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Long Gone (film)

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Wikipedia article




'Long Gone' is a 1987 baseball film by HBO that is based on Paul Hemphill's 1979 book of the same name.Hemphill, Paul (1979). [https://books.google.com/books?id=Sm4hAQAAIAAJ&q 'Long Gone']. Published by Viking Press, New York. . . The television film was directed by Martin Davidson and starred William Petersen, Virginia Madsen, and Dermot Mulroney.Didinger, Ray and Macnow, Glen (2009, pp. 190 & 191). [https://books.google.com/books?id=iNReCd-bVlMC&pg=PA190&lpg=PA190&dq#v=onepage&q&f=false 'The Ultimate Book of Sports Movies: Featuring the 100 Greatest Sports Films']. Published by Running Press, Philadelphia. . . Historic McKechnie Field, located in Bradenton, Florida, was the location for many of the film's scenes. Outside North America, the film was released as 'Stogies'.

Plot



The Tampico Stogies are a last-place baseball team based in Tampico, Florida. The team competes in the lowest-level (Class D) professional Gulf Coast league during the summer of 1957. The team is unaffiliated with a major league franchise; so, it must sign and pay all of its own players without any financial support outside of the team's owners.

The Stogies are owned by a pair of corrupt and scheming local Tampico businessmen, Hale Buchman (Henry Gibson) and his son, Hale Buchman Jr. (Teller). They refer to themselves as sports moguls, despite the team being heavily mortgaged.

Their star player and manager is an aging Cecil "Stud" Cantrell (William Petersen), a hard-drinking, hard-playing, and hard-loving man's man of an indeterminate age nearing 40. Signed out of high school by the St. Louis Cardinals, Cantrell was a onetime rookie standout in the organization, coming up in the same group as Stan Musial, but he never made it to the big leagues because of a war injury he sustained in World War II during the Battle of Guadalcanal.

At a game against the Crestview Cats in Alabama, Cantrell meets a beautiful young woman just voted Miss Strawberry Blossom of 1957, Dixie Lee Boxx (Virginia Madsen),O'Connor, John (May 22, 1987). [https://www.nytimes.com/1987/05/22/arts/tv-weekend-long-gone-a-baseball-comedy.html TV Weekend; 'Long Gone,' A Baseball Comedy], 'The New York Times'. Retrieved June 30, 2011. botching the lyrics of the Star-Spangled Banner, but still wowing the crowd in her skimpy skin-tight outfit. What Cantrell initially intends to be a one-night stand soon develops into a semi-serious relationship.

Cantrell signs a slick-fielding but light-hitting second baseman named Jamie Weeks (Dermot Mulroney), fresh out of high school. Weeks soon falls for a virginal and church-going local girl, Esther Wrenn (Katy Boyer), who is looking to escape Tampico. Cantrell also signs a power-hitting, strong-armed catcher, Joe Brown (Larry Riley), who is African American. Because this is the Deep South during the 1950s, to keep local bigots and Ku Klux Klan off his back, Cantrell lies that Brown is a Venezuelan named Jos Luis Brown who can't speak any English.

With the addition of these new players, the Stogies go on a red-hot winning streak. On the verge of a pennant, however, Cantrell is told that throwing the big game would give a substantial boost to his sagging career. He is offered a managerial position in the minor leagues with the Cardinals organization, on the condition he does not show up for the final game. If he plays, his future managerial career is over.

Brown, poverty-stricken since childhood, is also bribed not to play (with the promise of a fancy car). The team's owners, the Buchmans, are involved in the match-fixing as well. They set up a trivial yet undeniable scandal in which Cantrell could be implicated in betting on his team's games (for $1.00 per game), giving them leverage by which they can threaten to have him suspended for life.

While the pennant-deciding game is being played at Tampico, Cantrell and Brown meet at a local bar where they discuss their moral and ethical dilemmas. Brown erupts in anger, smashing his new car with his baseball bat.

They elect to hurry to the park and play, much to the anger and regret of the owners. Cantrell instructs the PA announcer to introduce Brown by his actual name, Joe Louis Brown.

Cast



Reception and home media



Released in 1987 by HBO, 'Long Gone' is a little-known and difficult-to-obtain film which has become somewhat of a sports cult film. It has been described as "three parts 'Bull Durham', two parts 'Slap Shot', add a dose of 'Bingo Long' and a pinch of 'The Longest Yard'". It has also been described as the best baseball movie most of you never saw.Jones, Joseph (March 28, 2011). [http://bleacherreport.com/articles/647819-hbos-long-gone-the-best-baseball-movie-most-of-you-never-saw HBO's "Long Gone", The Best Baseball Movie Most of You Never Saw]. 'Bleacher Report'. Retrieved June 30, 2011.

A book, 'The Baseball Filmography, 1915 Through 2001', described 'Long Gone' as one of the most thoroughly enjoyable baseball comedies made in the last two decades.Erickson, Hal (2002, p. 294). [https://books.google.com/books?id=HuBkAAAAMAAJ&q 'The baseball filmography, 1915 through 2001']. Published by McFarland, N.C. . . Robert Creamer, a writer for 'Sports Illustrated', wrote that it was probably the best made-for-television movie he had ever seen.Creamer, Robert (June 1, 1987). [http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1066034/index.htm Low Minors, High Style]. 'SI Vault'. Retrieved June 30, 2011.

John O'Connor, a writer for 'The New York Times', wrote that 'Long Gone' makes classics such as 'The Pride of the Yankees' look like promotional fantasies. The 'Bleacher Report' wrote that this film deserves to be included in anyone's collection of baseball features. 'Newsday' called it one of the best sports movies ever made.Holston, Noel (June 25, 2005). [http://www.newsday.com/entertainment/fanfare/holston-10-1.635983 Holston 10]. 'Newsday'. Retrieved July 5, 2011. 'Long Gone' was ranked 50th in 'The Ultimate Book of Sports Movies: Featuring the 100 Greatest Sports Films'. It also rated a mention in another book, 'The Great Baseball Films', which stated 'Long Gone' was an above-average comedy-drama that is full of bite, grit, and good feelings.Edelman, Rob (1994, p. 111). [https://books.google.com/books?id=MPwHAQAAMAAJ&q 'The great baseball films: from right off the bat to a league of their own']. Published by Carol Pub, N.J. . .

'Long Gone' was released on VHS and laserdisc by Lorimar Home Video. In 1994, Warner Home Video re-reissued it on VHS. However, 'Long Gone' has never been released on DVD, Blu-ray or on any streaming platform (as of May 2021).

Awards



* Director Martin Davidson won an ACE Award for the film under the category, Writing award for Biography.

References




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