Morris Buttermilk (Walter Matthau) is a foul-mouthed drunk who used to play minor league ball. For some inexplicable reason, the mayor is paying him to coach the Bears...a team made up of losers who don't have a prayer of winning. Yet, despite being a despicable man and a lousy coach, the team starts winning...mostly because it's a movie and stuff like this happens in movies.
I know that this film has a cult following and was very successful when it debuted...so much so that it spawned sequels and even a TV series! But to me, it's good and worth seeing, but not THAT good. Matthau is good and the film is enjoyable....but nothing more.
By the way, one thing I didn't love about the film is how unrealistic the umpires were. Late in the film one coach slaps the snot out of a kid and the ump does nothing...which really shows it's a movie and not real life. This isn't the only incident where the umpiring was poorly written but it was the worst.
The Bad News Bears
1976
Action / Comedy / Drama / Family / Sport
The Bad News Bears
1976
Action / Comedy / Drama / Family / Sport
Keywords: sportscaliforniaalcoholicbaseballcoach
Plot summary
Former minor leaguer Morris Buttermaker is a lazy, beer swilling swimming pool cleaner who takes money to coach the Bears, a bunch of disheveled misfits who have virtually no baseball talent. Realizing his dilemma, Coach Buttermaker brings aboard girl pitching ace Amanda Whurlizer, the daughter of a former girlfriend, and Kelly Leak, a motorcycle punk who happens to be the best player around. Brimming with confidence, the Bears look to sweep into the championship game and avenge an earlier loss to their nemesis, the Yankees.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
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Mathau plays a foul-mouthed and perennially drunk coach...and he's NOT the worst coach in the movie!
Different, and all the more for it
I have to admit I am not a huge sports fan, but several sports movies have sparked my interest, such as Hoosiers, Breaking Away and Remember the Titans. I saw The Bad News Bears mostly for Walter Matthau and I really enjoyed it. While it could have been a tad longer perhaps, and one or two scenes could have been tighter in the pace, it is a very good movie. For a sports movie, it is quite different, taking on the underdogs taking on the big boys scenario for example, and it works wonderfully.
The production values are very nice, and Jerry Fielding's score compliments each scene beautifully. The film's script is quite gritty, but it is also funny and thoughtful, while the story is always engaging and well-thought out with the relationship between Morris and his team particularly pulling you in. The direction is solid, while the acting is excellent. Walter Matthau is simply brilliant as the boozy coach Morris, while Joyce Van Patten gives great support and the child stars are more than a match for Matthau. Especially Tatum O'Neal, who is quite charming yet very spunky and likable, and I personally think she has better screen presence than her dad.
All in all, a very enjoyable movie, and whether you are a fan of sports movies or not, this movie is recommended. 8/10 Bethany Cox
I love this movie
Buttermaker (Walter Matthau) is a drunken ex-minor leaguer. He gets hired to coach a little league team of misfits. One of the fathers had sued to get the kids into a competitive league. However after a humiliating opening loss, the father figures the team should quit and so do the kids. Buttermaker try to save the team by getting a couple of ringers, his former girlfriend's kid (Tatum O'Neal) who happens to be a little girl and a juvenile delinquent (Jackie Earle Haley).
This isn't simply a good kids movie. Quite frankly, parents today wouldn't want their kids to see this. The language is rough. A parent hits his kid. The kids swear, smoke, talk sex, and drink beer. I don't know how they got PG.
The kids are great. Walter Matthau is his grumpy best. Tatum O'Neal is wonderful. It works as a good underdog movie. And then the last act explodes into something wonderful. It's heartbreaking when Buttermaker rejects Amanda for simply wanting a father figure. Then it goes all out as both coaches go super competitive. It's a real indictment of the ugliness of kids' sports culminating in that slap. It's not just a simple underdog movie, but a movie about real sportsmanship. It is a great original that the 2005 remake cannot touch.