This article is about the 1976 film. For the 2005 remake, see
Bad News Bears
.
1976 film by Michael Ritchie
The Bad News Bears
is a 1976 American
sports
comedy film
directed by
Michael Ritchie
and written by
Bill Lancaster
. It stars
Walter Matthau
as an alcoholic ex-baseball pitcher who becomes a coach for a youth
baseball
team known as the Bears. Alongside Matthau, the film's cast includes
Tatum O'Neal
,
Vic Morrow
,
Joyce Van Patten
,
Ben Piazza
,
Jackie Earle Haley
, and
Alfred W. Lutter
. Its score, composed by
Jerry Fielding
, adapts the principal themes of
Bizet
's opera
Carmen
.
Released by
Paramount Pictures
,
The Bad News Bears
received generally positive reviews. It was followed by two sequels,
The Bad News Bears in Breaking Training
in 1977 and
The Bad News Bears Go to Japan
in 1978, a short-lived 1979?80
CBS
television series
, and a 2005
remake
.
Plot
[
edit
]
In 1976, Morris Buttermaker, an alcoholic pool cleaner and former minor-league baseball pitcher, accepts an under-the-table cash payment from a lawyer to coach his son's youth baseball league
expansion team
, the Bears. The team is made up of misfit players, formed as a settlement to a lawsuit brought against the league for excluding such players from other teams. Shunned by the more competitive teams (and their competitive parents and coaches), the Bears are the outsiders, and the least talented team in the Southern California league.
Buttermaker makes little effort to help the boys improve, accomplishing nothing before their first game except finding a sponsor to provide uniforms. He forfeits the opening game after the Bears allow 26 runs without recording an out.
With the entire team wanting to quit due to the humiliation of their first loss, Buttermaker begins to take his coaching more seriously, teaching basics like hitting, fielding, and sliding. In addition, he recruits two unlikely prospects: sharp-tongued Amanda Whurlitzer, the 11-year-old daughter of Buttermaker's former girlfriend and a skilled pitcher (trained by Buttermaker when she was younger); and the local cigarette-smoking, loan-sharking, Harley-Davidson-riding troublemaker, Kelly Leak, who also happens to be the best athlete in the area, but has been excluded from playing in the past due to his juvenile delinquency. With Amanda and Kelly on board, the team starts gaining more confidence, and the Bears begin to win. A subplot reveals the strained relationship between Buttermaker and Amanda as the team improves.
Eventually, the Bears make it to the championship game opposite the top-notch Yankees, who are coached by aggressive, competitive Roy Turner. As the game progresses, tensions rise between the teams and the coaches, as Buttermaker and Turner engage in ruthless behavior toward each other and the players in order to win the game. But when Turner strikes his son Joey, the pitcher, for ignoring his orders and intentionally throwing at the batter's head, Joey retaliates by holding on to a
comebacker
until the Bears' runners have all scored, and then walking off the field. Buttermaker realizes that he, too, has placed too much emphasis on winning, and puts his
benchwarmers
in to allow everyone to play. The Bears lose in the end, but despite Buttermaker's move, they nearly win the game. After the trophy award ceremony, Buttermaker gives the team beer, which they spray on each other in a field celebration as if they had won, telling the Yankees where they can put their championship trophy.
Cast
[
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]
Top billed, shown in opening credits, were Matthau, O'Neal and Morrow.
Adults
[
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]
- Walter Matthau
as Morris Buttermaker, coach of the Bears: A drunken, loud, ex-professional baseball pitcher and part-time pool cleaner, who drives a rundown green Cadillac convertible
- Vic Morrow
as Roy Turner, coach of the Yankees, who is competitive and aggressive.
- Joyce Van Patten
as Cleveland, league manager who favors Roy and the Yankees.
- Ben Piazza
as Bob Whitewood, city councilman and lawyer who sued the league to allow the Bears (in particular, his son) to play and who convinces (and pays) Buttermaker to coach the team.
Children
[
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]
- Tatum O'Neal
as Amanda Whurlitzer, the 11-year-old star pitcher for the Bears who feels insecure about her
tomboy
image. She is recruited by Buttermaker to help the team start winning. She is no-nonsense and a great pitcher who was taught by Buttermaker when she was young. The boys grow to be very protective of her, picking a fight with their rivals during the championship game when Amanda is kicked in the chest. Her mother is Buttermaker's ex-girlfriend, and Amanda looks to him as a father figure. Amanda and Tanner butt heads a lot, but respect each other. She also has a secret crush on Kelly.
- Chris Barnes
as Tanner Boyle, the short-tempered shortstop with a
Napoleon complex
; after suffering a horrible loss on their first game, he picks a fight with the entire seventh grade from the boys' middle school (and loses). He tends to curse more than the others, and initially insults and bullies Timmy before realizing he's treating Timmy no better than the kids from their rival team and becomes protective of him, leading to an unlikely friendship between them. He is also close friends with Ahmad.
- Jackie Earle Haley
as Kelly Leak, the local troublemaker who smokes and rides a mini
Harley-Davidson
motorcycle. Kelly is also the best athlete in the neighborhood. At first, he doesn't want to join when Amanda attempts to recruit him, but he changes his mind when Coach Turner threatens him. He alternates between left- and center-field and has a crush on Amanda. After joining the team, he forms close friendships with Tanner, Ahmad and Ogilvie.
- Erin Blunt as Ahmad Abdul-Rahim, a black Muslim boy who plays in the outfield, is liked by everyone on the team and adores
Hank Aaron
; Ahmad strips off his uniform in shame after committing several errors in the Bears' first game, but is convinced to return to the team by Buttermaker and is used for bunts in games due to his speed. He is shown to be close friends with Tanner and often has to pull Tanner away from fights.
- Gary Lee Cavagnaro as Mike Engelberg, an overweight boy who plays
catcher
; a great hitter, he frequently teases Tanner about his size. He breaks Buttermaker's windshield with a baseball at the first practice. He has a deep rivalry with Yankee pitcher Joey, causing them to throw insults at each other.
- Alfred W. Lutter
as Alfred Ogilvie, a bookworm who memorizes baseball statistics. He's mostly a bench-warmer who assists Buttermaker with defensive strategy. A backup outfielder/first baseman, but reluctant to play because he feels he's one of the lesser-skilled players on the team.
- David Stambaugh as Toby Whitewood, an unassuming boy who plays first base. He knows about the other players' personalities, is intelligent and well-spoken, and at times speaks on behalf of the team. He is the son of councilman Bob Whitewood, who secretly paid Buttermaker to coach the team.
- Quinn Smith as Timmy Lupus, initially described by Tanner as a "booger-eating spaz", plays right-field and is considered to be the worst player on the team ? if not the entire league ? but he surprises everyone in the championship game by making a key play to keep the Bears in the game. He is the most quiet and shy player, but shows the odd ability to properly prepare a martini for Coach Buttermaker while the team was assisting the coach with pool cleaning.
- Jaime Escobedo as Jose Aguilar, Miguel's older brother who plays second base and doesn't speak English.
- George Gonzales as Miguel Aguilar, Jose's younger brother; mostly plays right-field. He does not speak English. He is so short that the
strike zone
is practically non-existent.
- David Pollock as Rudi Stein, a nervous
relief pitcher
with glasses who is a terrible hitter; at times he is asked by Coach Buttermaker to purposely get hit by pitches in order to get on base. Also a backup outfielder.
- Brett Marx
as Jimmy Feldman, a fairly quiet third baseman with curly blond hair.
- Scott Firestone as Regi Tower, a fairly quiet, red-headed third baseman whose dad vocally attends practices and games. He plays first base.
- Brandon Cruz
as Joey Turner, the star pitcher for the Yankees and coach Roy Turner's son. He has a rivalry with Engelberg and regularly bullies Tanner and Timmy. He nearly
beans
Engelberg, which results in his father slapping him. In response, Joey holds a ground ball Engelberg hits to him, allowing an inside-the-park home run. He then drops the ball at his father’s feet and quits the team.
Production
[
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]
The Bad News Bears
was filmed in and around
Los Angeles
, primarily in the
San Fernando Valley
. The field where they played is in Mason Park on Mason Avenue in
Chatsworth
. In the film, the Bears were
sponsored
by an actual local company, "Chico's Bail Bonds". One scene was filmed in the council chamber at
Los Angeles City Hall
.
Matthau was paid $750,000 plus over 10% of the
theatrical rentals
.
[3]
Tatum O'Neal was paid $350,000 plus a percentage of the profits.
[4]
These were later estimated to be $1.9 million.
[5]
Reception
[
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]
Rotten Tomatoes
gives the film a score of 97% based on reviews from 30 critics and an average rating of 7.6/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "
The Bad News Bears
is rude, profane, and cynical, but shot through with honest, unforced humor, and held together by a deft, understated performance from Walter Matthau."
[6]
In his 1976 review, critic
Roger Ebert
gave the film three stars out of four and called it "an unblinking, scathing look at competition in American society."
[7]
Gene Siskel
awarded two-and-a-half stars out of four, calling the film's characters "more types than people" and the kids' foul-mouth dialogue "overdone," though he found O'Neal's performance "genuinely affecting."
[8]
Variety
called it "the funniest adult-child comedy film since '
Paper Moon
'," and lauded the "excellent" script.
[9]
Kevin Thomas
of the
Los Angeles Times
declared it "the best American screen comedy of the year to date," adding, "Bright, pugnacious and utterly realistic as most children seem to be today, these kids are drawn with much accuracy and are played beautifully."
[10]
Vincent Canby
of
The New York Times
found the film only "occasionally funny" but praised screenwriter Bill Lancaster for "the talent and discipline to tell the story of 'The Bad News Bears' almost completely in terms of what happens on the baseball diamond or in the dugout."
[11]
Gary Arnold of
The Washington Post
praised it as "a lively, spontaneously funny entertainment" that "could rally a large parallel audience seeking less innocuous and stereotyped pictures with and about children."
[12]
Tom Milne
of
The Monthly Film Bulletin
called it "miraculously funny and entirely delightful."
[13]
"It’s so funny. It’s so sweet. It’s sweet and, yet, it’s completely wrong. It’s just so wrong on so many levels." ? Tatum O'Neal
[14]
Awards
[
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]
Walter Matthau was nominated for the
BAFTA Award for Best Actor
. The screenplay by
Bill Lancaster
, son of actor
Burt Lancaster
, was awarded "
Best Comedy Written Directly for the Screen
" by the
Writers Guild of America
.
See also
[
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]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
Box Office Information for
The Bad News Bears
.
Archived
2017-10-31 at the
Wayback Machine
The Wrap
. Retrieved April 4, 2013.
- ^
"The Bad News Bears, Box Office Information"
. The Numbers
. Retrieved
January 23,
2012
.
- ^
"Par Queries Walter Matthau".
Variety
. July 2, 1980. p. 4.
- ^
"Ryan O'Neal: Does Father Know Best?: Ryan O'Neal".
Los Angeles Times
. 23 July 1978. p. v24.
- ^
Lee, Grant (28 August 1977). "Ryan O'Neal: A Love-Hate Story".
Los Angeles Times
. p. q1.
- ^
The Bad News Bears (1976)
at
Rotten Tomatoes
- ^
Review,
The Bad News Bears
,
Chicago Sun-Times
, April 13, 1976
- ^
Siskel, Gene
(April 14, 1976). "'Bad News Bears' takes a swing at Little League".
Chicago Tribune
. Section 3, p. 5.
- ^
"Film Reviews: The Bad News Bears".
Variety
. April 7, 1976. 23.
- ^
Thomas, Kevin
(April 7, 1976). "Matthau, O'Neal Throw Strikes".
Los Angeles Times
. Part IV, p. 1, 9.
- ^
Canby, Vincent
(April 7, 1976). "At Bat With Matthau and O'Neal in 'Bad News Bears'".
The New York Times
. 28.
- ^
Arnold, Gary (April 8, 1976). "A hit for 'The Bad News Bears'".
The Washington Post
. 53.
- ^
Milne, Tom
(November 1976). "The Bad News Bears".
The Monthly Film Bulletin
.
43
(514): 228.
- ^
Sherman, Ed (January 20, 2013).
"Tatum O'Neal reflects on legacy of Bad News Bears: 'It's just so wrong on so many levels'
"
.
shermanreport.com
. Archived from
the original
on 5 January 2015
. Retrieved
2 June
2023
.
External links
[
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]