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The Perfect Gameby
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The Perfect Game Quotes Showing 1-30 of 65
“It's not that I can't live without you; it's that I don't want to. There's a difference. We all make choices in life and I choose you.
My heart belongs to you. And I'm not asking for it back, even if you won't want it anymore. I'm just asking for a chance to have your again. I promise I'll be more careful with it this time.”
tags: chance, choice, heart, love, mature-ya, promise
“Our scars don't point us in the direction were headed, Cass, they simply remind us of where we've been”
“There will come a time in your life when you lose something that matters to you. You'll fight for it and you won't win. But what really matters isn't the war you're waging, it's that you don't lose the person you are in the midst of the battle.”
tags: battle, fight, insparation, lose, mature-ya, wisdom
“Sometimes letting go is the only way to find out who you're meant to hold on to.”
“You're both so screwed up alone that together you're like the perfect mess.”
“Letting go of someone who owns your heart is hard. Sometimes holding on to that person is even harder. I know I'm not the easiest person to love, but you are.”
“Watching the two of you interact, it was like watching fireworks light up the night sky. You two burn brighter when you're together.”
“We're all scarred. That's how we know we've lived a life worth fighting for. Love is a battlefield! Thank you, Pat Benatar!”
“Have you ever noticed how pretty and beautiful words can be? How easy it is to say the things you think someone wants to hear. How you can affect a person’s entire day with just a few measly sentences?”
“Kitten,
Letting go of someone who owns your heart is hard.
Sometimes holding on to that person is even harder. I
know I'm not the easiest person to love, but you are.
I'ts not that I can't live without you; it's that I don't want to. There's a difference. We all make choices in life and I choose you.
My heart belongs to you. And I'm not asking for it back, even if you don't want it anymore. I'm just asking for the chance to have yours again. I promise I'll be more careful with it this time.
Love Always,
Jack”
“Sometimes life gets ugly before it gets beautiful”
“I was one hundred percent not in control of this situation. This girl fucking owned me right now. I sat on that bed waiting for her to give me the time of day. I didn't necessarily like this feeling, but I suffered through it... for her. I convinced myself that I'd probably suffer through pretty much anything for this girl.”
“No relationship can survive without trust, honesty, and communication, no matter how close you are.”
“Cassie's Rules for a Happy Life:
#1 - Don't Lie
#2 - Don't Cheat
#3 - Don't Make Promises You Can't Keep
#4 - Don't Say Things You Don't Mean”
“My head questions everything and believes nothing.'
'So your head wants proof and your heart wants reassurance?”
“This doesn't change anything,' I stammered, my defenses fading.
'It changes everything.' He sounded so sure of himself as his soft lips silenced my weak protest.”
“That anyone could father a child, but a real man chooses to be a dad.”
“I know that. But here's the thing about baseball, Kitten. There's an expiration date for every single one of us who plays and we all know it. Eventually my baseball career will come to an end, and I can live with that. But I can't live without you.”
“Because once you give your body to a guy, there's no taking it back. And once you've done that it opens up feelings, emotions and vulnerabilities you never knew you were capable of having. I'm not ready to give him my heart. What if he breaks it?”
“I am so fucking in love with you I can't see straight. I don't love her. I'll never love her. But I fucked up and now I have to pay for it. I'll never forgive myself for hurting you,' he said. 'Or losing you.”
“I know I'm not the easiest person to love, but you are.”
“I changed my mind. Get out of my house now. I'll set your things on fire and mail you the ashes.”
“I looked into his eyes and then down at his mouth before continuing. “Have you ever noticed how pretty and beautiful words can be? How easy it is to say the things you think someone wants to hear. How you can affect a person’s entire day with just a few measly sentences?”My slight smile dropped. “But when you don’t follow them up with any action, they’re completely pointless. They’re just sounds and syllables. But they mean absolutely nothing.” My gaze glossed over as my mind wandered.”
“Oh my God, you feel incredible.' He breathed heavily against my ear. 'Holy shit, I may never recover from this.”
“And I know that the past version of me is someone you would never trust. But who I am when I’m with you” he paused, “isn’t who I used to be. I don’t think I’ve been that guy since the night of our first date, so it’s not fair that you judge me like I’m still him.”
“Kitten, I’d break my fucking pitching arm if it meant keeping you safe.”
“Jack: I’m going to kiss you.
Cassie: This doesn’t change anything
Jack: It changes everything.
Cassie: Prove it.”

All Quotes
Quotes By J. Sterling

For Love of the Game
Directed bySam Raimi
Produced byAmy Robinson
Screenplay byDana Stevens
Based onFor Love of the Game
by Michael Shaara
Starring
Music byBasil Poledouris
CinematographyJohn Bailey
Edited by
Production
companies
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
  • September 17, 1999
138 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$50 million[2]
Box office$46.1 million[3]

For Love of the Game (sometimes misconstrued as For the Love of the Game) is a 1999 American sportsdrama film directed by Sam Raimi and written by Dana Stevens based on Michael Shaara's novel of the same title. Starring Kevin Costner and Kelly Preston, it follows the perfect game performance of an aging star baseball pitcher, Billy Chapel, as he deals with the pressures of pitching in Yankee Stadium in his final outing by calming himself with memories about a long term relationship with Jane Aubrey.

The play-by-play of the game is announced by longtime Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers baseball broadcaster Vin Scully, who himself has called four perfect games in his career, and Steve Lyons.

The film received mixed to negative reviews from critics with major criticism drawn towards Costner's performance bringing him a nomination for the Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Actor and was a box office bomb grossing $46.1 million against a $50 million production budget.

  • 4Reception

Plot[edit]

The Detroit Tigers travel to New York to play a season-ending series against the New York Yankees. At 63–97, the team has long since been eliminated from playoff contention and are playing for nothing but pride against the Yankees, who have a chance to clinch the American League East with a win. For 40-year-old pitcher Billy Chapel, however, this may end up being the most significant 24 hours of his life.

In his Manhattan hotel suite, Billy awaits his girlfriend Jane Aubrey, but she doesn't show. Jane is also a single mother with a teenage daughter Heather that Billy got to know. The next morning, Billy is told by Tigers' owner Gary Wheeler that the team has been sold and that the new owners' first move will be to end Billy's 19-year tenure with the Tigers by trading him to the San Francisco Giants. Billy also learns from Jane that she is leaving that same day to accept a job offer in London.

Billy is a famous, accomplished pitcher, but has a losing record this season, is near the end of his career and is also recovering from a hand injury. Wheeler hints that Billy should consider retiring rather than join another team. As he goes to Yankee Stadium to make his last start of the year, Billy begins reflecting about Jane, detailing how they met five years prior. These flashbacks are interspersed within the game, along with glimpses of Jane watching the game on a television at the airport.

As the game progresses, with friend and catcher Gus Sinski aware that something is on Billy's mind other than baseball, Billy dominates the Yankees' batters, often talking to himself on how to pitch each one. While in the dugout resting between innings, Billy also reflects how his relationship with Jane was strained by his shutting her out of his life after he suffered a career-threatening injury in the off-season. The pain of pitching is getting worse as the game goes on.

Billy is so caught up in his thoughts that he does not realize he is pitching a perfect game until he looks at the scoreboard in the bottom of the eighth inning. Gus confirms that no one has reached base, and says that the whole team is rallying behind Billy to do whatever it takes to keep the perfect game bid alive. Billy's shoulder pain has become intense by this point, and after he throws his first two pitches of the inning well out of the strike zone, Tigers manager Frank Perry makes the call to warm up two relief pitchers in the bullpen. The count goes to 3–0 before Billy recalls pitching to his father (now deceased) in the back yard. He rallies and throws a strike, then gets the batter out on the next pitch.

Before the Tigers take the field for the bottom of the ninth inning, Billy has final ruminations about his career and his love for Jane. He autographs a baseball for Wheeler, who has been like a father to him for many years. Along with a signature at the end, Billy inscribes the ball with 'Tell them I'm through. For love of the game.'

After finishing the perfect game, Billy sits alone in his hotel room as the realization sinks in that everything he has been and done for the past 19 years is over. Despite his amazing accomplishment, Billy weeps not only for the loss of baseball, but for the other love of his life, Jane.

The next morning, Billy goes to the airport to inquire about a flight for London. Jane had missed her flight the night before so she could watch the end of his perfect game. Finding her there waiting for her plane, they embrace and reconcile.

Cast[edit]

  • Kevin Costner as Billy Chapel
  • Kelly Preston as Jane Aubrey
  • John C. Reilly as Gus Sinski
  • Jena Malone as Heather Aubrey
  • Vin Scully as himself
  • Steve Lyons as himself
  • Brian Cox as Gary Wheeler
  • J. K. Simmons as Frank Perry
  • Michael Papajohn as Sam Tuttle
  • William Newman as Fitch
  • Bill E. Rogers as Davis Burch
  • Bob Sheppard as himself
  • Daniel Dae Kim as E.R. Doctor
  • Greer Barnes as Mickey Hart
  • Larry Joshua as Yankee fan in bar

The pitching coach who prepared Costner for this role was former New York Yankees/Milwaukee Brewers middle reliever, Mike Buddie. Buddie also had a small speaking role in the film as the character Jack Spellman, the starting pitcher for the Yankees.

The Yankees manager is played by Augie Garrido, former head coach of the University of TexasLonghorns. Garrido is the former head baseball coach of California State University Fullerton, which is Costner's alma mater.

Fact vs. fiction[edit]

  • In the opening credits, a newspaper headline says that 'Billy Chapel dominates Game 1 of the 1984 World Series'. In real life the starting pitcher of game one for the Tigers was Jack Morris.[4]
  • No Tigers pitcher has ever pitched a perfect game.[5][6]
  • Although filming took place prior to the 1999 season, the movie correctly picked the Yankees to win the division with the Boston Red Sox in second place (although in reality, the race was over before the final day). The movie also nearly correctly determined the Tigers' final record of 69–92. In the movie, the Tigers record is 64–97, with one game to play.
  • In the next to the last game of the actual 1999 season, the Tigers were playing in Kansas City against the Royals. The Tigers lost 9–5.[7]
  • In the scene where Billy first meets Jane in New York in 1994, she makes a reference that summer was over and that she had missed it. The only games that the Tigers played in New York that season were in April,[8] due to the 1994–95 Major League Baseball strike.
  • In the film, fictional Tigers outfielder Mickey Hart makes a great catch in the 8th inning to keep Billy's perfect game alive. This is redemption for Hart, as earlier in the film there is a flashback to an embarrassing play where a fly ball bounced off his head and over the outfield wall for a home run. The humorous play was said to have defined his career to that point. The play is nearly identical to one that occurred in the 1993 Major League Baseball season, to then Texas Rangers outfielder Jose Canseco.[9] However, both plays occurred in different stadia. Hart's play was at the Green Monster (left field) of Fenway Park. Canseco's was at right center gap ofAstrodome. Also: In the film, there is an inflieder called Bobby Witt that plays for the Tigers, but a different Bobby Witt was present when Canseco conceded his blooper home run. Witt was the pitcher for Texas Rangers.
  • In reality, baseball players that have spent 10 years in the major leagues and their last 5 years with the same team have the right to block any trade. As Chapel had spent 18+ years with the Tigers, he could have refused a trade if he chose.[10]

Reception[edit]

Critical response[edit]

The film received mixed reviews from critics. For Love of the Game has a 45% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 93 reviews.[11] In Roger Ebert's review, he gave the film 1 and a half stars out of 4 writing, 'For Love of the Game' is about the kinds of people who give the wrong answers. It's the most lugubrious and soppy love story in many a moon, a step backward for director Sam Raimi after A Simple Plan, and yet another movie in which Kevin Costner plays a character who has all the right window dressing but is neither juicy nor interesting.'[12]

Box office[edit]

The film opened at #2 with a weekend gross of $13,041,685 from 2,829 theaters for a per venue average of $7,023.[13] Ultimately, For Love of the Game grossed only $35,188,640 domestically and an additional $10,924,000 overseas to a total of $46,112,640 worldwide. Based on an estimated $50 million budget, the film was a box office bomb.[3]

Accolades[edit]

Costner earned a Golden Raspberry Award nomination as Worst Actor for his performance.

Awards
AwardYearCategoryRecipients and nomineesResult
Blockbuster Entertainment AwardsMay 9, 2000Favorite Supporting Actress – Drama/RomanceJena MaloneNominated
Motion Picture Sound EditorsMarch 25, 2000Best Sound Editing – Dialogue & ADRKelly Cabral, Wylie Stateman, Jennifer L. Mann, Lauren Stephens, Richard Dwan Jr., Elizabeth Kenton, Chris Hogan, Dan Hegeman, Constance A. KazmerNominated
Razzie AwardsMarch 25, 2000Worst ActorKevin CostnerNominated
Young Artist AwardsMarch 19, 2000Best Family Feature Film – DramaNominated
Best Performance in a Feature Film – Supporting Young ActressJena MaloneNominated
YoungStar AwardsNovember 19, 2000Best Young Actress/Performance in a Motion Picture DramaJena MaloneNominated

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^'FOR LOVE OF THE GAME (12)'. British Board of Film Classification. November 8, 1999. Retrieved January 9, 2016.
  2. ^http://www.the-numbers.com/movie/For-Love-of-the-Game
  3. ^ ab'For Love of the Game (1998)'. Box Office Mojo. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved January 9, 2016.
  4. ^'1984 World Series - Detroit Tigers over San Diego Padres (4-1) - Baseball-Reference.com'. baseball-reference.com. Retrieved June 10, 2014.
  5. ^'Cleveland Indians vs. Detroit Tigers - Recap - June 02, 2010 - ESPN'. scores.espn.go.com. Retrieved June 10, 2014.
  6. ^Although no Tigers pitcher has officially thrown a perfect game, on June 2 2010, Armando Galarraga had retired 26 Cleveland Indian batters in a row before Cleveland shortstop Jason Donald hit a ground ball to Tiger first baseman Miguel Cabrera. Galarraga went to 'cover' first base and take an underhanded throw from Cabrera to record the out. But, first base umpire Jim Joyce called Donald safe. After the game, when the media showed Joyce the replay, Joyce, on the verge of tears, admitted that he took a perfect game away from Galarraga and he thought that Donald had beat the throw. The next night, with Joyce working behind the plate, Galarraga brought out the Tigers' lineup card and the two men hugged again (they had the night before). That play and several others provided the impetus for Major League Baseball to expand its replay system in 2014. Detroit Tigers' Justin Verlander tosses second career no-hitter in win over Blue Jays MLive.com May 7, 2011
  7. ^'The 1999 Detroit Tigers Game Log'. retrosheet.org. Retrieved June 10, 2014.
  8. ^'The 1994 Detroit Tigers Game Log'. retrosheet.org. Retrieved June 10, 2014.
  9. ^20th anniversary: homer off Jose Canseco’s head Jaffe, Chris at hardballtimes.com on May 26, 2013. Retrieved August 20, 2013.
  10. ^http://m.mlb.com/glossary/transactions/10-and-5-rights
  11. ^'For Love of the Game (1999)'. rottentomatoes.com. Retrieved September 4, 2010.
  12. ^'For Love Of The Game (PG-13)'. rogerebert.suntimes.com. September 17, 1999. Retrieved September 4, 2010.
  13. ^Natale, Richard (September 20, 1999). 'Comedy 'Blue Streak' Is Off and Running at No. 1; Box Office: Costner's 'Game' takes second spot; low-budget 'Beauty' enjoys strong opening weekend'. The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved December 26, 2010.

External links[edit]

Wikiquote has quotations related to: For Love of the Game (film)
  • For Love of the Game on IMDb
  • For Love of the Game at Box Office Mojo
  • For Love of the Game at Rotten Tomatoes
  • For Love of the Game at Metacritic
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