Everyone's Hero | |
Director: | |
Producer: |
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Screenplay: |
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Story: | Howard Jonas |
Starring: | |
Music: | John Debney |
Cinematography: |
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Editing: | John Bryant |
Studio: | IDT Entertainment[1] |
Distributor: | 20th Century Fox |
Runtime: | 87 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Budget: | $35 million[2] |
Gross: | $16.6 million |
Everyone's Hero is a 2006 American animated sports comedy film directed by Christopher Reeve, Daniel St. Pierre and Colin Brady. Starring Jake T. Austin, Rob Reiner, William H. Macy, Raven-Symoné and Whoopi Goldberg, the film was produced by IDT Entertainment in Toronto with portions outsourced to Reel FX Creative Studios. Distributed by 20th Century Fox, Everyone's Hero was theatrically released on September 15, 2006, to mixed reviews from critics and was a financial flop, earning $16.6 million on a $35 million budget. It also marked the final film for Dana Reeve before her death in March 2006, six months before the release of the film; it was dedicated to her and her husband, Christopher Reeve, who co-directed the film.
In 1932 New York City during the Great Depression, Yankee Irving is a 10-year-old baseball fan but is picked on by the other kids for his poor athletic skills. On that day, he finds a talking baseball that only he can hear who he names Screwie. Yankee's father, Stanley, works as a custodian at Yankee Stadium. While the two are on the premises, a thief disguised as a security guard steals Babe Ruth's "lucky" bat, Darlin'. Stanley is falsely accused of the crime and is temporarily fired until Darlin' can be found. After being wrongly blamed for the crime and grounded by his father and sent to his room, Yankee learns that the real thief is Chicago Cubs pitcher Lefty Maginnis. Lefty works for the Cubs' general manager Napoleon Cross, who desires to see the Cubs defeat the New York Yankees during the World Series.
Determined to reclaim the bat and save his family from being evicted and out on the street, Yankee goes to the train station and takes it from Lefty, but fails to get off the train before it takes them to another stop. Darlin' also has the ability to talk and urges Yankee to take her back to Babe Ruth in Chicago, where the next World Series game will be played. During the trip, Lefty attempts to steal the bat from Yankee during a wild chase. Yankee decides to return Darlin' to Babe Ruth, thereby clearing his father's name and saving his job. Meanwhile, Stanley (who now regrets being too hard on his son) and Emily (who is very worried about her missing son) start searching for Yankee after discovering that he left home. Meanwhile, Yankee meets others who help him in his quest, such as hobos Andy, Louis and Jack, a girl named Marti Brewster, her father, a Negro league pitcher named Lonnie Brewster, who helps him drive to Chicago and teaches Yankee to set his feet right while batting, and Babe Ruth himself. Lefty steals Darlin' and gives her to Cross, who kidnaps Yankee. During the game, Cross traps Yankee inside the office and reveals his plans to him.
When Yankee escapes the office, he evades several security guards and finally returns Darlin' to Babe. Cross tries to talk Babe out of accepting the victory, saying that Yankee is too young to be a counting player. Despite this, Babe gives Yankee a confidence boost by telling him that "it's not the bat, it's the batter". Yankee manages to hit Screwie after two strikes. While numerous Cubs players try to tag Yankee out, he dodges and trips them. Lefty makes his last attempt to tag him out, but Yankee manages to outsmart him by jumping over him (as payback for getting both him and his father in trouble) and landing on home plate, scoring a run. This restores the morale of the Yankees, who score seven more runs to take the lead and win the World Series.
The revelation of Darlin's theft leads to the arrest of Cross, who says that Yankee was a fan who cheated. When his involvement as an accomplice and a cheater is also revealed, Lefty is kicked off the team and also arrested. Stanley apologizes to Yankee for being too hard on him and congratulates him for being the best player, while his name is cleared and officially reinstated as the stadium's custodian. Yankee, his parents, and his new baseball friends, Screwie and Darlin', celebrate the Yankees' World Series win in a victory parade where he becomes an honorary player, while Cross works as the Babe Ruth bobblehead's vendor and Lefty as the street cleaner as part of their work release. Yankee happily plays catch with Screwie and the hobos' dog.
Everyone's Hero was released on DVD on March 20, 2007, by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment. The movie was released on Blu-ray on March 5, 2013, exclusively by Walmart stores.[3] The movie premiered on Disney+ on May 7, 2021, in Canada and the United States; it was previously available for streaming on HBO Max.
In its opening weekend, the film grossed $6.1 million in 2,896 theaters in the United States and Canada, ranking #3 at the box office, behind Gridiron Gang and The Black Dahlia. By the end of its run, Everyone's Hero grossed $14.5 million in the US, and $2.1 million internationally, for an approximate total of $16.6 million worldwide.[4]
Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on a scale of A+ to F.[5]
Jack Matthews of the New York Daily News wrote, "Whoever wanders into the theater should leave a winner."[6]
LA Weekly called the themes "fairly pro forma" and cited the film's "antique Rockwellian look" as "its greatest pleasure".[7]
Gregory Kirschling of Entertainment Weekly rated it "B−", and wrote, "Everyone's Hero re-creates Depression-era America with surprisingly agreeable anachronistic panache", although he criticized the character designs.[8]
The Austin Chronicle primarily criticized Everyone's Hero for focusing too much on sentimentality over entertaining moments.[9]
Tasha Robinson of The A.V. Club opined that the film "ranges from improbable to nonsensical to just plain dull. [...] The lame banter, the one-note characters, the predictable clumsy stabs at emotional uplift, or the booger jokes [don't help]."[10]
Screwie and Darlin' were bashed in a review by The Washington Posts Stephen Hunter, panning their inability to "move or express emotion".
Slant Magazines Ed Gonzalez disliked the lack of reasoning for anthropomorphic baseball gear for being "random".[11] The anachronisms, such as its out-of-time slang, pop-song-dominated soundtrack, and use of an African-American-voiced talking bat, were also panned, with Gonzalez calling the Great Depression setting "nonexistent".
The story did have its supporters. Variety reviewer Joe Leydon honored Everyone's Hero as a "modestly engaging mix of broad comedy and nostalgic fable", picaresque plot and the inclusion of a Negro league player. However, in addition to disliking its gross humor, he questioned the low-key portrayal of segregation that occurred in the 1930s era in which the film is set. He also suggested that the film would have a hard time selling to children: "The toon's target demo — i.e., toddlers and grade-schoolers — are too young to know about the Reeves, and pic could be a hard sell to youngsters who aren't baseball fanatics and recognize Babe Ruth only as the name of a candy bar."[12]
Seattle Post-Intelligencer writer Manny Lewis concluded, "The film certainly will appeal to kids; with its beating-the-odds theme and its dramatic finale involving a crucial at-bat in the World Series, it is reminiscent of a boyhood daydream."[13]
Orlando Sentinel film critic Roger Moore concluded, "The kids will laugh and there's enough heart in Everyone's Hero to bring it over the plate -- barely."
MaryAnn Johanson at MTV News similarly spotlighted the "sweet gentleness" and "can-do-it-iveness" that made its otherwise typical children's film plot stand out.[14]
Time Out London applauded the characters, especially Screwie, which recouped for its "lacking" amount of tension.[15]
The visuals garnered a mixed response, Robinson calling the animation "bland" and "generic", and Leydon "herky-jerky". Lewis found Screwie and Darlin's visual gags "stale" but praised those of Lefty, reasoning that "his flailing limbs giving him a clumsy grace far more entertaining to watch than either the ball or the bat". Hunter acclaimed the animation as "quite advanced, bringing emotional subtleties, vivid eye dilations and expressions and complex movements to exceptional life",[16] while Moore opined that "the animated people look plastic, but the backdrops are pretty, and the slapstick bits are a 'stitch'".
The voice acting was also praised.[17]
In the United States, FX aired Everyone's Hero on July 12, 2009. Telemundo aired the film in the US on October 4, 2009. In Latin America, Cartoon Network Latino aired the film on November 23, 2011. In Asia, Disney Channel premiered the film on May 29, 2012. In the United States, FXM aired the film on June 16, 2012. It also aired on Disney XD in the United States on April 8, 2013, and on March 30, 2014. It also aired on Cartoon Network in the United States on November 5, 2016.
On its launch in May 2020, the movie was available to stream on HBO Max as part of a longtime distribution deal that the HBO network had made with Fox; the deal was still enacted after the acquisition of 21st Century Fox by Disney, which had its own streaming service, Disney+. However, on May 7, 2021, the film moved from HBO Max to Disney+, although it was removed from the latter service in September 2021 in the United States.
Everyone's Hero: Music from the Motion Picture | |
Type: | Soundtrack |
Artist: | Various Artists |
Released: | 2006[18] |
Genre: | Film soundtrack |
Length: | 38:28 |
The soundtrack, released on the Columbia Records and Sony Music Soundtrax labels, features tracks by the star of the film Raven-Symoné, Grammy-winners Wyclef Jean, Brooks & Dunn, Mary Chapin Carpenter and various other artists.