Monday, June 15, 2009

Sugar re-posted from Sundance 2008 on Beck's Day

Sometimes I cross-post because I'm lazy. Sometimes I cross-post because I think the audience is wider than just one of my blogs....
The movie "Sugar" opened for about a week in SLC a few weeks ago and I had planned to repost this post while it was still playing here. I didn't see the re-release, so I hope that there weren't any major changes. Anyway, I hope it's still playing somewhere and I can get at least one movie goer interested in this movie.
This is a slightly truncated version from a post of mine on Beck's Day.

Anyway, my first movie for this year was "Sugar" brought to us by Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck, the fine folks who have brought us the short "Gowanus, Brooklyn" and it's feature length follow up "Half Nelson."
"Sugar" is, in the words of Ryan Fleck at the Q&A, "just a baseball movie."
(Baseball, movie -- two words that rock my world)
It is, of course, more than "just" that. "Sugar" is the story of Miguel "Sugar" Santos (Algenis Perez Soto), a young Dominican pitcher who has been signed from a development camp in the Dominican Republic by the fictive Kansas City Knights. With minimal English skills he and some of his compatriots are sent to Phoenix for Spring Training. He does well enough that he skips Rookie League ball and is sent straight to 1A in Iowa, where he starts strong. After he is injured and has a hard time coming back Sugar runs away to New York, to find his friend who was cut from the team a few weeks earlier.
I enjoyed this movie, but after sleeping on it I saw so many threads that could've been stronger: the contrast between the bargain basement Dominican Sugar and the million dollar baby second baseman who graduated from Stanford; language and cultural barriers in Iowa while he lives with an older couple who speak almost no Spanish; what to do when the dream (whatever dream it is) falls apart...
It is also nice to be reminded that just because a movie doesn't have the best of all possible endings, it doesn't mean it doesn't have a happy ending.
It's not the best baseball movie ever (in my opinion that would have to be "Bull Durham") and it isn't the best immigrant story ever but "Sugar" is fairly good at being both.


Back in June of 2009, here's the link to the official site for "Sugar"

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Mmmm.... baseball

For the first time in several years I missed the Salt Lake Bees' home opener. It was a combination of homework, weather and money - in that order. Now that the weather is nice and homework is winding down to a manageable level they're out of town, figures...
I did make it to my now traditional first day of spring Utes game. They lost to TCU in the last inning. I feel so sorry for the losing pitcher, after all, he had 3 Ks.

The New York Times reports...

This is one of the saddest and most disgusting sports related articles I've read in a very long time... What is wrong with people?
SPORTS / OTHER SPORTS
Poison Suspected in Deaths of Polo Horses
By KAREN CROUSE
Published: April 21, 2009
At least 21 horses from a Venezuelan-based team died on Sunday and investigators said that poison was the most likely cause.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/21/sports/othersports/21polo.html

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Cricket again

It's been a while since I've written. The U rocked the football world and basketball is on its way to doing the same. Spring training is in motion, and unlike The Salt Lake Tribune, my handy little MLB widget is keeping me up to date. So I know that the Brewers beat the Rockies today and the Tigers did not play.
But the sports news of the day is terrorism news and it's about cricket.
According to The Independent and what I remember from listening to NPR this evening, five members of the Sri Lankan cricket team and a British coach were injured and seven police officers and a bus driver were killed in Pakistan as the team arrived for a third day of matches against Pakistan. Another good place to keep up-to-date is on the Telegraph's cricket page.
Officials are blaming the same group who attacked Mumbai, India, killing 107, last November.
Come on people. I'm not in favor of terror as a political tool, but killing athletes, tourists and other innocents just makes people angry, it does not make politicians act, it's just a few less voters to try to please.
Hrrmph. Now I need to stop fretting about this and think about March Madness and the game that proves it is always spring or summer somewhere.