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Santa Baby
Location: Toronto, Canada (Eh?)
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5. BULL DURHAM
Directed by Ron Shelton (1988)
It took an ex-ballplayer to craft the ultimate ode to America's pastime. For his rookie outing behind the camera, Ron Shelton set the story in his old stomping grounds: the minor leagues, where the beer is cheap and the game is at its stripped-down best. The standard-issue plot brash fireballer ''Nuke'' LaLoosh (Tim Robbins) locks horns with veteran catcher Crash Davis (Kevin Costner) and both strike sparks with sexy groupie Annie Savoy (Susan Sarandon) goes way inside baseball, exposing locker-room trysts, Bible-beating teammates, claustrophobic bus trips, and fungus-coated shower shoes. And now we know what they talk about on the pitcher's mound: candlesticks.
4. FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS
Directed by Peter Berg and Josh Pate (2004)
Friday Night Lights, based on H.G. Bissinger's critically-acclaimed non-fiction book, captures the immense pressures placed on the real-life athletes of Odessa, Texas, where ''Mojo'' football is a way of life. Billy Bob Thornton fully inhabits the role of the conflicted coach, but his players provide the real heroics. ''It was like watching soldiers going off to an early death,'' says Bissinger in the DVD commentary. Like wounded superstar ''Boobie'' Miles (played by Derek Luke), players are discarded when they're no longer useful, but this band of brothers fights for one another in their quest to ''be perfect.''
3. MILLION DOLLAR BABY
Directed by Clint Eastwood (2004)
''You're not gonna cry now, are ya?'' Clint Eastwood's cranky trainer growls. Actually, boss, we're all gonna cry at the heart-wrenching ending, after we've cheered the hard-knuckled determination of Maggie Fitzgerald (Hilary Swank), left-hooking her way to self-respect as she climbs the ranks of women's boxing. A story that could have wallowed in sentimentality, Baby instead pays homage to the redemption of a poor, uneducated waitress through starkly staged fight scenes and gutsy performances in and out of the ring.
2. FIELD OF DREAMS
Directed by Phil Alden Robinson (1989)
Much more than just bringing ''If you build it, he will come'' into the lexicon, this nostalgic love letter to our national pastime captures perfectly the game's intangibles the thwack of a fist to the glove, the shock of a fastball high and tight. Everybody knows Kevin Costner plows down his cornfield to set up a baseball diamond...but then there's that line: ''Hey, Dad? Wanna have a catch?'' Sigh. Talk about your fantasy baseball.
1. HOOSIERS
Directed by David Anspaugh (1986)
Because this is the greatest basketball movie ever made, and if you haven't seen it for some petty I-don't-like-sports reason, you're just afraid to let yourself be happy. Based on the true story of a tiny Indiana high school team that won the state championship, Hoosiers is supremely acted thanks to the cool-as-ice Gene Hackman and the Oscar-nominated Dennis Hopper and beautifully shot, and features a Jerry Goldsmith score that should be listed in the dictionary under triumphant.
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And this above all: to thine ownself be true, and it must follow, as the night the day, thou canst not then be false to any man.
Polonius, Hamlet Act I, sc iii
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