Trouble with the Curve (2012)
Starring Clint Eastwood, Amy Adams, Justin Timberlake, John Goodman, Matthew Lillard, and Robert Patrick
Directed by Robert Lorenz
No one will ever mistake me for a Clint Eastwood fan. As a director, I think he's as boring as they come. As an actor, I think he can't exude any emotion beyond gruffness. Although he didn't direct Trouble with the Curve, this 2012 flick didn't do anything to change my opinion on the guy.
It should come as no surprise that Eastwood is playing a grizzled old man. In this instance, he's Gus, a long-time baseball scout for the Atlanta Braves, who finds himself heading to check out a southern high school hitting prospect. However, Gus isn't a young guy anymore and he discovers that his eyesight is making it very difficult for him to see both the pitches and the hitter's reaction to them. Gus's boss and friend Pete (John Goodman) gets in touch with Mickey (Amy Adams), Gus's daughter, and convinces her to help her father make the best of what may very well be his last scouting trip. Mickey is an aspiring attorney who is gunning for a partner position, but she obliges Pete despite the fact that her relationship with her father is somewhat strained thanks to him placing work before family through most of her childhood. It should come as no surprise that despite the tension between father and daughter, by the film's end, resolutions are made.
The biggest issue with Trouble with the Curve is that it's simply too generic to really love or hate it. There's not a thing in it that's horrible, but there's nothing in it that deserves acclaim either. Eastwood is playing the same role he plays in everything. Amy Adams is burdened with a character that is forced to change her allegiances and feelings towards her father on a dime simply to assist the storytelling. Shockingly, Justin Timberlake is actually one of the better aspects of the film even though he's just playing a token love interest. Granted, he isn't given much to do, but he shouldn't be embarrassed by his switch as of late to acting.
Ultimately, though, the film just doesn't provide any spark or substance beyond anything we've seen before. It's perfectly okay, but it's just okay. There's nothing recommendable about it, but nothing that I can say to steadfastly try and persuade you not to watch it either.
It should come as no surprise that Eastwood is playing a grizzled old man. In this instance, he's Gus, a long-time baseball scout for the Atlanta Braves, who finds himself heading to check out a southern high school hitting prospect. However, Gus isn't a young guy anymore and he discovers that his eyesight is making it very difficult for him to see both the pitches and the hitter's reaction to them. Gus's boss and friend Pete (John Goodman) gets in touch with Mickey (Amy Adams), Gus's daughter, and convinces her to help her father make the best of what may very well be his last scouting trip. Mickey is an aspiring attorney who is gunning for a partner position, but she obliges Pete despite the fact that her relationship with her father is somewhat strained thanks to him placing work before family through most of her childhood. It should come as no surprise that despite the tension between father and daughter, by the film's end, resolutions are made.
The biggest issue with Trouble with the Curve is that it's simply too generic to really love or hate it. There's not a thing in it that's horrible, but there's nothing in it that deserves acclaim either. Eastwood is playing the same role he plays in everything. Amy Adams is burdened with a character that is forced to change her allegiances and feelings towards her father on a dime simply to assist the storytelling. Shockingly, Justin Timberlake is actually one of the better aspects of the film even though he's just playing a token love interest. Granted, he isn't given much to do, but he shouldn't be embarrassed by his switch as of late to acting.
Ultimately, though, the film just doesn't provide any spark or substance beyond anything we've seen before. It's perfectly okay, but it's just okay. There's nothing recommendable about it, but nothing that I can say to steadfastly try and persuade you not to watch it either.
The RyMickey Rating: C
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