running out to the pitcher's mound): "Well, he really hit the shit outta that one, didn't he?"
Nuke: "I held it (the ball) like an egg..."
Crash: "Yeah, and he scrambled the sonofabitch. Look at that, he hit the fuckin' bull! Guy gets a free steak!"
  • Nuke: "God, that sucker teed off on that like he knew I was going to throw a fastball!"
Crash: "He did know."
Nuke: "How?"
Crash:"I told him."
  • "Charlie, here comes the deuce. And when you speak of me, speak well"–Crash Davis, to the hitter after Nuke once again starts shaking off the signs.
  • "Man that ball got outta here in a hurry. I mean anything travels that far oughta have a damn stewardess on it, don't you think?"–Crash Davis
  • "Isn't this just the damnedest season that could be? The Durham Bulls can't lose, and I can't get laid!" –Annie, after being turned down by both Nuke and Crash.

[edit] Trivia

  • The filming was done after the close of the regular season, during September and October of 1987. The length of the shadows during the day games subtly give away the time of year. Durham Athletic Park was, of course, used for most of the baseball action. There were also scenes filmed in other Carolina League cities, although one establishing shot of War Memorial Stadium in Greensboro, North Carolina was erroneous, because Greensboro's club was and is in the South Atlantic League.
  • The Durham Bull sign, once a staple at ballparks everywhere, was built specifically for the movie. Once filming was done, the bull was retained as a decoration, albeit in foul territory, and with a simple "Let's Go Bulls" instead of "Hit Sign Win Steak". Like the Hollywood Sign, this Durham Bull was not originally intended to be a long-lasting artifact, and was eventually replaced by a sturdier version. The new Durham Bulls Athletic Park also features the Durham Bull. In the new park, the sign is in fair territory, and hitting the bull will win the batter a free steak. Also, if the batter hits the grass the bull is standing on, he will win a free salad.
  • In a case of life imitating art, during a long rain delay that interrupted (and ultimately postponed) the Chicago Cubs' first night game in August, 1988, several Cubs players came out and slid on the tarp, imitating a scene in this movie. Cubs manager Don Zimmer, an old-school, no-nonsense type, reportedly was not amused, and saw to it that all of the "perpetrators" were fined $500. However, the on-screen antics may have been inspired by Baltimore Orioles catcher Rick Dempsey, who famously performed a similar routine on the tarps at Fenway Park during a rain delay in the early 1980s and then made the routine a bit of a personal trademark, without publicly incurring the wrath of Orioles' management.
  • Aside from the sliding routine, the "rainout" scene was based on an actual event. In the late 1960s, Ron Shelton played minor-league ball in the Texas League. Shelton's team was in Amarillo, Texas for a season-ending series. The night before the final game, Shelton, some teammates and some Amarillo players were out partying and decided to go to the stadium and turn on the sprinkler system, thereby flooding the field and ensuring a "rainout". However, the Amarillo team owner rented a helicopter, dried the field, and the game was played.
  • During his famous rant, Crash Davis comments that he believes ". . . Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone . . ." in the JFK assassination. In 1991, Kevin Costner appeared in JFK as a District Attorney determined to indirectly prove Oswald was part of a larger conspiracy.
  • Crash yells at Nuke about messing up the lyrics to "Try a Little Tenderness". In the movie "The Upside of Anger", Kevin Costner plays a former baseball player. At a wedding the singer starts singing "Try a Little Tenderness", after singing the first verse, the singer looks like he forgets the words and starts humming.
  • In the scene in which the bat boy gives Crash the pine tar rag and tells him to "get a hit", Kevin Costner ad-libbed the line "Shut up." The actor playing the bat boy wasn't expecting the line, thought Costner was being serious, and burst into tears.
  • The note that Crash writes to Annie actually reads "Let's fuck sometime," not "I want to make love to you", as Millie reads. It can be seen over Crash's right shoulder when he writes the note in the dugout.
  • The movie states that Crash Davis has 227 minor league home runs and needs twenty more to break the all-time minor league home run record. After hitting home run number 247 (but not with the Durham Bulls), Davis leaves baseball. However, the actual minor league home run record is 484, held by Hector Espino, who played for 24 years in the Mexican League between 1960 and 1984. Espino played in the American minor league system briefly in 1964, but was offended by racial discrimination and returned to Mexico to finish his career there. (He hit no major league home runs.) Even discounting Mexican League players, Davis's 247 minor league home runs wouldn't put him in the current top ten list of all-time minor league home runs.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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