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Game 6

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Game 6 (2006)

March. 10,2006
|
5.7
|
R
| Drama Comedy
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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.

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Moustroll
2006/03/10

Good movie but grossly overrated

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filippaberry84
2006/03/11

I think this is a new genre that they're all sort of working their way through it and haven't got all the kinks worked out yet but it's a genre that works for me.

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Neive Bellamy
2006/03/12

Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.

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Ariella Broughton
2006/03/13

It is neither dumb nor smart enough to be fun, and spends way too much time with its boring human characters.

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adonis98-743-186503
2006/03/14

Combining real and fictional events, Game 6 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. Both Michael Keaton and Robert Downey Jr are very talented when it comes to superhero movies but that's about it because Game 6 is full of weird stuff, terrible acting and basically a plot and pacing that it's just boring the whole film is basically about Keaton a playwright that wants to see the 1986 World Series and Downey Junior's career was still in trouble back then and it's easy to see why to be honest this isn't just a bad film but it's also a boring one too.

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cadmandu
2006/03/15

Nicky is a successful playwright in New York City. He's got a new play about to open, a marriage that's shaky, and a theatre critic who is gunning for him. This all takes place at the time of the World Series in which Boston is playing New York. Nicky is a life-long fan of the ill-fated Red Sox.This is a kind of quirky indie-type film. It has some James Toback flavor to it, and not just because of Robert Downey Jr. What I enjoyed most about this film is Michael Keaton's performance. As noted above, he took the role for a hundred bucks a day, which does not surprise me. It's a plum role, and he's obviously enjoying every minute of it. This is really a film about his character. Robert Downey looks about as bored as I've ever seen him on screen, which is saying a lot, but his character is --like most of the supporting roles -- under-developed, and not much to get excited about.The only decent supporting role in this one is the Elliot Litvak character, and to some extent Nicky's father.So if you're up for a few laughs (we're talking mild humor here) with a thin plot, and good acting at the top, this is a worthwhile experience.

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george.schmidt
2006/03/16

GAME 6 (2006) *** Michael Keaton, Robert Downey, Jr., Bebe Neuwirth, Griffin Dunne, Catherine O'Hara, Harris Yulin, Tom Aldredge, Ari Graynor, Roger Rees, Shalom Harlow, Lillias White. (Dir: Michael Hoffman)"There's no crying in baseball! : Keaton shines in his love of the game turnMichael Keaton is one of my favorite (and largely underrated) actors. He hasn't been making a lot of films in the past few years but whenever he pops up you immediately are focused on his kinetic energy, the arched eyebrows not unlike Nicholson's (side note: I always thought it was divine intervention when they were cast in BATMAN since they had so many mirror image physical ties!) and glib, self-deprecating wit that acts as a shield from his inner demons his characters often try to keep at bay. His latest is no exception.Based on a story by acclaimed author Don DeLillo (who adapted the screenplay), Keaton stars as a New York bred playwright who's latest work is to dawn on the fated October 1986 evening of the World Series where his beloved Boston Red Sox' lifetime curse gets re-enforced by the infamous ball-between first baseman Bill Buckner's legs.But I'm getting ahead of myself.Nicky Rogan (Keaton) is facing many cross-roads: his new play is about to premiere on Broadway but Rogan's dilemma is whether to avoid the possible public crucifixion by the notorious critic Steven Schwimmer (Downey in a wonderfully daffy turn) whose perchance for theatricality (he attends his works in masquerade since he has been virtually vilified by all who know him) sharpening his fangs to sink into his baby or watch the drama unfolding of his aforementioned team in the defining moment of baseball. Along the way he is avoiding his family, namely his wife Lillian (the equally gifted O'Hara) who is requesting a divorce and their teenage daughter Laurel (a great Graynor) whose dabbling into the punk era underscores her dad's rebellious nature in namely a heated affair with Joanna Bourne (a nubile Neuwirth) who is also giving Nicky an ultimatum. To make matters worse he runs into an old colleague, Elliot Litvak (an unkempt and funny Dunne) who is downward spiraling fast after a devastating debacle in the form of his last attempt at a play that was skewered by the hated Schwimmer to the point Litvak can quote chapter and verse of the bilious critique that has him fixated to the extent of dementia. Nicky grows increasingly wearier as the day becomes night and after a short visit with his father ("The Sopranos" ' Aldredge) figures to ditch the premiere after all (especially when his leading man - the always welcome vet Yulin - whose addled brain can't get its grasp on a key line reading) and ducks into a local bar to add insult to injury and watch with melodramatic hubris his beloved Sox get theirs.Filmmaker Hoffman does a yeoman-like job in getting fine quality performances from his gifted ensemble and in his star, Keaton gets a few juicy yet low-key turns as well balancing the tension that is leading to a possible fall-out. Smartly shot on location in Manhattan the city acts as a character as it normally does providing just enough backdrop to its proceedings at hand.DeLillo has a fine gift for his literations and the parallel of Nicky's play - a quasi-autobiography about his relationship with his working class dad - with Nicky's family life shows a man, flawed, yet genuinely wanting to make things work. The same can be said of this little gem of a film.

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jhilley
2006/03/17

Really enjoyed this "New York" film ... Keaton and Downey were great ... good music... craziness all around ... Bebe Neuworth was completely over the top. Super New York City shots recreating the grit and graffiti of '86 that have pretty much disappeared. One of the best features is the background monologue by a fictitious radio announcer that is heard throughout... great language... DeLillo! Also the moments of the game interspersed with the ongoing narrative were well done. I'm not a big baseball fan and wasn't much aware of the 1986 series (even though I live in New York) but I found the game sequences fun and exciting. Saw this at a pre-screening (opening March 10 in NYC)with a Q&A afterward and was amazed at the LOW cost to make the film. The producer (who also produced After Hours )indicated that most people worked for practically nothing... It isn't a 'perfect' film but I would highly recommend it as a totally entertaining two hours.

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