I Watched Every Baseball Movie and Ranked Them by How Well the Actors Played Baseball

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Published 2023-03-02

All Comments (21)
  • As someone with Asperger’s, I had no idea I could throw 100 mph; I’ve topped out at Tim Wakefield’s late-career heater, so clearly I’ve been misdiagnosed for the past 16 years
  • I was an extra in Moneyball, and it was actually surprisingly dark during filming. Filming took place at the Oakland Coliseum 9pm to 5am. Maybe it was a city ordinance due to the hours filming took place, but only a few of the stadium lights were on. Other unrelated details: 1. It was COLD! We weren’t allowed to walk around, so having to stand/sit in one spot for hours made it worse. 2. Catering was actually just Coliseum food (which was awful) 3. There was a prop churro that obviously wasn’t seen on screen, but yes… there was a food vendor in the stands twirling a rubber churro between takes. 4. There was a standup comic doing his best to keep the extras upbeat during the shoot. It was cold, food sucked and filming is already tedious as is. He did a surprisingly good job. 5. Brad Pitt wasn’t a part of the shoot, but he was still there on-set for the first few hours in his normal clothes occasionally being social with extras. 6. This is gonna sound like BS, but I got to high-five Chris Pratt several times. One of the shots was him leaving the dugout heading towards the tunnel to the clubhouse. These are exposed walkways at the Coliseum. We high-fived in the first take and they wanted us to keep doing it for a few more takes. 7. The closest I got to being visible on screen was in a shot where Jonah Hill is in the stands and he stands up to react to something happening on the field. I was one row up, and one seat diagonal to him. However the shot was framed tight and alas… it was my Moonlight Graham moment.
  • Moneyball being dark during gameplay was one of my favorite choices in any baseball movie. You’re getting in the mind of the players being shown. Baseball players mention everything else being drowned out and being locked in. Looks as if they’re more on a stage. The baseball vernacular was great, and as someone who grew up in the bay they really nailed what the colosseum was like in those years.
  • @zacharyscott6779
    I f-ing LOVE that of all movies, the Naked Gun is a respectful in how they portrayed baseball. Theres a reason its one of the finest works of art in cinematic history. 😂
  • @luckylag360
    I watched an hour of this only for you to put airbud as #1 unbelievable finally someone gives it the recognition it deserves as a truly accurate and realistic baseball movie.
  • @bmac4
    I'm laughing at Ken Griffey Jr being the bad guy considering he might be one of the most beloved players of all time
  • @billcook4768
    Never in history has anybody put in this much work to set up a joke. Well played sir, well played.
  • The fact that Little Big League is so high up there is amazing to me! It was my favorite movie growing up as a kid in Seattle because getting to see Lou, Ken, and Randy on film was mind blowing! Amazing content throughout this video! Thanks for making this video!
  • I understand they're disqualified because of players age, but The Sandlot and origional B.N. Bears deserve honerable mention for capturing the joy of baseball as a kid. My first little leauge team was all 1st & 2nd year players - we won a single game that season...4 years later - with almost all the same kids - we won the championship.
  • You're legitimately hilarious. I spent the entirety of the Bull Durham segment, racking my brain to guess what you had as No.1... 😂
  • @macsenplays
    The stretch of time from 1988 (Bull Durham) through 1994 (remake of Angels in the Outfield) was truly a golden age in baseball and baseball-themed films.
  • The original “Bad News Bears” was always my favorite, most realistic and believable. The first 5 minutes immediately takes me back to the T-Ball, little league and Pony league years. Great flick.
  • @Nhamp2000
    The reason that Bull Durham was so realistic is because Ron Shelton (writer-director) played minor league baseball. You hit on one of my favorite points in the movie; how cruel baseball can be. Crash Davis, a switch-hitting catcher with power could never break through for more than those three glorious weeks. I loved his speech on the bus about how Nuke didn't respect the game despite the fact that The Gods gave him a thunderbolt for a right arm. Crash was a guy who loved the game that didn't love him back. I also like that his record-breaking home run wasn't a big dramatic moment to win a big game. It went out of the park and into obscurity. Ron Shelton had a great line about the theme of baseball in the movie: careers don't end with game-winning home runs, they end on two-hoppers to second base.
  • My grandfather's brothers bestie was actually a grounds keeper for the Yankees back in the day around that time frame. Wetting the fields was not a thing until somewhere in the mid 20's. It actually became a thing because someone who was a grounds keeper for a different organization got fired and decided to spray a field before game play out of spite and it actually made the play better. My grandpa always told me it was the chocolate chip story of baseball. Commenting on your debate for dust accuracy.
  • @c-puff
    Watching this as someone who doesn't have baseball as a sport in my country, nor do I have a particular interest in it as a sport, but I'm a BIG fan of anime and movies about Baseball. So getting this video recommended to me was like striking gold. Don't know if you'd ever consider looking at different baseball anime since I imagine that is way out of your line of interest and watching series is a bit more intensive than watching a bunch of movies, but genuinely thanks for the list! I always love finding niche-ish topics covered by passionate people.
  • @youngjackieboy
    Air bud at the end had me wheezing bro LMFAO great vid keep it up
  • @andyf7027
    That line drive by Liotta in field of dreams actually happened and was not a choreographed stunt as you assumed, which is why Costner's reaction is so good, and he managed to stay in character
  • @hardyworld
    Glad to see Little Big League up so high. When I watched it as a kid, I loved that it actually looked like MLB gameplay (unlike Rookie of the Year). Thanks for putting this together, it has always been something I wondered in the back of my mind how well movies depict actual baseball.
  • @Recluse_Flys
    Ahh man it tore me open when I got brought back to Angel's in the Outfield and lost it when Rookie of the year was right after. My grandma introduced me to both and watching little league games was probably her favorite thing ever. She was an amazing lady and I'll never forget her.
  • @cowhand6112
    Excellent job of staying on point about the baseball quality and I appreciate your work in looking at so many of the details (Chapel's ERA for instance).