Ray Charles Video:

Reel Baseball The Busher/Heading Home Shorts



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Ray Charles Video:
Reel Baseball The Busher/Heading Home Shorts



Video
Reel Baseball (The Busher/Heading Home + Shorts)
Reel Baseball (The Busher/Heading Home + Shorts)
List Price: $29.95Label: Kino Video

Salesrank: 45356

Released: April 3, 2007
Our Price: $19.01
Used Price: $12.31
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • Closed-captioned
  • DVD
  • Original recording remastered
  • NTSC
  • Editorial Review:
    Studio: Kino International Release Date: 04/03/2007

    Description of Reel Baseball (The Busher/Heading Home + Shorts):
    Reel Baseball is an outstanding collection from Kino of baseball-themed films from the silent era of American cinema. The two-disc set is anchored by an unexpected and enjoyable 1920 feature, "Headin' Home," starring a boyish and slender Babe Ruth in a silly but vibrant piece of fiction about the roots of the legendary player. Portrayed as a hayseed essentially waiting to be discovered, Ruth never looked or performed (as an actor) better than in this expertly paced farce. He re-tools his own legend, playing some version of himself as a rough diamond recruited into playing against his own hometown team and doing well enough to be nearly lynched. The other long production here is the ambitious "The Busher," from 1919, starring Charles Ray as another rural talent fetched up by a visiting team and spat out when he can’t get his head in a big league game. Roaming anonymously in the aftermath of his failure, Ray’s character comes home ragged and beaten, but baseball has a way of extending opportunities for redemption.

    Elsewhere in the collection are a number of short pieces, some of them fragments or excerpts, others complete. Among the highlights is a wonderful Felix the Cat cartoon, "Felix Saves the Day," a funny, mixed-media work in which the darkly mischievous Felix proves an adept pitcher and hitter in street games, then loses a valuable teammate when the latter is thrown in jail. For all its relative simplicity, there are some surprising and delightful moments, including a hilarious chase scene in which animated characters are running amok over real-world buildings somehow excerpted from a photograph. "Kinogram" is a one-minute, undated strip of footage of Ruth in his Yankees uniform. "His Last Game" is an amusing if somewhat tawdry comedy from 1909, about an Indian pitcher trying to resist the temptations of demon alcohol, bribes, and gambling prior to a big game. "The Ball Player and the Bandit," from 1912, is directed by Francis Ford and is a slightly convoluted tale about a ball player who refuses to carry a gun while working as a paymaster out west. The oldest film segment here, the 1899 "Casey at the Bat or The Fate of a ‘Rotten’ Umpire," is a fascinating few seconds of a home plate brawl from a larger project. Another "Casey at the Bat," from 1922, is simply a showcase for actor De Wolf Hopper to recite—as he did for years—the famous, eponymous poem. Finally, "Butter Fingers" is an irresistible, Mack Sennett comedy starring Billy Bevan as a loutish pitcher with some magic hands but bad judgement when it comes to wooing the ladies. --Tom Keogh

    Reel Baseball (The Busher/Heading Home + Shorts) Reviews:
    Truthfully You'll Need To Be Attracted By Something Other Than These Scalpel-Thin Plots 3 Star Review
    2007-10-20 - Contrary to what most people today might think, there are many great silent movies collected together on DVD, but Reel Baseball is not one of them. The Busher is pretty bad as a movie, and loveable fat comic John Bunny (killed in part by his chronic obesity shortly after making the film) is unable to salvage much from his performance as a shameless gold digger in 1914's Hearts and Diamonds. Home run wizard Babe Ruth's little remembered flair for hamming it up does add a few smiles into the mix, and seeing him so young and athletic is somehow surprising.

    That's not important, though. What does make this DVD marginally worth seeing is the age of its venerable cinematic contents, and frankly that's the selling point I'll highlight in my review. The addition of the seconds-long Thomas Edison clip from 1899 connects our age to another century by showing people doing something familiar to us today---playing a sport and assaulting an official over a bad call---and reinforces for us the universality of human experience: in this case adrenaline-fueled frustration inspiring an entertaining bout of on-field violence.

    As for the main features, The Busher is the best of a mediocre lot. Again, since it's from 1919, long ago by human terms, there is a certain pleasant fondness in seeing that those who lived back in that time were so like us, despite the superficial ways in which they differed. The anorexic plot of The Busher with its small town boy makes it big in baseball, crashes, burns, crawls home...well, it's a short film, so you can bear it without too much mental trauma. Its leading men, by the way, Charles Ray and Jack Gilbert, were among the first Hollywood superstars, and the rise and fall of these two and the twists and turns of their careers and personal lives match anything the industry's tabloid darlings of today have to offer. (Gilbert was an unrepentant drunk who was once jilted at the altar by his would-be great love, Greta Garbo; Ray arrogantly refused roles offered and tried to found his own production company, which left him bitter and destitute, his proverbial boats burned behind him.) Somehow watching all of these early films and knowing what is in store for the casts grants a humbling, god-like power absent from sitting in on a contemporary movie.

    For those who love baseball in its more innocent form, this DVD will be meaningful, but for everyone else, I suspect the main attraction, if any is to be found, will be the fact that it hearkens from Hollywood's nascence at the conclusion of the nineteenth and dawning of the twentieth-century. I'll give Reel Baseball two stars for the stories themselves but one extra star because it is cinematic history.



    Wonderful baseball history fun 5 Star Review
    2007-08-01 - Everyone in our family - the baseball and non baseball fans loved watching what baseball was like back in the silent films. Babe Ruth carving his own bat out of a limb, the players carrying their gloves on their belts, the cartoons are really funny and the short movie of an older man trying to win the heart of a rich lady by playing baseball - they are all well done and fun to watch. We laughed and laughed.

    Nostalgic small town baseball from a long ago era 4 Star Review
    2007-05-03 - Baseball fans of all ages will probably greatly enjoy the labor of love, REEL BASEBALL, 1899-1926, which runs over four hours on two disks. But devotees of small town America before World War One and later during the Jazz Age, may love it even more. It's a valentine to the America that was, when baseball was played on vacant lots in small towns and whole towns went to a game at the local stadium.

    Disk One starts with a shockingly thin Babe Ruth in HEADIN' HOME (1920), which is a 73 minute feature about Babe leaving his town for the big city and success, then returning home at the end. It is followed by a 1 minute Kinogram with The Babe, the 12 minute HIS LAST GAME (1909), and the 12 minute THE BALL PLAYER AND THE BANDIT (1912), starring someone named Harold Lockwood. I should note that this entire set is all silent, with a variety of music scores that range from gramophone to piano to Wurlitzer organ. Print sources include Film Preservation Associates, Lobster Films in Paris, and the Library of Congress. The films have been magnificently preserved.

    Disk Two is long and may play better in two sittings. It starts with a 55 minute baseball and romance feature called THE BUSHER (1919), starring Charles Ray, Colleen Moore, and John Gilbert. There are two versions of CASEY AT THE BAT--a 1 minute short from 1899 and a 6 minute experimental sound recitation by DeWolf Hopper from 1922. HOW THE OFFICE BOY SAW THE BALL GAME (1906) runs 5 minutes as an excerpt. ONE TOUCH OF NATURE (1917) is an 18 minute excerpt that seems complete. Those who remember rotund comic John Bunny will love the 33 minute HEARTS AND DIAMONDS (1914). FELIX SAVES THE DAY (1922) is a 7 minute animation and live action cartoon that is great fun. BUTTER FINGERS (1925) stars Billy Bevan (who had a long screen career into the 1940s) and runs 16 minutes. And we finish off with HAPPY DAYS (1926) at 14 minutes.

    Notice that a lot of these silent shorts do not have big name stars. Baseball in its many forms is the star in these nostalgic films from a lovely, long ago era when the sport was still great fun, something a whole town turned out to see, and gambling was not yet part of the game. I highly recommend this Kino blockbuster, especially to an older audience that may remember some of these players and remember small town baseball fondly.




    A Home Run for Silent Film Lovers Who Are Also Baseball Fans 5 Star Review
    2007-05-01 - A delightful collection of 2 features and 11 shorts, all but one silent with appropriate and effective musical scores, from the fine folks at Kino, who help keep silent film lovers happy with regular release of pre-talkie goodies! (The lone talkie item here is an early experiment in sound presenting the stage actor DeWolf Hopper presenting a recitation of "Casey at the Bat." This was one of the highlights for me - I really enjoyed the actor's totally over the top performance (he was clearly aware of what he was up to, and having a good time doing it!) The other titles on the two disc set provide straight dramas, comedies, westerns(!), and more.

    Babe Ruth's feature is pretty incredible in plot, but entertaining none-the-less, and the Babe doesn't strike out with his acting, which is appealing if a bit lacking in theatrical polish. Charles Ray, Colleen Moore and John (here Jack) Gilbert offer a good introduction to a type of silent film that was very popular - it might be called a "small town boy makes good, before he goes bad, before he learns what's best for him" movie.

    Another reviewer complained that the films had too little baseball content - perhaps he should just buy a box set of some historic World Series and forget about dramatic and comedic presentations. While the baseball content of many of the films is lower than THE NATURAL or PRIDE OF THE YANKEES, baseball is at the thematic core of all these films, although more prominent in some than others. I love old movies and baseball and didn't feel a bit cheated.

    Sign me up for REEL BASEBALL II!

    Extremely Disappointing 1 Star Review
    2007-04-29 - Most of the short subjects in this collection have little, if anything, to do with baseball. You'll watch them, as my family did, wondering where the baseball is. And when you see it, you'll wonder if the people who created this collection are kidding. (Two minutes of lousy baseball footage in a 12-minute film does NOT make a baseball movie.) The quality of the films is substandard, even for silents, and the newly recorded organ music is nauseating. The only thing even vaguely entertaining about this collection is how bad it is. Some movies are meant never to be seen ever again, unless you happen to be a film student or an archivist. From a consumer's standpoint, I consider this collection a complete waste of money.










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