A
League of Their Own (1992)
Rating:
PG
Runtime:
128 minutes
Box
Office (in today’s dollars): 182 million (approximately)
Characters:
Dottie Hinson, Kit Keller, Jimmy Dugan, “All the Way” Mae Mordabito, Doris
Murphy, Linda “Beans” Babbitt, Shirley Baker, “Mumbles” Brockman, Connie
Calhoun, Neezer Dalton, Beverly Dixon, Vivian Ernst, Evelyn Gardner, Alice
Gaspers, Ellen Sue Gotlander, Helen Haley, Marla Hooch, Betty “Spaghetti” Horn,
Marbleann Wilkinson, Stillwell Gardner, Ernie Capadino, Miss Cuthburt, Ira
Lowenstein, Walter Harvey, Bob Hinson
Favorite
Quote: “There’s no crying in baseball!”
Favorite
Scene: Jimmy Dugan’s pre-game 50+ second pee
Favorite
Character: Dottie Hinson
Other
need-to-see nineties movies directed by Penny Marshall: Awakenings
This
was one of the movies that was playing when I first started working at a
theater when I was in high school. I remember cleaning up popcorn and soda
while Madonna was singing “This Used to Be My Playground” during the credits. I
can’t believe that was 25 years ago!! Ok, the movie review: lots of characters
to love. Younger sister Kit is fighting to get out of her sister’s shadow; Mae
goes all the way from 2nd base to home on a single to center, if you
know what I mean; and there are ladies with nicknames like Beans, Mumbles, and
Spaghetti. But my favorite character is Dottie Hinson. She is the heart and
soul of the Rockford Peaches, and the perfect player to lead this team to the
top of the All American Girls Professional Baseball League.
And
who is the manager of this team you ask?? Jimmy Dugan. A washed-up old baseball
star whose pre-game speech is no more than a long trip to the urinal (favorite
scene), who yells “there’s no crying in baseball!” at his players (favorite
quote), and who gives great advice to kids: “avoid the clap.” There are many
funny moments in this movie, but at its core, it is all about sisterly love
(the opposite of my last movie reviewed, Boyz
in the Hood, which was all about the love of your brothers). Oh, and did I
mention the baseball action is great, and even Madonna is believable as a ballplayer??
There
is a great debate on the ending of movie during game seven of the World Series.
Spoiler alert: The Rockford Peaches vs. The Racine Belles. Dottie vs. Kit. Does
Dottie let her sister win, or did she earn it?? I say she let her win. But
others see it differently. I would ask Jon Lovitz’ character Ernie Capadino how
he saw it, but he probably skipped the game to give his wife a little pickle
tickle.
Next
movie to review: Groundhog Day