What Parents Should Know
Although the movie is rated G, it will not be of much
interest to younger kids. And some children might be upset by
the scenes of Morris with his father, who is cold and
unsympathetic, or by the financial problems faced by the
family. There are references to divorce and remarriage.
Common Sense Media Review
If this hadn't really happened, Disney would have had to
make it up. But a high school science teacher did tell the
baseball team he coached that if they won the division title he
would try out for the major leagues. And they did and he did
and Jim Morris did become the oldest rookie in 40 years. And
then, when he went in as relief pitcher in his first major
league game, he struck out the first player at bat. Sometimes,
life just is a Disney movie.
And this story turns out to make a very nice movie indeed, thanks to not one but two irresistible underdog-with-a-dream stories, dignified-but-heartwarming direction by John Lee Hancock, and a hit-it-out-of-the-ballpark performance by Dennis Quaid.
A leisurely prologue sets the scene. After a mystical fairy tale about some nuns and wishing and rose petals, we meet a boy who lives for baseball. It is the one constant in his life as his family moves from one Army base to another around the country. When they finally find a place to stay, it is Texas, where the only game anyone cares about is football.
Fade into the present, when Morris (Quaid) is happily married, with deep roots in that same dusty Texas town. He had his shot at the big leagues, but didn't make it. We don't learn the specifics, but we see a big scar twisting around his shoulder. And as he tells his son, "It's never one thing" that derails you.
Morris is the high school baseball coach. But it is still a football town, and no one pays much attention to the team. One day, Morris throws a few balls to the catcher and the team is impressed with the power of his arm. When he challenges them to try harder, they challenge him back. If he wants them to dream big, he will have to show them the way. So he promises that if they win the division title, he will try out for the major leagues.
He never expects it to work. But the boys turn into a team and they start winning games. And so Morris ends up going to the try-outs, though he has to take his kids along. It turns out that despite what had always been thought to be the incontrovertible rule that pitches slow down as pitchers get older, Morris is throwing faster than ever, up to 98 miles an hour.
But dreams ask a lot of us. The success of the team has brought a coaching offer from a bigger school. Morris can take it and give his family a more comfortable life. Or he can accept the offer to play on a minor league team, with the slim hope that he might get picked up by the major leagues.
His dream asks a lot of him, but it asks a lot from his family, too, perhaps more than is fair to expect.

