Angels in 
      the Outfield (1994) 
      
      
       
        - Angels are the celestial beings of choice right now. They're getting 
        good press in the newsweeklies, Broadway plays are written about them, 
        and now here is a retread of the 1951 film "Angels in the Outfield," 
        about how they help a losing team turn around its season, all because of 
        the faith of a little boy. 
 
           
        - I have always had my doubts about any form of divine intervention in 
        sports contests. The power of prayer may be remarkable in many other 
        arenas, but why should God want my team to win instead of the other 
        side? Isn't it insulting to request God to even take an interest in 
        baseball? 
 
           
        - Angels, on the other hand, seem to represent less of a problem, 
        maybe because they have murkier theological functions. Milton saw them 
        shaking the very heavens, but in our trivializing times they've been 
        downgraded to starring roles in greeting cards and pop songs. This movie 
        is a good career move. 
 
           
        - The film opens on a sad note, with little Roger (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), 
        a foster child, in court hoping to be reunited with his father. But the 
        father is a motorcycle loner with no room for a kid on the bike, and so 
        Roger is sent back to stay with the warm woman (Brenda Fricker) who runs 
        his foster home. When will he ever be part of a "real family" again, he 
        asks his dad, who laughs and says, "Not until the Angels win the 
        pennant." 
 
           
        - He is referring to the California Angels, mired in last place at 
        this point in the film (and at the bottom of the West Division in 
        reality), but Roger consults with little J.P. (Milton Davis, Jr.), who 
        also lives in the foster home, and then prays for heavenly intervention 
        in the team's fate. And before long, amazingly, the Angels start to win. 
        There are plays so sensational that they seem to defy the laws of 
        physics. And only Roger, who can see angels in the outfield and 
        elsewhere, knows why these miracles are happening. 
 
           
        - The team is being managed by a bitter, angry veteran named George 
        Knox (Danny Glover). Among its members is the once-great pitcher Mel 
        Clark (Tony Danza), who has been benched for much of the season. When 
        George's team starts to win, he is astonished, until he learns from his 
        little fan Roger that angels are helping the team. He doubts it, but 
        cannot argue with results. And when Mel starts pitching again, he gets 
        help from the angels, too, and regains his old form. 
 
           
        - The movie then reduces itself to a formula, alternating between 
        baseball action (angels appear, work miracles, and announcer goes into 
        ecstasy) and human redemption (the manager becomes more of a human 
        being). The baseball action isn't very interesting because the angels 
        (led by Christopher Lloyd) manipulate the outcomes. And the human 
        interest stuff is canned and unconvincing. The only character who really 
        rings true is the comeback pitcher played by Danza. 
 
           
        - "Angels in the Outfield" closely follows another movie about kids 
        and baseball, "Little Big League." Both are about how small boys control 
        the destinies of major league teams. But while "Little Big League" is a 
        smart movie about a kid who really understands baseball, "Angels" is a 
        dumb movie about soppy sentimentality. The choice is clear.
 
       
      
      
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