Page 1
Standard

the bad news bears. [another day, another baseball movie.]

Listen, Lupus, you didn’t come into this life just to sit around on a dugout bench, did ya? Now get your ass out there and do the best you can.

———

———

The Bad News Bears is amazing. It’s still hilarious, and at its core, it’s as socially relevant today as it was when it was released in 1976. It’s an essential baseball movie, an essential sports movie, and an essential movie in general.

It was a truly unique onscreen depiction of baseball when it came out. Before it, cinema sanitized the game — a practice that often happens even still. It’s common when baseball is projected on the silver screen that the imperfections have been airbrushed out, a lens filter gives the whole affair a heavenly glow, and bad words are overdubbed with more family-friendly alternatives. The functioning belief was that the game is only beautiful when it’s pristine and unblemished.

Then, The Bad News Bears came along to make clear that baseball is beautiful even when it’s dirty and irreverent. Maybe especially then.

Irreverence is an underrated quality. The world is tilted against the little guys, the outsiders, the freaks and weirdos, the marginalized. The systems and authorities that govern our world aren’t built for us. Irreverence is the appropriate response to the powers that be. The people with money and power walk all over us, treat us like shit, and then, if we’re lucky, offer a half-hearted apology.

There’s only one sane reaction, which can be summed up in the immortal words of the great poet Tanner Boyle: “Hey Yankees… you can take your apology and your trophy and shove ’em straight up your ass!”

The film itself, and the characters within the film, refuse to let baseball belong to the establishment. [Fun fact: the film was released at the peak of Portland Mavericks baseball.] The team refuses to toe the line of respectability which everyone else assumes to be a given. They reject the idea that some authority gets to dictate what makes the game beautiful, and how a good life should be lived. You could definitely pick a worse movie to glean life lessons from.

And speaking of life lessons, I came away with three while watching it this time around.

  1. “This quitting thing, it’s a hard habit to break once you start.”
  2. When success comes, it can be tempting to join the dark side. But in the end, it’s not worth winning if it means playing by their rules.
  3. We’re always going to be afraid of fucking things up, but, “you didn’t come into this life just to sit around on a dugout bench, did ya? Now get your ass out there and do the best you can.”

Next Up: The Stratton Story — Jimmy Stewart plays real-life pitcher Monty Stratton, who lost a leg in a hunting accident and still fought his way back to pitch in the minors.

more
Standard

the seventh inning stretch, or, all the non-baseball stuff getting me through social distancing.

———-

My friend Phil made a 7th inning stretch reference when I mentioned being two thirds done with this series. I immediately realized it made a great excuse to take a day off.

Obviously, a man cannot live on baseball films alone. I’d originally planned on publishing all sorts of non-baseball related posts about the things helping me get through isolation. But, it turns out that writing 30 posts in 30 days is a lot when you’re entirely out of shape in terms of consistent writing.

But now I have a day off!

So, here’s the rest of the stuff helping me survive:

————-

Movies: Obviously, most of my movie time has been taken up by baseball movies. Still, I rewatched Knives Out, which is just as brilliant the second time. I saw Pedro Almodóvar’s Pain and Glory, which is fucking amazing. Antonio Banderas is remarkable in it. And Emily and I are working our way through the MCU movies again.

—————-

Shows: Like everyone else in the world, I watched Tiger King. I also watched The Outsider, Last Week Tonight, lots of Seth Meyers and Colbert segments, Cowboy Bebop, and the final season of Schitt’s Creek. There’s a bunch of shows still on my quarantine list, including Tales from the Loop and The Midnight Gospel.

—————

Books: Trick Mirror by Jia Tolentino, Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller, Black Leopard, Red Wolf by Marlon James, and Ship of Magic by Robin Hobb. All highly recommended. If you haven’t read Hobb before, she’s great. I’d start with Assassin’s Apprentice.

—————-

Comics/Graphic Novels: The Weatherman by Jody Leheup-Nathan Fox-Dave Stewart, The Backstagers by James Tynion IV, Head Lopper by Andrew MacLean, The Sandman: Overture by Neil Gaiman. You should read all of them!

—————-

Video Games: I’m working my way through Spider-Man for PS4 — thumbs up — but Emily has been playing the ever-loving shit out of Stardew Valley. Emily spending all of her time playing a video game is definitely the most surprising development from this whole thing.

I also have a huge backlog of games to get to, but I’m assuming I’ll still use this as an excuse to buy either Final Fantasy VII Remake or Divinity: Original Sin 2. Or both.

—————

Puzzles: I bought Emily a puzzle for Christmas. Neither of us had done a puzzle in years, and I thought it would be fun. I had no idea it would become a way of life — and that was before this all went down! Fortunately, our new puzzle obsession meant we were well stocked to be trapped in our apartment for two months.

————–

Music: A new Childish Gambino album in March, and a new Orville Peck song released just in time for my birthday.

I wholeheartedly recommend adding them to your survival kit.

[I also didn’t know until yesterday that Frank Ocean released new music this month, so I’ll checking that out right now.]

————-

———

more
Standard

field of dreams. [another day, another baseball movie.]

I have just created something totally illogical.

———

——–

To slightly alter the familiar refrain, no one ever watches the same movie twice. At least, not if you’re watching closely. Our experience of film — or books/music/etc. — is usually even more about us than the artifact itself. We bring more into the experience than we often admit. I don’t think I’ve seen Field of Dreams in two decades, and watching it now, in my late 30’s, I’m watching a different movie.

It’s still mostly the same; an airy, fantastical, sentimental homage to baseball’s lasting power to connect us to the past, and make adults feel like children again. It’s the sort of film that rarely gets made anymore: a family-friendly, adult-oriented, live-action drama — and with a supernatural bent at that.

But watching it at this stage of life, there’s a resonance for me in Ray’s fear that he’ll miss his last chance to ever do something surprising or remarkable. He’s about to enter the next act of his life, and he’s more aware of his mortality than he was as a younger man. It’s a bonafide mid-life crisis, because let’s be honest, even for the luckier amongst us, our late 30’s is likely right smack in the middle of our lives.

The film picks up his story right after he’s left his life as a city-dweller and moved his family to a farm in the middle of Iowa. By anyone’s standards, that’s about as surprising and remarkable as it gets. And still, he’s nagged by the fear that he’ll live his entire life having never done something beautifully illogical on a grand scale.

That means more to me than it could have when I was a teenager, or even in my 20’s. As the familiar genre of mid-life crises shows, more of us than not are familiar with the question — which can range from niggling to oppressive — Is this all there is? We’re not the hero of our story the way we’d once imagined we’d be. Perhaps we’re at a point in life where anything that may have resembled potential has withered on the vine. Is this it? Is it too late?

And so, the film functions as a bit of wish fulfillment. In the midst of his ennui, a voice comes to Ray Kinsella and tells him what he needs to do. Sure, it’s still an insane gambit, but he only needs to find the courage to follow instructions, crazy as those instructions might be. He’s worried he’s out of chances to be the man he’d once dreamed he’d be, and then a disembodied voice speaks to him out of a corn field. It’s not exactly a burning bush, but building a baseball field is a relatively easy sell. So he creates a totally illogical thing, but he doesn’t do it ex nihilo.

That sounds pretty good, but we don’t get voices in corn fields. Ray Kinsella got a road map to a new frontier outside of the life that felt like resignation. The rest of us don’t get that. Here’s to hoping we still might find heaven in a cornfield.

Up Next: One of the all-time greats: The Bad News Bears. The ’76 version, obviously.

more
Standard

cobb. [another day, another baseball movie.]

It is not confusing. It’s simple – you won. You go ahead and tell the whole wide world that the greatest ballplayer who ever lived is also the greatest bastard. Eureka! Who fucking cares?

——–

——–

As the title suggests, Cobb is a 1994 film in which Tommy Lee Jones plays Ty Cobb, one of the greatest baseball players of all time — many would say the greatest.

The film plays as a ‘so crazy it’s true’ account of Al Stump’s time spent traveling with Ty Cobb to ghostwrite his autobiography. As it would turn out, ‘so crazy it’s true’ was actually ‘sensational bullshit made up by Stump to sell books.’

Decades after Cobb’s autobiography, My Life in Baseball: The True Record, was published, Stump released another volume telling the story of what really happened during their time together. Other biographers would later discover that the account was almost entirely fabricated. It turned out Stump made a habit of forging and fabricating during his career, especially in relation to Cobb. The truth about the book came out after the film, so at the time it was still believed to be a true account.

Still, even if those particular events were fabricated, Cobb was still quite possibly the most miserable son of a bitch to ever step on a Major League ball field. He was a racist, bigoted, misogynist, abusive, world class piece of shit. His opponents hated him, his teammates hated him, his family hated him, even baseball fans often hated him. Anyone who had the misfortune of interacting with him lamented the experience.

On the field, Cobb played dirty. He was famous for his attempts to harm opposing players — something he was transparent about. For example, he consistently slid into bases with his spikes high enough to cause injury. Cobb apparently kept his metal spikes sharp for this explicit purpose.

As a human, he was the worst. He was also one of the most remarkable baseball players of all time. Like Ruth, he single-handedly changed the game. That fact is particularly interesting because they men were contemporaries, had opposite playing styles, and still left indelible marks on the game moving forward. Cobb changed how the game was played forever.

With a character like that, a really compelling biopic could be made about his life. This was not that biopic. I’d say some grace was necessary for a film made 28 years ago, but it came out the same year as Pulp Fiction, The Shawshank Redemption, Quiz Show, and The Professional, just to name a few.

The movie is a mess in so many ways. To name one, the tone changes wildly from time to time, then swings back. For example, there’s a zany segment where Stump tries to survive as a drunk Cobb drives a car along windy roads in a snowstorm. The scene is complete with playful, adventurous music that belongs in a dated film about a troublemaking but lovable rascal, something in the vein of Uncle Buck. Why was that placed in the middle of an otherwise dark film about a monstrous man at the end of his life? I don’t know, you’re going to have to tell me.

I also think Jones’s performance — which many see as the lone saving grace in the film — is significantly overrated.

I wouldn’t say I outright hated Cobb, but I also can’t think of a single positive to say about it.

Whatevs, onto the next one!

Up Next: Field of Dreams — After three straight films I didn’t like, it’ll be nice to get back to an old standby to right the ship.

more
Standard

off the black. [another day, another baseball movie.]

You wanna know why people go to reunions? To tally up who they’re beatin’. They just gotta find out who’s worse off than they are.

——–

——–

I’ll keep this relatively brief. Nick Nolte plays Ray Cook, a lonely, alcoholic high school umpire who catches a kid vandalizing his house. Turns out, the vandal was a pitcher, and earlier that day Nolte’s character had made a ball four call that ended the kid’s season one game short of playing in the championship. In exchange for not calling the cops, Cook forces the kid to agree to clean up the damage. After that, he wants the kid to accompany him to his high school reunion, pretending to be his son, so he doesn’t look as sad and lonely as he actually is.

As for the kid, his mom has abandoned the family. In the aftermath, his dad is a shell of a human who has disconnected from his children, and life in general.

Camaraderie ensues, there’s some empathy and pathos, characters grow, you know the drill. I won’t spoil what happens after that, in case you decide to watch the movie.

For me, this felt like a mediocre-at-best film, made by someone with a lot of potential to be really good eventually. As it turns out, that’s exactly what happened. I like what I’ve seen of writer-director James Ponsoldt’s later work much more. Films like The End of the Tour and The Spectacular Now are critically lauded films that show there was a great filmmaker in there.

As for this one, none of it connected with me. I got what Ponsoldt was trying to do, but it didn’t land. With the exception of Nolte, the performances are wooden and shallow. The emotional cues are weak. There are some story beats that had a lot of potential, and a refreshingly unexpected conclusion that was so close to being really good, but never quite got there. Scenes needed more flesh and depth. I didn’t feel like the movie earned the supposed gravity and growth of the characters and their relationship.

What are you gonna do? With 30 baseball movies in a row there’s no chance I’d love all of them.

Up Next: Cobb, a biopic about legendary baseball player, and detestable human being, Ty Cobb. Tommy Lee Jones plays Cobb, a man who everyone hated. Literally everyone. He played dirty, he was a racist-bigoted asshole, and he was a monstrous husband and father. He also changed the game of baseball, and is one of greatest, if not the greatest player of all time. [I still pick Willie Mays as greatest of all time, but these things aren’t a science.]

more
Standard

take me out to the ball game. [another day, another baseball movie.]

Gee! Ain’t that somethin’? She’s the kinda girl I’ve always dreamed about. Wouldn’t it be wonderful to be married to a girl who played baseball? 

Take Me Out to the Ball Game is the second and final musical of these 30 baseball films.

I love baseball. I love Gene Kelly. Even with that going for it, I still disliked this one.

Now understand, I didn’t dislike it because I didn’t know what I was getting into watching a Kelly-Sinatra musical. I enjoy plenty of 40s and 50s musicals. I’m saying that judging the film by the standards of this particular genre, I still think this one isn’t any good.

I expected the baseball to be silly. This is Gene Kelly and Frank Sinatra pretending to be ballplayers, I didn’t expect it to look like they’re the real deal. If they’d been able to competently swing a bat, that would have been a bonus. Granted, they didn’t even get the basic rules of the game right, but still, the poor quality of the baseball element and my enjoyment of the film were in no way mutually exclusive.

The problem was that the rest of the movie wasn’t any good, either.

There was no arc to any of the plotlines, characters basically just teleported from one emotional state to the next. The romance makes even less sense than it does in most musicals from the 40s — and that’s really saying something, because that’s about the lowest bar there is. And the songs are lackluster at best.

There’s also a plotline in which a wealthy, corrupt gambler conspires to keep Kelly’s character from helping his team win the pennant. This should have been the central throughline in the film for a number of narrative reasons. Instead, it’s jammed into the final 25 minutes of the movie. That sort of arc is either the heart of the plot, or it’s not in the film. It shouldn’t have been randomly tacked on in the third act.

We don’t even get a trademark Gene Kelly surrealist dance segment. I know it was the late 40s and Kelly still hadn’t reached the height of his powers, but still. They even had one in On the Town, so I don’t think it’s too much to ask for them to throw us a bone. It wouldn’t have saved the movie, but at least it might have given us something worthwhile to watch for 7-12 minutes.

When I’m finished with these baseball movies, I’m going to need to watch An American in Paris or Singin’ in the Rain to get this taste out of my mouth.

Related fun fact: I’m going to be honest, and say I actually fucking hate the song ‘Take Me Out to the Ball Game.’

Up Next: Nick Nolte plays a directionless, alcoholic high school umpire in Off the Black. It’s a 90’s indie-drama, not like, a script that was originally meant to be Bad Umpire starring Billy Bob Thornton.

more
Standard

brothers in exile. [another day, another baseball movie.]

What flooded over me was what flooded over a lot of Miami, which is, my parents struggled and sacrificed so that I would never have to struggle and sacrifice. What flooded over me was just hugely personal. Seeing that at the height of sports.

——–

——–

I’ve never loved watching an athlete play more than I loved watching Orlando ‘El Duque’ Hernandez pitch.

If I had to pick a team made up of Yankees from my lifetime, plucking them out of history to play a one game playoff with my life on the line, my starting pitcher would be a 32 or 33-year-old El Duque. I don’t even need to weigh my options — I wouldn’t pick Pettite, CC, Cone, Mussina, or Wells.

In ’98 and ’99, over the course of six postseason starts, El Duque pitched 44 innings, had 40 k’s, allowed only 24 hits and 19 walks, and had an era of 1.02. He was simply dominant in big games. His control was remarkable, his blood was ice cold, and his stuff got nastier as the stakes got higher.

And along with pure pitching, he also dictated the energy on the field. When people refer to an electric atmosphere for a game, big games he started were the epitome of the phrase. He gave the opposing team fits, but he impacted the Yankees top to bottom as well. When he started, it effected the lineup, the defense and the fans. He owned Yankee Stadium.

Even Yankee fans had to feel a modicum of pity for the opposing team. If El Duque was on the mound, he was in your head, especially in big games. He went at least 7 innings in every postseason start he made over those two years, and if the other team survived that, Mike Stanton and Mariano Rivera were waiting in the bullpen.

Bonus: he fielded his position as well as any pitcher I’ve ever seen.

Long story short, I love Orlando Hernandez.

Brothers in Exile is the ESPN ’30 for 30′ documentary about El Duque and his half brother Livan. Both men defected from Cuba to play baseball in the United States — a 20-year-old Livan first in 1995, then a 32-year-old El Duque two years later.

Their stories began in poverty, playing baseball in the face of intense scrutiny and political persecution, but both men eventually came to make millions of dollars to play in the US. With no shortage of postseason heroics, each carved his place among the best in the game for a time. An impressive feat for El Duque, who was already 32 when he arrived in the States.

ESPN knows what they’re doing with their 30 for 30 docs. They continue to release slickly produced, perfectly paced, engaging documentaries on a variety of sports subjects. Brothers in Exile is no exception. They take a remarkable story and tell it well.

I felt waves of nostalgia watching the footage of El Duque, and while I already knew much of his story, the added details in this documentary only more firmly solidified his place among my favorite athletes of all time.

If you have a spare 78 minutes and an ESPN+ subscription, you should check this one out.

Up Next: Take Me Out to the Ball Game. Starring Frank Sinatra and Gene Kelly, it’s the second of two musicals I’ll be watching during this 30 day marathon.

more
Standard

fear strikes out. [another day, another baseball movie.]

“Mental illness is an illness, like any other.”

Fear Strikes Out is the 1957 biopic of Red Sox outfielder Jimmy Piersall, focusing on his battle with mental illness. Based on his memoir of the same name, the film features an impressive performance by Anthony Perkins (of Psycho fame), and a progressive attitude toward mental illness that surprised me from a film made in the mid-late 50s.

I could be mistaken, but I don’t really think of 1957 as a time when mainstream opinion included the belief that mental illness was an illness, like any other. And yet, the psychiatrist in Fear Strikes Out says exactly that. Fuck, I don’t even think the general population in 2020 sees mental illness that way, so it’s an impressive stance for a film made 63 years ago.

Piersall’s real life mental illness differed from that depicted in the film. In the movie version, his unrelentingly, overbearing, perfectionist father led to Piersall developing an extreme anxiety disorder, to the point of psychosis. Obviously, I have no training or authority to diagnose anyone, but from a narrative standpoint, that’s how the film painted his struggle.

This wasn’t entirely accurate for two reasons.

One, it wasn’t an accurate portrayal of Piersall’s relationship with his father. After the film was released, he even went on record refuting the idea that his father abusively tried to fulfill his own shattered dream vicariously through the life and talent of his son. If his parents did play a role in Piersall’s illness, it was due more to genetics than abuse. His mother struggled with profound mental illness, and was repeatedly institutionalized — a fact alluded to early in the film.

The second way the film’s portrayal departed from reality was that, in real life, Piersall was bipolar.

Just as in the movie, he was certainly known for violent outbursts with opponents, umpires, teammates, and in one instance, a scoreboard in Chicago. And, as in the film, these types of outbursts led to his institutionalization for a prolonged period during his rookie season.

The film omitted the fact that, more than just rage, he suffered from severe mania. He was disliked by teammates, as well as Red Sox management and ownership, because of his constant on-field antics. For instance, he apparently once stepped up to bat wearing a Beatles wig, using his bat to play air guitar. He’d lead cheers for himself in the outfield during breaks in play, taking bows after virtually every catch. He had a conversation with the Babe Ruth monument in center field at Yankee Stadium during a game. When he hit his 100th home run, he ran backwards — as in, he still ran first to home, but he did it ass first.

These could easily be silly, entertaining anecdotes, were it not for the misery and utter lack of self-control at the core of Piersall’s mania.

These changes were likely necessary. I understand why they put a finer point on the details so it would land with general audiences, or to add more narrative clarity. If the film were made today, we’d expect more nuance, but the language of film was different in the 50s. Nuanced and complicated films were made at the time, but they were certainly few and far between. Thus, I’m not saying the changes were a weakness. It’s just that, as a person who lives with mental illness, I felt the need to clarify his actual battle.

There were times it was hard to watch Perkins in the role of Piersall, and I mean that as a compliment. It certainly wasn’t a naturalistic performance — again, this was 1957, that’s not how acting in American cinema worked back then. But in the style of the time, Perkins was great. He brought a dark, brooding, at times even creepy, energy to the role, even in the more mundane scenes.

It worked to illustrate what was always present in Piersall’s mind. Even when he wasn’t in the middle of an outburst or meltdown, that weight was still always pressing down on him. When we see the character in other scenes, where he’s wrestling his way toward some sort of wellness, and finds moments of reprieve, there’s an ease, even a bouyancy to Perkins’s performance. Again, it wasn’t a naturalistic portrayal of a mentally ill person, but it was quite effective in communicating the inner life of the character.

There’s a lot to like in Fear Strikes Out, but I definitely could have done without the tidy Hollywood ending. After a single intense confrontation with his abusive father, dear old dad immediately takes a 180* and just wants his son to be well, baseball be damned! Piersall has a breakthrough, and suddenly he’s cured. Our tortured protagonist seems destined to go on to a happy life from that moment on, free of the illness that has hounded him all those years. Still, to belabor the point, it was the 1950’s. I guess they don’t call it a Hollywood ending for nothing.

Oh yeah, one interesting tidbit: The final shot in Fear Strikes Out is like a photonegative of the final shot in Pride of the Yankees. In Pride, Gehrig slowly walks off the field, down the dugout steps, and through a door into the darkness. In Fear Strikes Out, Piersall walks to the end of a shadowy clubhouse hallway, pauses to collect himself, then walks up the dugout steps and into the light. It’s the sort of thing I wouldn’t have noticed had I not made the insane decision to watch 30 baseball movies in 30 days.

Up Next: Brothers in Exile, an ESPN 30 for 30 documentary about Livan and Orlando ‘El Duque’ Hernandez, half brothers who each risked everything to escape Cuba and play baseball in the MLB.

more
Standard

sugar. [another day, another baseball movie.]

Life gives you lots of opportunities. Baseball only gives you one.

——–

——–

Sugar is the story of Miguel ‘Azucar’ Santos, a Dominican pitching prospect trying to work his way from the baseball academies of the DR to the major league promised land.

Written and directed by Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck, the first act of Sugar reveals what life is like within the DR’s prospect machine; doing so three years before Pelotero came along to give the subject the documentary treatment. [I wrote up the documentary yesterday.]

I watched Pelotero for the first time the day before rewatching Sugar, which added considerable depth to my second viewing. The film was great on its own, but the new layers of understanding were significant.

While there were some liberties taken in service to the story, Boden and Fleck clearly did their research about life for young ballplayers in the Dominican Republic. There are scenes that are shot for shot precursors of what would later be shown in the documentary — even though the productions were entirely independent of one another.

After the first act of the film in the DR, the remainder reveals what life is like for a latino prospect once he graduates from the baseball academies to minor league ball in the US.

I can’t actually go into anymore detail without spoiling some powerful beats in the narrative, but what I will say is that this one is well worth a watch. Sugar is a beautifully crafted film that joins the ranks of movies on this list you should watch even if you aren’t a baseball fan. Although, let’s be honest, I don’t see how someone who isn’t a baseball fan could possibly still be reading these posts.

My second viewing of Sugar leaves me feeling much the same way I did after watching Pelotero. Baseball is a beautiful game, but the economics at the professional level too often reflect the monstrous injustices that color every facet of human life.

Up Next: Fear Strikes Out, the true story of Red Sox outfielder Jimmy Piersall and his battle with mental illness. The film stars Psycho‘s Anthony Perkins.

more
Standard

pelotero. [another day, another baseball movie.]

The Gringos may have invented baseball, but we’re better at playing it.

———-

———

One of every five MLB-affiliated players, including the minor leagues, is from the Dominican Republic. Let that sink in for a second. A country with a population of just over 10 million accounts for 25% of all ballplayers in the most competitive baseball league in the world.

This insanely disproportionate number is the result of a remarkable hotbed of talent, combined with a ruthlessly efficient system created to churn out the best players for a fraction of what their market value will be stateside.

At the bottom of the system are the young players themselves.

Next are the mentors/coaches who develop the kids. They are independent contractors who train players to prepare them for MLB appraisal. These mentors work for free, and pay for equipment, travel, and other expenses, all in the hopes of a receiving a commission once a player secures a major league signing bonus. If a player doesn’t get signed, the mentor gets no return at all. Most of these men live in poverty alongside the players they’re coaching.

Next up are MLB scouts. They work for individual teams, following players closely. Their recommendations determine which players clubs offer signing bonuses, as well as where those bonuses max out.

Then, at the top, are the MLB general managers and owners. At the time this documentary was filmed, in 2010, teams competed with each other by offering large bonuses in the hopes of recruiting the best players into their minor league systems. This has since been amended. An entry draft was created for Latin American players, removing the remaining leverage from the teenagers at the bottom of the pyramid.

Pelotero is a documentary following two players, as each works to lift his family out of extreme poverty by securing a big payday from an MLB club. There’s human drama, intrigue, deceit, MLB fuckery, and some remarkable baseball along the way.

To be honest, the primary thing I come away with after watching this beautifully crafted documentary is how disgusting the wealth gap between the DR and the US is.

With millions to throw around for bonuses, the MLB could easily afford to change the lives of the a huge percentage of people in Dominican Republic. They could lift families out of poverty, pay the mentors an appropriate salary commensurate to what scouts and other player development staff get paid, and work with players from a young age to teach them to play the game. And they could do this while offering schooling, to prepare the vast majority of kids who never play pro ball for life on the other side. They could do all of that without breaking a sweat. Instead, they are constantly doing whatever they can to spend as little as possible, including some obvious collusion to make sure bonus amounts never get out of control.

If we suddenly discovered a disproportionate population of wildly talented young baseball players in North Carolina — a state with a population roughly the same size as the Dominican Republic — there would immediately be league sponsored youth academies. They would be training kids to play ball in the highest quality facilities money can buy. There would be tutors, scholarships for families who couldn’t afford equipment or travel costs, and whatever other amenities needed to help churn out as many big league prospects as possible. In the DR, people living in extreme poverty are left to fend for themselves, hoping for a winning lottery ticket. Anyone who comes close and fails, including the mentors, are left with nothing.

The world is fucked up, and entirely upside down.

Up Next: Things stay on a similar note with Sugar, a 2008 film following the journey of a young pitching prospect as he attempts to make it to the big leagues. And yes, the main character is from the Dominican Republic

more