My work is rarely to-the-minute, and I rarely consider when a piece will be read. I started this post long before Covid-19 and the consequent postponing of the baseball season. If it doesn't elevate, nor replace peanuts and Cracker Jack, it is, I hope, of interest.

The 1919 White Sox added disgrace to poverty when they threw the World Series. 70 years on, the "Black Sox" were in the zeitgeist: 1988's Eight Men Out had D.B. Sweeney as Jackson. According to MLB Radio's Ryan Spilborghs (in a special devoted to Bull Durham), the athletic motions in Eight Men Out are "terrible." Even so, that Joe Jackson hit lefty, at least. Filmmaking is tough, but faking a base hit is still easier than the real skill (hitting a round ball with a round bat). Faking is Hollywood's job.
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Shoeless Joe Jackson |
It's not that Ray Liotta was perfect casting otherwise: he doesn't look or sound like Jackson, who was from South Carolina. (Actually, Jackson looked more like top-billed Kevin Costner.) The production makes matters worse in the field: Jackson threw right-handed, but Liotta's Jackson throws left-handed (again, the actor's preference). Effectively, the switch draws the attention of anyone still oblivious. (Field of Dreams also flips Moonlight Graham left to right as a batter, as the redemption-mad narrative grants a sympathetic washout his first big-league at-bat.)
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Liotta as Jackson |
If so, the filmmakers added their own reason for anxiety. Their message is memorably spoken by James Earl Jones (as author Terence Mann):
The one constant through all the years ... has been baseball. America has rolled by like an army of steamrollers. It's been erased like a blackboard, rebuilt, and erased again. But baseball -- has marked the time. This field, this game ... (is) a reminder of all that's good, and could be again.Fans can only forgive the script's worst sabotage: the school-auditorium meeting. All the parents arguing for exclusion of Mann's indecorous book (from the school library) fit the Hollywood-and-Left stereotype: they're ignorant, resentful, repressed. As Annie Kinsella, Amy Madigan warns them not to be like "the Nazis." Just as young Ray (Costner) insulted his father (who died before Ray could apologize), the film picks a side from which to decry division.
Even with this regrettable scene, Field of Dreams delivered a plea for unity. It went unheeded, but we should have self-mercy. Polarization, I've come to believe, is part of the normal operation of the United States. The owner of a high performance car should expect road noise and greater maintenance; a nation based in diversity, democracy and ambition is comparable. (Reading on 3/27, this is ~trite. But who makes it so?)
If we get twitchy around moves left and right, we need the distraction. The existential unknown may be displaced to a Jack Nicholson movie: "what if this is as good as it gets?" How would we ever react, to the honest conviction all our American plans are good for a laugh.
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