You Gotta Believe

2024

Family / Sport

4
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 58% · 40 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 91% · 50 ratings
IMDb Rating 5.5/10 10 236 236

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Plot summary

After dedicating the season to a teammate’s ailing father, a group of underestimated Ft. Worth youth baseball players takes its Cinderella run all the way to the 2002 Little League World Series—culminating in a record-breaking showdown that became an instant ESPN classic.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
September 17, 2024 at 06:49 AM

Director

Top cast

Sarah Gadon as Patti Ratliff
Luke Wilson as Bobby Ratliff
Greg Kinnear as Jon Kelly
Molly Parker as Kathy Kelly
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
960.24 MB
1280*534
English 2.0
PG
us  fr  
23.976 fps
1 hr 44 min
Seeds 100+
1.93 GB
1920*800
English 5.1
PG
us  fr  
23.976 fps
1 hr 44 min
Seeds 100+

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by ucladude1 6 / 10

Somewhat inspiring

I never knew this was a true story until I read a few reviews here. The fact it was a true story inspired me watching. The only part I knew that was true is that this was a real little league team I didn't know about the father at all.

Now the set up for this team being a bunch of bodies who were just bad at baseball, I don't know If it is true. It was nice seeing that the team came together even though honestly that just wasn't well played out in the script. It kind of just happened.

They start playoffs and they literally showed us literally literally literally nothing after their first game until they're magically in the World Series. That's a really lame script. That is really really lame.

You know I wanna see how the kids felt and acted after their first game or any other game up until the World Series. They showed us nothing.

It's only good because the story of a bunch of nobodies making the World Series and watching the effect that dad has on them is inspiring. But the script was really, really poorly played out.

Reviewed by yshiycrq 4 / 10

Grief Story Plus Sandlot 2.0

You Gotta Believe is advertised as a story about the 2002 Ft. Worth, Texas team that made the LLWS. However most of it was about a family battling through the terminal diagnosis of the father of the home. The baseball theme is very present, but the hope and inspiration that could have been added to the story was very lacking.

There were also several times you could tell they were trying to take this story and add successful, memorable moments from the 90's classic The Sandlot. Perfect example is several of the team members run into members of a future opposing team and they start a war of child-like, comedic verbal attacks towards each other.

Also, for those parents wanting to take their young child to this, be warned. The theme of grief is very highlighted at the end of the film, and it's quite heavy. Filmmakers also don't really bring it back to a positive message of hope. Ending should have had more of a positive message for a film marketed for families.

Reviewed by ferguson-6 5 / 10

just a bit outside

Greetings again from the darkness. As a lifelong avid baseball fan, I recall the 1973 season when relief pitcher Tug McGraw (father of country performer and actor Tim McGraw) elevated the phrase "You Gotta Believe" to the rallying cry for his New York Mets team that year (they ultimately lost the World Series to the Oakland A's). So, I'll admit to a touch of skepticism when I saw this was a baseball movie. Director Ty Roberts and writer Lane Garrison previously collaborated on 12 MIGHTY ORPHANS (2020) and THE IRON ORCHARD (2018), and after watching this one, I'll give them full credit for bringing very human stories of real people to the screen.

Based on the true story of the 2002 Fort Worth (Texas) Little League team that advanced all the way to the Little League World Series, this one has the bones of the always enjoyable youth 'underdog' story in the vein of THE MIGHTY DUCKS (1992) and HARDBALL (2001). The big difference here is that there is also some personal and family drama that's not quite so uplifting ... heartwarming, yes ... but not uplifting. We first meet this team as they are finishing their winless season. Optimistic coach Bobby Ratliff (Luke Wilson) and distracted manager Jon Kelly (Greg Kinnear) both have sons on the team, but from the action we see, this team rarely practices and has a shocking lack of athleticism for a bunch of 12-year-olds.

It's the glimpse of on-field action that makes this version of reality a bit difficult to swallow. When the league commissioner, played by Patrick Renna (from the truly classic baseball film THE SANDLOT, 1993) pleads with too-busy attorney Jon to take his team to the all-star tournament, logic tells us, it's one and done. However, the dynamics change quickly when coach Bobby is diagnosed with melanoma and a brain tumor. The team now has something to play for, and we are to believe that with the help of Coach Mitch Belew (hard-working character actor Lew Temple, ONCE UPON A TIME ... IN HOLLYWOOD, 2019), this team improves enough to win regionals and sectionals (in a montage) while qualifying for the Little League World Series.

Bobby's two sons Robert (Michael Cash) and Peanut, and Jon's pitching son, (the ironically named Walker (Etienne Kallici) have key supporting roles, as do Molly Parker as Jon's wife Kathy and Sarah Gadon (COSMOPOLIS, 2012) as Bobby's wife Patti. The team has "Bobby" embroidered on their caps as motivation, and the team's winning ways help keep up spirits for Bobby as he goes through treatment. There is a "Rawhide" theme song sequence that adds a bit of comic relief to help offset the heaviness of cancer.

The film highlights the remarkable game the team played in Williamsport, and we get a Satchel Paige reference (or two). The downside is that by exaggerating the ineptitude of the team when we first see them, their turnaround and entire journey seem a bit hokey. Of course, no game is bigger than life, and the film ends with the expected harsh reality of the boys wearing their uniform one more time. We do get a shot of Bobby's grown-up son reading a letter to his young son, and it concludes with clips of the actual Little League World Series - complete with players, coaches, and Bobby. Once again, a story of underdogs manages to make solid contact.

In theaters nationwide on August 30, 2024.

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