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Major League
Released 1989  /  107 min
Box Office: $75 million
When Rachel Phelps inherits the Cleveland Indians from her deceased husband, she's determined to move the team to a warmer climate—but only a losing season will make that possible, which should be easy given the misfits she's hired. Rachel is sure her dream will come true, but she underestimates their will to succeed.
A comedy with bats and balls.
Tom Berenger
Jake Taylor
1
Best Performance
Charlie Sheen
Rick Vaughn
Corbin Bernsen
Roger Dorn
Margaret Whitton
Rachel Phelps
James Gammon
Lou Brown
Rene Russo
Lynn Wells
Wesley Snipes
Willie Mays Hayes
1
Scene Stealer
Charles Cyphers
Charlie Donovan
Chelcie Ross
Eddie Harris
Dennis Haysbert
Pedro Cerrano
Andy Romano
Pepper Leach
Bob Uecker
Harry Doyle
Steve Yeager
Duke Temple
Peter Vuckovich
Haywood
Stacy Carroll
Suzanne Dorn
Richard Pickren
Tom
Kevin Crowley
Vic Bolito
Mary Seibel
Thelma
Bill Leff
Bobby James
Mike Bacarella
Johnny Wynn
Skip Griparis
Colorman
Gary Houston
Ross Farmer
Ward Ohrman
Arthur Holloway
Marge Kotlisky
Claire Holloway
Tony Mockus Jr.
Brent Bowden
Deborah Wakeham
Janice Bowden
Neil Flynn
Longshoreman
Keith Uchima
Groundskeeper #1
Kurt Uchima
Groundskeeper #2
William M. Sinacore
Coleman
Richard Baird
Hal Charles
Julia Milaris
Arlene
Roger Unice
Rexman
Michael Thoma
Gentry
Patrick Dollymore
French Waiter
Joe Liss
Guy in Bar
Gregory Alan Williams
Bull Pen Guard
Peter Ruskin
Gateman
Michael Hart
Burton
James Deuter
Phil Butler
Jack McLaughlin-Gray
Jerry Simmons
Tim Bell
Body Building Assistant
Joe Soto
Security
Ted Noose
Lyle Matthews
Lenny Rubin
Clubhouse Man
Thomas P. Purdoff
Umpire #1
Jeffrey J. Edwards
Umpire #2
Alexandra Villa
Hostess
Michelle Minyon
Working Class Bar Patron
A
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D
F
Screenplay
Music
Acting Quality
Character Depth
Story Pacing
Originality
Sequel Potential
Re-Watchability
20% Drama
Comedy 80%
Baseball
Comedy
Underdog
Reviews
The owner of the perennial loser Cleveland Indians assembles a team so bad that she will be able to move the team to Miami, but then they start to win! Wildly funny baseball comedy works on both a frat house level of humor as well as a winning sports movie formula. Other than the swearing (which is near constant) this movie plays great for nearly any audience, milking its "team of misfit underdogs" story to great effect. Helps that it is extremely quotable: "Juuust a bit outside!"