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The Slugger's Wife

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1985 film by Hal Ashby

The Slugger's Wife
Directed byHal Ashby
Written byNeil Simon
Produced byRay Stark
StarringMichael O'Keefe
Rebecca De Mornay
Martin Ritt
Randy Quaid
Cleavant Derricks
CinematographyCaleb Deschanel
Edited byDon Brochu
George C. Villaseñor
Music byPatrick Williams
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date
  • March 29, 1985 (1985-03-29)
Running time
105 minutes
LanguageEnglish
Budget$19 million[1]
Box office$1.3 million

The Slugger's Wife is a 1985romantic comedy film about a baseball star who falls for a singer. Written byNeil Simon, directed byHal Ashby and produced byRay Stark, the film starsMichael O'Keefe,Rebecca De Mornay andRandy Quaid. It was distributed byColumbia Pictures and released on March 29, 1985.

Plot summary

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Darryl Palmer is a baseball player for theAtlanta Braves. He enjoys the fame and fringe benefits of bachelor life until he meets rock singer Debby Huston, falls in love, and decides to settle down.

Debby is not ready to put her professional hopes on hold, but from the moment Darryl meets her, his own career takes off. He seeks to breakprofessional baseball'ssingle-season home run record and considers Debby a good-luck charm, wanting her to be there at his games.

Manager Burly DeVito appreciates that Darryl has found a settling influence in his life, but teammates Moose Granger and Manny Alvarado become increasingly aware of how obsessed Darryl is with Debby and how unhappy she has become. She feels smothered by her husband, who interferes with her career ambitions and goes into a jealous funk whenever she goes on the road.

The couple breaks up, to the detriment of Darryl's game and his pursuit of one of baseball's greatest feats. He begins to fail on a regular basis and the team's playoff chances could be in jeopardy. Burly and his players concoct a plan to have another woman, hidden by shadows, pretend to be Darryl's wife, telling him everything he wants to hear. It works temporarily, then backfires.

Debby comes back to try to work things out. Darryl does indeed hit his record-breakinghome run, but whether the couple's relationship can ever be what it once was remains uncertain.

Cast

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Reception

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The Slugger's Wife was a total critical and commercial failure. The film has a 0% favorable rating on theRotten Tomatoes web site based on ten reviews.[2] Audiences polled byCinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "C-" on an A+ to F scale.[3]

A review inThe New York Times byJanet Maslin began: "It's a shock to find Neil Simon's name attached to something as resoundingly unfunny as this."[4]Roger Ebert gave the film two stars out of four and wrote that it "has a story that demands to be taken as lighthearted nonsense, and since the screenplay is by Neil Simon, we go in expecting to have a good time. But, no, Simon's not in a lighthearted mood, and so the silliness of the story gets bogged down in all sorts of gloomy neuroses, angry denunciations, and painful self-analysis."[5]Gene Siskel of theChicago Tribune also awarded two stars out of four and wrote that "we can't help but laugh at the miscasting. Simon's writing should be spoken by adults, not kids.The Slugger's Wife might have worked if the ballplayer were, say,Pete Rose's age, and his wife wasTina Turner's age, but with 20-year-old-looking stars on the screen, we have to shake our heads when listening to them discussing major lifestyle decisions."[6]Variety described the film as "about as affecting as a rock video. Despite some decent tunes and interesting performances, elements never jell."[7] Michael Wilmington of theLos Angeles Times wrote: "A movie directed by Hal Ashby shouldn't seem so frequently tame and predictable; a movie written by Neil Simon shouldn't have such sometimes sparkless dialogue."[8]Paul Attanasio ofThe Washington Post wrote: "AfterThis Is Spinal Tap and the bookBall Four, you'd hardly think you could make a dull movie about baseball, rock 'n' roll or the two together. But here is a Neil Simon movie with all of his banality, but none of his humor — a sort ofThe Nod Couple."[9]David Ansen ofNewsweek declared: "We might care if we believed in the fateful love of these two people, but this baseball player has the sensitivity of a catcher's mitt, and we only put up with him because O'Keefe is a cute kid. De Mornay is an even cuter kid, but between the two of them there's maybe 40 watts of electricity."[10]

The film was nominated for aGolden Raspberry Award for Worst Original Song for the song "Oh, Jimmy!"

According to the web site AllMovie.com, the film earned $1,300,000 in box-office receipts.

See also

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References

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  1. ^"AFI|Catalog".
  2. ^"The Slugger's Wife".Rotten Tomatoes. RetrievedMarch 31, 2019.
  3. ^The Spokesman-Review. The Spokesman-Review.
  4. ^Maslin, Janet (March 29, 1985)."Film: Neil Simon's 'Slugger's Wife'".The New York Times. RetrievedJune 29, 2015.
  5. ^Ebert, Roger (March 29, 1985)."The Slugger's Wife".RogerEbert.com. RetrievedMarch 31, 2019.
  6. ^Siskel, Gene (March 29, 1985). "As adult fare, 'Slugger's Wife' strikes out".Chicago Tribune. Section 7, page A.
  7. ^"Film reviews: The Sliugger's Wife".Variety. March 20, 1985. 12.
  8. ^Wilmington, Michael (March 29, 1985). "The Slugger's Wife: Bases Aren't Loaded for Simon and Ashby in This Unjelled Game".Los Angeles Times. Part VI, p. 1.
  9. ^Attanasio, Paul (March 30, 1985). "'Slugger': Out in Left Field".The Washington Post. G3.
  10. ^Ansen, David (April 1, 1985). "Matrimonial Slump".Newsweek. p. 87.

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