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The Natural (1984)
Front Cover Actor Back Cover
Kim Basinger Memo Paris
Wilford Brimley Pop Fisher
Glenn Close Iris Gaines
Joe Don Baker The Whammer
Robert Duvall Max Mercy
Richard Farnsworth Red Blow
John Finnegan Sam Simpson
Barbara Hershey Harriet Bird
Robert Prosky The Judge
Robert Redford Roy Hobbs
Movie Details
Genre Drama
Director Barry Levinson
Producer Mark Johnson
Writer Phil Dusenberry; Roger Towne
Studio Columbia / TriStar
Language English
Audience Rating PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Running Time 134 mins
Country USA
Color Color
IMDb Rating 7.4
Plot
Boyhood dreams, a bat made from a tree struck by lightning and most importantly, a never-ending passion for the game.

The film version of The Natural pulls off the neat trick of conveying the spirit of the Bernard Malamud novel upon which it is based, even while changing both the outcome and the meaning of Malamud's closing chapters. In his first film appearance in four years, Robert Redford plays Roy Hobbs, a farm boy with a hankering to be a great baseball player. With his faithful homemade bat "Wonderboy" in hand, Roy heads to the big city. En route, he arouses the fascination of the mysterious Harriet Bird (Barbara Hershey). Luring the boy to a hotel room, Harriet asks Roy what he wants out of life. Roy brashly responds he wants to be "the best there is"-whereupon Harriet whips out a gun and shoots Roy down. Sixteen years later, a humbler Roy Hobbs emerges from the bush leagues to become a 35-year-old "rookie" on the 1939 lineup of the New York Knights. He soon becomes the team's star player, and in so doing once more attracts an enigmatic woman: Memo Paris (Kim Basinger), the glamorous niece of the Knights' manager Pop Fisher (Wilford Brimley) and the mistress of Rothstein-like gambler Gus Sands (a curiously unbilled Darren McGavin). Roy's fascination with Memo compromises his ability to play, but this time he finds salvation in the form the angelic Iris Gaines (Glenn Close), his childhood sweetheart. From this point forward, the script for The Natural bears very little resemblance to the Malamud original. Without giving anything away, we can say that Roy Hobbs is given a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to compensate for the mistakes of his youth, despite the demonic intrusion of inexplicably spiteful sports writer Max Mercy (Robert Duvall). The Natural elevates the art of slow-motion photography to new heights; while this technique would become precious and boring in later baseball films, it works beautifully here, as does the decision by director Barry Levinson and cinematographer Caleb Deschanel to convey the symbolism inherent in the story in purely visual rather than blatantly verbal terms (if the characters told you that the story was a retelling of the "Camelot" legend in baseball terms, would you have watched?) Another plus is the pastoral theme music by Randy Newman, which has been well utilized on sports broadcasts and "human interest" TV documentaries ever since. Trivia note: The baseball scenes in The Natural were staged at War Memorial Stadium in Buffalo, New York. — Hal Erickson
Personal Details
Seen It Yes
Index 162
Collection Status In Collection
Links Amazon US
All Movie Guide
DVD Empire
Atlantic DVD
Product Details
Format DVD
Region Region 1
Screen Ratio Widescreen 1.85:1 Color (Anamorphic)
Layers Single Side, Dual Layer
UPC (Barcode) 043396046092
Chapters 28
Release Date 4/6/2004
Subtitles Chinese; English; French; Korean; Portuguese; Spanish; Thai
Packaging Keep Case
Audio Tracks ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 4.0 [CC]
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Surround [CC]
FRENCH: Dolby Digital Stereo
PORTUGUESE: Dolby Digital Stereo
SPANISH: Dolby Digital Stereo
Nr of Disks/Tapes 1
Extra Features
Color Closed-captioned Dolby Widescreen
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