Game 6

2006 "Where were you on that night?"
5.7| 1h27m| R| en| More Info
Released: 10 March 2006 Released
Producted By: Double Play
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website: http://www.game6film.com/index.html
Synopsis

Combining real and fictional events, this movie centers around the historic 1986 World Series, and a day in the life of a playwright who skips opening night to watch the momentous game.

... View More
Stream Online

Stream with Prime Video

Director

Producted By

Double Play

AD
AD

Watch Free for 30 Days

Stream on any device, 30-day free trial Watch Now

Trailers & Images

Reviews

Wordiezett So much average
Onlinewsma Absolutely Brilliant!
Siflutter It's easily one of the freshest, sharpest and most enjoyable films of this year.
Logan By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
MBunge If the Boston Red Sox hadn't finally won the World Series in 2004, I'm pretty sure this movie would never have been made. People would have been afraid they'd get killed for dredging up the spectacular sports tragedy of the 1986 World Series and the ground ball down the first base line that crushed the soul of generations of Red Sox fans, and that's not much of an exaggeration. Boston baseball had been a tale of woe for almost 3 generations, but that game 6 really hardened the Curse of the Bambino in modern minds. Before it, Red Sox fans had their hard luck stories just like many others. After it, the dashed hopes of Boston baseball futility became an epic saga unlike anything else.While I wouldn't wish that kind of continued suffering on anyone, I also wouldn't mind if I and the rest of the viewing public could have been spared the huge waste of time that is Game 6. If their were truth in advertising laws applied to motion pictures, that's what the title of this film would have to be. "Huge Waste of Time". The only remotely entertaining parts of the whole production are watching the characters watch the final at bats of that legendary game 6. The rest of it is like bits of a New York City comic's stand up routine or the insipid ramblings of a public radio monologist. The only people in this story who have any life to them are terrifically clichéd. The others are like impervious sharks trying to swim their way through the treacle of this script.Nicky Rogan (Michael Keaton) is a successful playwright in New York with a new drama opening the same night at that fateful contest between the Red Sox and the hometown Mets. His daughter (Ari Graynor) also informs him that his wife wants a divorce, a devastated and disheveled fellow playwright (Griffin Dunne) torments him with word that a piercingly savage critic (Robert Downey Jr.) is certain to destroy the play in his review, his leading man is suffering from a memory-eating parasite and Nicky also happens to be a huge Sox fan and is filled with foreboding about the game. Well, that last one is what the audience it told. The reality is that Nicky doesn't act like someone who gives a fig for baseball or the Red Sox until they get to the part where he's in a bar watching the game with a disgustingly positive cabbie and her grandson (Lillias White and Amir Ali Said).Now, while their roles are shallow and simplistic, the cast does more than adequate work. The individual scenes on their own are tolerable. The way they're all connected, the structure of the narrative, is flat and lifeless and phony. There's a lot of little things to criticize, but let me focus on the biggest and most obvious.In the aforementioned scene with Nicky, the cabbie and her grandson, it's all about the cabbie and her grandson exhorting Nicky to give up his practiced cynicism and self-comforting doubt. They encourage him to believe in life, believe in his team and believe good things happen. And then the Red Sox lose. Now, by all rights, shouldn't the scene conclude with a gargantuan speech by Nicky where he tears both the cabbie and her son a new one for getting his hopes up? Something like that, right? Whether it's played for drama or laughs, that's the only logical conclusion there could possibly be.Well, not if you're writer Don DeLillo or director Michael Hoffman. They conclude the scene with Nicky have a hallucination that the Red Sox won, a fantasy he's not dissuaded of until after he gets into a fight with a couple of Mets fans in the bathroom. And that's exactly how it goes. Nicky has the fantasy of Buckner catching the ball and the next scene is in the bathroom where the Mets fans tell him he's dreaming. What happened to the cabbie and her grandson? How did Nicky not immediately turn to them to celebrate his delusion? How did they not tell the crazy man that his team had indeed lost? I don't know. The cabbie and her grandson vanish and are never seen or heard from again.What the hell, man? How is that sequence supposed to make any emotional or thematic sense? It's the most important scene in the movie. The three characters in it are playing out a clearly defined dynamic. Then when the climactic moment comes…it's like the cabbie and her grandson never existed and none of the things they said ever happened. That's how these storytellers handle the most crucial and significant moment in their story, so I think you can imagine what the rest of it is like.The real game 6 was one of the most searingly painful experiences ever in sports. The cinematic Game 6 is without any reality, painful or otherwise. Even if you're a big devotee of the New York theater scene, there's nothing here worth your time or trouble.
Mark Mastrogiovanni I like to think I know exactly how the character of Nicky Rogan felt. I am a young Redsox fan so thank goodness I don't have all those sour memories locked away, but I know several people who do have them hidden somewhere. Honestly, until i saw it for myself, I had very little faith in the Redsox ever winning a world series again. Anyway this film was a real joy to watch. Michael Keaton did a great job playing Nicky Rogan. As the Redsox go, so goes Nicky's entire world and that's usually how it is if you're a Redsox fan. There's an amazingly tense sequence in a New york bar toward the end of the film, so watch for that. I can't close this review without mentioning the brilliant Catherine O'Hara, who does a great job in her scene as Nicky's wife
wrlang Based on a true story, a dark and heavily emotional drama about a playwrite Nicky in 1986 NY who loves the Red Sox so much, he skips the opening night of his play to see game 6 of the 1986 world series between the Mets and the Sox. Nicky has a series of conversations with a myriad of people he knows and meets in the days leading up to game 6. They all help Nicky deal with life's stresses consisting of a particularly nasty Broadway critic who has nothing good to say about anyone and kills the careers of anyone unfortunate enough to fall under his poison pen. His impending divorce over his long affair. A major actor that is forgetting his lines due to a parasitic illness. The beginning of his estrangement of his daughter over the divorce and his neglect of their relationship. The excellent acting envelopes you as the slow and deliberate plot plays out. If quality of acting is important to you, you should see this movie.
Howardr675 I saw this movie with about 300 people as a screening for a film class. About 1/2 the audience did not like it and the other 1/2 did. Many saw it as a baseball movie. I saw it as a movie about fear of failure and the expectation of failure in life by many. I felt that the script relating the expectations of the Boston Red Sox fans who feel the curse and expect to lose was incredibly written to parallel how this can relate to the way a person visualizes his life and dreams (real or imagined). The script was brilliant, the acting was extraordinary. I don't know that this will work commercially but I was moved by this movie more than any movie I have seen in a long time. Too me, this was not a baseball movie, this was a brilliant look into the the mind of more people than we would like to believe.