For Love of the Game (1999)
Kevin Costner plays a handsome, famous baseball pitcher who can have any woman in the world, and for absolutely no reason, he chooses Kelly Preston, a bespectacled, mousy, problem-ridden, ordinary girl. Straight out of the Every Woman’s Fantasy playbook, a role Costner has shouldered several times over the years. In his own words, she’s “a bummer”—that line is my favorite part of the movie—but he just can’t live without her?
At two hours and twenty minutes, For Love of the Game is far too long. I kept fast forwarding to get to the ending. She’s unlikable, he’s unrealistic, the pseudo-sad piano music will drive you insane, and there’s not enough baseball to make it an interesting sports movie. Then again, since it really isn’t intended to be an interesting sports movie, there’s altogether too much baseball, adding to the boredom that sets in as soon as Kelly Preston shows up.
Unless you’re angry with someone and want to torture him by sitting him in front of this movie, there’s really no reason to rent it. I know that’s harsh, but I’m still trying to figure out why anyone, after reading the script, agreed to make it in the first place.
More Kevin Costner movies here!
At two hours and twenty minutes, For Love of the Game is far too long. I kept fast forwarding to get to the ending. She’s unlikable, he’s unrealistic, the pseudo-sad piano music will drive you insane, and there’s not enough baseball to make it an interesting sports movie. Then again, since it really isn’t intended to be an interesting sports movie, there’s altogether too much baseball, adding to the boredom that sets in as soon as Kelly Preston shows up.
Unless you’re angry with someone and want to torture him by sitting him in front of this movie, there’s really no reason to rent it. I know that’s harsh, but I’m still trying to figure out why anyone, after reading the script, agreed to make it in the first place.
More Kevin Costner movies here!