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Fever Pitch (2005)

Fever Pitch
"I know reading about baseball puts you in the mood, but I've got a really bad headache - here look at this, it's the Tomatometer for Taxi!"

Starring:

Drew Barrymore
Jimmy Fallon
Drew Barrymore
Ione Skye
JoBeth Williams

Released By:

20th Century Fox

Released In:

2005

Rated:

PG-13

Reviewed By:

Adam Mast

Grade:

B


Fever Pitch is a romantic comedy from those wacky Farrelly Brothers (There's Something About Mary, Dumb and Dumber etc.), but surprisingly, it's very tame and subdued in tone. There isn't an ounce of bodily fluid to be found in the picture, and half way through, I began questioning whether or not the Farrelly's actually directed this. But then I also questioned whether or not Paul Weitz (American Pie) actually directed About a Boy. In both cases, these film makers have opted to trade in audacious, in your face humor for laughs that come from the heart.

In Fever Pitch, Jimmy Fallon plays Ben, a lovable high school teacher with a rabid obsession for the Boston Red Sox (even if the underachieving team does seem to self destruct at the worst of times). Drew Barrymore is Lindsey, a sweet, career-minded woman who's so consumed by her job, that she hasn't much time for romance. When these two gentle-hearted individuals meet they quickly fall for each other, but soon, Ben's lifelong addiction to the Red Sox threatens their blossoming relationship.

It took me a while to warm up to Jimmy Fallon. I always sort of felt like he was riding on Adam Sandler's coat tails. I mean the guy gets his start singing dopey little songs on Saturday Night Live and now here he's co-starring with Drew Barrymore in a movie. Thankfully, he's rebounded nicely from the joyless ride that was Taxi, and creates a likable sports fanatic in Ben. Even when he'd rather attend a Red Sox game than escort his girlfriend to London for a weekend, we can understand why, because Fallon makes us feel his passion for the team. Drew Barrymore is simply charming as Lindsay, and she makes us feel sympathy for her plight as well. It is perfectly understandable that she would be upset that Ben would rather attend a baseball game than spend a weekend with her. It is their predicament that makes Fever Pitch most interesting. The romance factor and laugh-count take a back seat to this much more interesting plot development. And on a quick cast side note, I must say, it was cool seeing JoBeth Williams (Poltergeist) in a film again. While her role as Lindsay's mother is a small one, I enjoyed her nonetheless.

Fever Pitch is surprisingly edgy even if, at it's heart, it's your typical date movie. The screenplay was written by Lowell Ganz and Babaloo Mandel (Parenthood), and based on the novel by Nick Hornby (High Fidelity), and doesn't shy away from a few candid themes that most of us can identify with. Ben's love for baseball is deep rooted and not something Lindsay can easily understand, just as Lindsay's work ethic is something that Ben can't entirely understand. The question is, can these two love birds find a middle ground?

Speaking from personal experience, I can say "no" to baseball (although it should be dually noted that I'm a huge Chicago Cubs fan - talk about underachievers) but movie and film based events are tougher for me to say no to. If I have an addiction, it's for movies, and lucky for me, I have an incredibly understanding wife. Suffice it to say, we've found middle ground in our own lives. Actually, I'm first to admit that she quite often bends to accommodate my movie habit. The point is, relationships are about compromise. You really have to work at them, and that's where Fever Pitch gets things right. It explores this particular theme in a way I don't think I've ever seen in a movie before.

The Boston Red Sox backdrop is a perfect one, particularly given their Cinderella season last year. To call their championship run magical would be a gross understatement, and the entire aura this magic brings to the movie, really elevates the proceedings.

For those of you who aren't fans of baseball, take heart. You don't have to be a fan of the sport to enjoy Fever Pitch. It isn't a movie about baseball. It's really film about love and what people might be willing to sacrifice (or compromise) to obtain it.

Fever Pitch is far from perfect. It isn't exactly a laugh per second, and anyone who can't see where the movie is headed, must not be familiar with the romantic comedy. Still, I give Fever Pitch props for it's insight into what might drive someone to love something so much that they'd do nearly anything for it. Lucky for Ben, he might just get to have his cake and eat it too.

:: zBoneman.com Reader Comments ::

Fallon up!

Fallon up!

I absolutely adored Fever Pitch. I've never been a particular fan of Jimmy Fallon, and I thought Taxi was a big enough disaster to bury the guy, but he's popped back up to the surface in a big way with this film. He demonstrated both deft comic timing as well as restraint and self-depracatory humor. I think Tina Fey would be proud of her little play-friend.

The Big Me

The Big Me

Thank God for Fever Pitch - I was afraid my boy Jimmy Fallon was toast. Taxi was that awful, just unbeileivably lame. Fever Pitch isn't brilliant, but it's definitley restored Fallon back to my good graces - and that's what really matters . . . me

Chris Pokorny

Chris Pokorny

I agree with your review except for one point. I thought there were plenty of laughs. Even the little small things that weren't necessarily jokes had me smiling the whold time.

Sir Dizzy

Sir Dizzy

High-school teacher Ben Wrightman is a good catch. He's charming, funny and great with kids. When he meets Lindsey Meeks, an ambitious business consultant whose spirit is as luminous as her beauty, their attraction is immediate. Sure, they have their differences. She's a workaholic; he loves his summers off. He lives and breathes the Red Sox; she doesn't know Carl Yastrzemski from Johnny Damon. But true love overcomes all--at least until Red Sox spring training rolls around. As Ben's beloved Bosox launch one of the most incredible seasons in baseball history, Ben and Lindsey must decide if they, as a couple, will strike out or fight to keep love alive through extra innings.

Some movies are too trite and contrived for me, its almost as if they are trying so hard to be likeable and cute that I almost end up despising them for it. Fever Pitch was that way for me, I mean it found its moments keying into the obsession that most men seem to find for a sports team (for me it's the Denver Broncos) but lost its way with the love story. The movie falls into the predictability that plaques most romantic comedies as that they can never seem to find a way to get past what we are expecting and do something entirely different. You know the characters are going to end up together, you know that something, anything is going to keep them apart for a little while all the rest is just filler. Why not do something different, why go the route of cutesy instead of breaking new ground of your own. The movie has so much going for it as it finds a way to identify with us sports crazed males, why not do something different with the ending as well because two months from now there will be a movie exactly like this one released and Fever Pitch will be forgotten.

Drew Barrymore is falling into that trap where she is playing the same character over and over again but just revolving out the male lead. We saw it twice with Adam Sandler, we saw it with Ben Stiller and even David Arquette it is simply time for a new character. I am sure Barrymore is talented enough to do something different and more diverse I just wish she wouldn't wait tell she was almost 40 and doing it to survive in Hollywood a little longer. Jimmy Fallon is cute, he is loveable heck at times he is even funny but he is so much better than these kinds of roles as he has shown on Saturday Night Live. The movie for the most part is cute, it is even funny at times but it is also very trite and entirely to contrived for me.

Jimmy Z

Jimmy Z

Fever Pitch is the best romantic comedy of the year, if you don't count Sin City ha ha ha

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