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If you are interested in another sports react to Gus Johnson, probably the best American sports announcer ua-cam.com/video/yJJpPVW3we0/v-deo.htmlsi=cGOF9T8PH_HLMHPJ
You CANNOT try to make logical sense of this film. It’s not possible. You must simply give in to the fantasy of it and experience the journey. I love this movie so much. I’ve seen it dozens of times, and I still cry at the end.
@@DNReacts I wonder also how much of the movie is missed by any non-American, and generally non-male, people watching. In the US, with Baseball being what it is (or at least was until the real rise of the NFL in the 90's-2000's), baseball and playing catch were an integral part of father son relationships. I think the part where it is Ray's Heaven is just that metaphorically it is "every" adult American male's heaven to have another chance to go play catch with his dad just one more time.
One of the best sports movies. It was me and my dad’s favorite movie. I haven’t been able to watch it since he passed away. It’s such a wonderful movie. Even if you aren’t into baseball.
Baseball isn't just a sport for Americans; it's a deeply ingrained part of our cultural DNA. When outsiders watch films like 'Field of Dreams,' they often approach it with a more analytical eye, lacking the emotional connection we Americans feel. For us, it's not just a game; it's a flood of memories and emotions that awaken our inner child. The sights, sounds, and smells of baseball-the crack of the bat, the scent of popcorn and hotdogs, the feel of a well-worn glove-transport us back to simpler times. Even the sight of a Little League game can evoke nostalgia. While I may watch more football and basketball these days, baseball retains a special place in my heart, and I believe, in the hearts of many Americans. There's something magical about experiencing baseball in person. The energy of the crowd, the intimacy of the stadium-it's an experience that television simply can't replicate. And when you add the layer of learning the game from a loved one-whether it's a father, brother, uncle, or grandad-the emotional connection deepens even further. 'Field of Dreams' captures all of this beautifully, reminding us why we fell in love with baseball in the first place. As I grow older, its impact on me only intensifies, serving as a poignant reminder of the timeless bond between the game and the American spirit.
I am going to be 67 at the end of the year and every Spring, about late March here in the North, when the whether is still cool but getting a little milder and flowers are blossoming on crab apple, cherry and Mountain Laurel, the smell of that immediately gives me a sense memory of being 11 and going to the first practices of little league at Jefferson Jr. High in Mt. Lebanon, PA. It is almost a little frightening that I can remember my teammates and their faces and what we joked about as knuckleheads in the Spring of 1969 (and some kid with his radio tuned the local "counterculture" FM radio stations in Pittsburgh--one of the first--WDVE playing "White Room" by Cream--specifically) all of the smells-- my glove (oiled over the Winter to help break in a new one), dirty hands and uniform, coaches hitting fly balls and grounders to us (taking one in the face on a bad hop for a bloody nose and of course the other kids laughing--typical boys in my area). So strange. But in the late Summer, Fall/Autumn I get a similar sense memory for football. This movie resonates.
This post was RIGHT ON! I have loved baseball my whole life. On a friend level me and my father bonded because of this game. In turn me and my son bonded on this game, as friends. It's too long to react to, but I suggest the documentary, "Baseball" by Ken Burns. It shows how this game has impacted America. Not just from an entertainment basis, but society basis.
Fellow Englishman here, this film was on one Christmas not long after I was married ( 1989 ). We watched it as a family, with my parents and younger sisters. When Ray asks his Dad to play catch, my typically reserved English Dad burst into tears and left the room, it was the first time I saw him cry ... As a 7 year old in July 1943, he'd waved his Dad off as he went off to his Royal Signals posting ... two days later, two Officers arrived at my Gran's door with the news that he'd been killed trying to save people during a bombing raid on the Rolls Royce Aero Engine factory in Derby .. I think the film brought all those suppressed feelings about his father to the surface, and the emotional dam burst ... In 1996, he suffered a heart attack on holiday in New England, and had a 6 way by-pass at a hospital in Boston, performed over 8 hours by a Professor of Cardiology at Harvard. Eighteen months later, he, me and my 12 old son played a round of Golf, and had a bite to eat together afterwards. We said our goodbyes, and when I got home, it was my turn to cry like a baby ... my wife understood, " It's your Field of Dreams moment, you've done something today you thought you'd never be able to do " . Dad's 88 now, suffers from bad vascular Dementia and is in a Residential home. I love this film ...
Thats a great story. So heartfelt. Three generations now four with your son, and I’m so glad you get to spend your Dads final days appreciating him and thinking about how much he means to you.
@@TheRealdal Thank you for that, Dad now also has two beautiful Great-Granddaughters aged 3 and six months ... I am of course, their doting " Pops " ... 🥰
When I saw this movie when it first came out, I didn't think about baseball or Ray's dad. I thought about my mother and how I couldn't connect with her. I realized that by the time children "know" their parents, their parents have been worn down by life. Your parents have compromised in order to make your life better. I cried at the end of that film, not because of Ray but because of myself and my mother. What I didn't know or appreciate about my mother and how much I missed. That's what this film is about. It's about the desire to connect with those you love and the dreams you share, even though you have those dreams at different times chronologically -- your parents having aspirational dreams unrelated to you a generation earlier than you -- but not different in terms of the actual dreams of fulfillment, or pursuing what you love.
@@DNReacts It was interesting watching a couple of British blokes react to this American classic, which I consider the best baseball film ever made. The second best baseball film ever made, IMO, should be next on your list of reactions. The 1976 comedy, *Bad News Bears,* starring Walter Matthau and a young Tatum O'Neal. It is fantastic! (Be sure to react to the original from '76.)
On the 25th I'm going to meet my seven year old nephew. He plays baseball. I told him I'm bringing my glove. My brother told me how excited he is. I can't wait.
Dam this movie made me cry as a 18 year old father and now I'm a 54 year old grandfather and this movie makes me cry for a whole other reason. Miss you Dad and sorry to my children for my mistakes.
All the players mentioned in the film were real, including Archibald "Moonlight" Graham. It was exactly like it was in the movie; he played in 1 game but never got to bat. Those old men in the bar that told Terence about Doc Graham were telling stories about the real Doc Graham. They weren't actors.
Most of the details about Doc Graham's life as shown in the film were pretty accurate as well. The one big thing that wasn't is the year of his one MLB inning. In real life, it was 1905, not 1922. The writers moved the date forward because the story required it to be plausible that he still be alive until they get to Minnesota and find out he's dead.
Grown men cry at the end of this movie. I’m a 63 year old man and I can relate to the relationship I wish I would have had with my father who is long gone
The English girl I was with for awhile loved baseball. She said that 'rounders' was still played by girls in the UK, and she understood most of the basic rules the first time I took her to an Atlanta Braves game.
This movie is a tear jerker every time. Dreams came to pass for all these men at that field in Iowa. MLB built a ballfield next to this one and a Field of Dreams game was played there between the White Sox and Yankees in the old uniforms. It was introduced by Kevin Costner walking out of the corn. You can see it on UA-cam and it had an epic ending! Cheers!
There was a second game played there. Construction kept them from playing there in 2024, so a game was played in an old park in Alabama., where Willie Mays had played. He died shortly before that game happened.
James Earl Jones character was real and alive. Recall that Ray’s brother in law could see and interact with him. He is healed as well by getting back into writing, which is his happy place and is a way back into society, rather than isolating himself.
The Moonlight Graham character is my favorite. Beautifully acted, beautifully written. And, technically, he never had an at bat because a sacrifice doesn't count as an at bat. He never got his wish but he got his dream.
It wasn't the 'sacrificial fly' if you look closely, you'll see that the ball goes to Archie's right, not left. Also, unless he runs faster than Usain Bolt, he wouldn't make it all the way round before it was thrown back in.
@@tonyhaynes9080 it was a pop fly to the right fielder - who caught it and then threw home to try to get the runner - it was a sacrifice fly and actually - doesn't count (in the scorebook) as an at bat - so he still doesn't have an official at bat
I think your interpretation of the film is pretty good. I know you guys have become very fond of baseball, but I do think there might be something lost in translation compared to if you were American men. There's something about baseball that is just so intertwined with our history that feels very personal, even for some of us who don't watch as often as we could. I'm not even a Red Sox fan, but when I visited Boston last year I absolutely had to go to a game at Fenway. I took a tour of the park a couple of hours before the game and they let us walk down onto the field, just in the backstop area, and I swear there was a magical feeling to it. Hell, it was Fenway. Ray's issues with his dad were left vague, but there was a huge generation gap here during the '60s and there were many stories like theirs. Fathers and sons just didn't understand one another. I don't know if that era was quite the same for people there in the UK at that time or not. This movie is one that makes grown men here in the states absolutely sob. It's nostalgia. It's daddy issues. It's baseball. Next you should watch Bull Durham if you haven't seen it yet. One of the great romantic comedies of the '80s set with a minor league baseball team in what was once my home town of Durham, North Carolina. Absolute classic.
Understand what you’re saying and appreciate the comment and context around the in depth emotions this movie brings to so many, thank you 🙏 Have made a note of the suggestion too
I showed this to my dad decades ago, and he cried like a baby at the end. Missing his dad. I have to say I've never heard two people grapple so endlessly about this lovely movie. Just to enjoy it and feel it. Nothing sinister or complicated. Laughter, tears, life.
Absolutely legendary actor. Should see him in Elmer Gantry or the movie about Jim Thorpe. Burt was an acrobat in the circus before acting. Oh I forgot From Here to Eternity
The journalist in Minnesota did interact with Terrance, she told him he was a good writer and answered his questions as well as the town folk who knew Doc Graham. I see it as a way for him to be re-inspired to write again because he made a difference when he did.
Good spot, I think we got so caught up in trying to untangle a mystery that didn’t exist 😅 Appreciate the comment, thank you. Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
Some trivia for you... the land on which the baseball field was built was originally owned by two different families. The Lansing Family owned the farm house and the ball diamond. The Ameskamp family owned left and center field. When shooting for the movie ended, the Ameskamp portion was plowed into farm ground again but the Lansing family kept the diamond and people did in fact come to see the now famous ball diamond. After a year, the Ameskamp family rebuilt the left and center field but due to some disagreements between the two families, they operated each part separately. In 1990, a neighboring farmer started a baseball team called the "Ghost Players" who would play at the famous ball park to entertain visitors once a month, increasing the number of people who would go to experience the site. In 1991 and 1992, celebrity games were held with Hall of Fame ball players and movie celebrities playing to raise money for local charities. In 2006, the Ameskamp land was sold to the Lansing family so for the first time, the entire field was owned by one family. In 2011 the family sold the entire farm and the Go The Distance Baseball organization has been taking care of it since. (Go The Distance is now primarily owned by former baseball star Frank "The Big Hurt" Thomas) Major League Baseball has held at least two games there and there are plans to do more as the attendance and viewership of the games were very good. If you like the farmhouse, you can rent it for $2200-$2500 a night. The site now gets about 100,000 visitors per year so Karen's words in the movie "People will come." came true.
I live about 50 miles from the field. MLB has built a stadium on the site, now too. There is one MLB game played there every year, in August. This only started 2 or 3 seasons ago. Terrance Mann was played by James Earl Jones (Darth Vader voice from Star Wars) an American Treasure among actors. Another giant among actors was Burt Lancaster (Doc Graham).
James Earl Jones starred in his own great baseball movie back in the day, "The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars & Motor Kings", which I personally think is why he may have been thought of for this role.
Its a father, son relationship movie wrapped in a baseball metaphor. Terrance Mann upon first meet. "Dont blame me your father never played catch with you" End of movie, Ray, " Dad , wanna have a catch?". They reality of it could be a single dream all the way to actually happening, leaning maybe more to the latter with the appearance of all the cars coming.
Costner was actually a pretty good ball player in college, he went to Cal State Fullerton here in SoCal. He’s one of the few actors that can look good out there playing baseball on film.
If you're interested in the 1919 World Series and Shoeless Joe, You should react to the movie Eight Men out, it's an 80's movie with John Cusack and big ensemble cast about the 1919 World Series and the Black Sox Scandal. The book Eight Men Out is loaded with even more details, but the movie does a good job of covering the basic story.
Major League Baseball now holds a “Field of Dreams” game each year. This years game will be June 20th with the Giants facing the Cardinals at Rickwood Field. The oldest professional ballpark in the US. They do a great job with these games. Pretty magical.❤
Field of Dreams is a wonderful, whimsical fantasy movie. My interpretation is that everything was real and Terrance Mann is alive in the movie. The Field of Dreams movie site is in Dyersville, Iowa. They hold youth travel baseball tournaments there. It is also a tourist destination with a couple baseball museums in town. One about the movie and one owned by Dwier Brown, the actor who played John Kinsella, Ray's dad. So people are actually coming there for real. They also are building a major league stadium next door to hold MLB games. I traveled there from Michigan with my family for our son's travel baseball tournament last year. We rented the movie site for a team practice and it was magical. The players played catch with their parents and they even had a Ghost player come out. The house can be rented out too. It was so fun that we are going again this season.
@@DNReacts Kevin Costner had a watching of the movie with Johnny bench,George Brett and Bret saberhagen, and they discussed it on the impact the movie had made on them being major league players
One little fun fact about the scenes they shot in Fenway Park: two of the extras (who, as far as I can tell, were never actually on camera but were in the crowd) were Ben Affleck and Matt Damon. I can't remember exactly what they said but they've talked about how, being Boston guys, they just looked for any way/excuse to get into Fenway and jumped on the chance to be extras so they could hang out in there.
The Field of Dreams is still in Dyersville in Eastern Iowa where it was filmed. I grew up a few miles away. Lots of people still visit and “have a catch” there.
I'm an atheist, have been since my early teens in the '70s, and as such, I don't believe in any of the spirit-realm and/or Heaven bullshit... But I cry every fucking time I see this movie! ...Even an edited reaction video on UA-cam has me balling like a little girl whose pet hamster just died! lol TBH, it might have something to do with not really getting to know my dad as well as I should have, before he passed. We were always supposed to go fishing, just me and him... we never got around to it.
Loved this movie as a kid, and even got to visit the actual place in Iowa back around 1991 which was amazing and it still exists today. The ending still to this day brings tears of happiness to my eyes.
I am glad you liked this movie. Most men in the US cry at the end though! Two more baseball movies you should watch are Bull Durham, also with Kevin Costner, and A League of Our Own, about women playing baseball during WWll when the men were at war. Both are terrific!
@DNReacts I'd say to watch the full game instead of highlights, it's such a great game. Highlights might not do it justice... just don't look at the final score on it... let someone else look it up for you guys lol
@@DNReactsNext: "A League Of Thier Own" Starring Thomas (Tom)Hanks Singer,Dancer Madonna (Mae #5) in her 2nd movie role "Desperately Seeking Susan" was the other in 1986.Actress Geena Davis (Dottie) FACT:Geena Davis tried out for The USA Archery Team for the 2002 Winter Olympic Games in Salt Lake City,Utah.She just missed qualifying for the team by a few points.She was really,really,good at Archery.It wasn't a celebrity publicly stunt,or a role for an upcoming movie.She made it through the preliminary rounds.Lori Petty (no relation to music rocker Tom) is really the better athlete in real life she's the faster runner.The game's last action scene that Lori,not a body double. ⚾
I visited the Field of Dreams as a kid many times. Even as a fueld trip in school lol I found a baseball in the cornfield and "knew" it was from the movie. Obviously there are plenty of balls out there from all the games actually played there but it was so cool having that memory.
If Terrence was dead they wouldn't be talking about him writing again. The only ghosts were the ballplayers. The movie Karin was watching near the beginning was "Harvey" starring James Stewart. That would be a great one to watch.
This movie reminded me of my father who played semi-pro basketball in the Midwest. He got invited to a tryout for the Cardinals. The day of the tryout it rained, and it was canceled. That was his one shot. Years later he taught his sons how to pitch.
So glad you all finally reacted to this movie. I'll be 41 this year and played little league baseball for about 10 years when I was kid, back in the late 80s and 90s, and remember vividly all the days I spent with my dad playing catch in the front yard trying to get better. I still cry every time he asks his dad to have a catch at the end. That part hits home so well for me. Great reaction!
Great reaction guys! And I agree with the previous poster who said you can't try to make logical sense of this film, it's a fantasy. BUT this was the first time I've seen male reactors and no tear was shed. I always choke up at, "Hey Dad, you wanna have a catch?"
Thank you so much, we really appreciate it! From the comments we’ve understood so much about how ingrained this is in American Culture. Was a really great film to watch, thanks again 🙏
Here’s another word for you; “Phantasmagorical”. - “They are a reality, whereas the guerrillas are only a dream”. -The Cambridge English Corpus. This is a classic. Makes grown men cry.
I had to laugh when you saw he left the bats and balls out, that you hope there's no youths around to mess with them. I grew up about 45 minutes from this location and not only would that just never happen, you literally knew every person who lived within 20 square miles and everybody always looked out for everybody. I still appreciate the absolutely true aspect of what is known as "Iowa nice," except when you are at a stop sign and the person with the right-of-way waits for you instead of just getting out of the way.
@@DNReacts Oh, yes, DM - You have often entertained me. I have lived all over America (I'm 59) and I moved back to Iowa City in 2008. We just completed our epic era of Caitlin Clark here in Iowa and tomorrow she is most likely going to be drafted by the Indiana Fever. I got to watch her live a few times as a freshman and sophomore. I maybe should have gone to see her these last two years, but I'm not into the crowd scene and you get a better view of games with other Hawkeye fans at our beautiful smallish downtown restaurant and bar area. A piece of info I am sure you are not aware of is that this locale is also known as "Wrestle-town USA." The UI men's wrestling team has been a national powerhouse for 40+ years and just this last year, the state sanctioned women's wrestling for high school and the UI had their first women's team competing nationally. Those women went undefeated and won the national championship in their first year!
Kind of a quintessential American movie--and yes about 99% of boys learn how to catch first by catching with their Dad. I did. I remember how much it hurt until I learned to catch in mostly in the webbing (and slide my index finger to the outside finger holes of the glove). He was a pitcher when he was young--and I became one, too.
My dad taught me how to catch, but he wasn't that athletic, so I quickly surpassed him in ability. But he was always up for going to a game, professional or semi-pro!
@@alittlebitgone Canadian author, but the book is set in Iowa 🙂. But I like that sports are one of the things we share, Gridiron Football, even if the rules are a bit different and we both call it Soccer. Hockey, Baseball, Basketball ( developed by a Canadian living in Massachusetts), Lacrosse. Toronto even had a baseball team in the International League all the way back in the late 19th century.
My parents were in their 30s when they had my brother and I, they’d originally planned on 3-6 kids, but chose to stop at 2 because my dad worried he’d be “too old to play catch” with kid #3. He never played catch with my brother or I, either, too much of a workaholic. This movie still gets to me, though, because of the missed opportunities for quintessential bonding. Plus it’s just a good movie. (Side note I think they stopped at 2 because I had a few health issues and my brother was autistic so we were a handful as it was- but we both wanted another sibling thinking we’d have a buddy when mom’s focus had to be more on one or the other of us so we got the playing catch line tossed at us a lot as to why we didn’t have another sibling).
They built a stadium about 100 yards away from the Field of Dreams they used in the movie and played an MLB game in Aug 2021. It was a really cool moment.. Same teams played a game in Iowa and they entered the field through the cornfield from center field like they did in the movie. Pretty cool moment in history. Kevin Costner also played in another movie called, "Bull Durham" as a catcher which got really good reviews and was nominated for an Oscar for best original screen play. Funny enough he plays a pitcher in For Love of the Game.
"Bull Durham" is another must-watch baseball movie that should be on your list, as is "The Natural." Since y'all have started watching "Ted Lasso" I think you should also check out "Major League" as there is a lot of overlap with the plot of Lasso S1. @DNReacts 👀
The game they played in 2021 (?) between the White Sox and the Yankees at this field in Iowa had one of the BEST endings of any game-Hollywood couldn’t write the ending they had to that game. It is available for viewing on UA-cam, and worth a look. Look up “White Sox Field of Dreams” game.
A lot of Americans have nothing really in common with each other, but can always bond over baseball. That’s kind of why this movie is so important to people. Other baseball movie recommendations: Bull Durham (Kevin Costner as a veteran catcher stuck in the minor leagues helps a young pitching prospect who has a great fastball but is childish and immature), Mr. Baseball (Tom Selleck is a struggling veteran in the MLB who nobody wants anymore, so he decides to play in Japan), A League of Their Own (a story about how when all of the men fought in WWII, a professional women’s baseball league was formed).
I remember the first baseball game ,I went to in Houston Texas, when I was a little girl.I still think about it today. my brother was on a little league baseball team as a boy.we also played softball in school! you all to see when they played like that today on tv,and players come walking out of the corn field. you get a chill watching that today on tv!
@@DNReacts He left out The Natural. Another novel adapted into a fantastic period piece starring Robert Redford and Glenne Close' You guys should react to more movies . 👍👍
Fun fact: this movie was even more popular in Japan.not only is Japan just as baseball crazy as america, even have their own 12 team Professional baseball league (Go Hanshin Tigers), if not even more so. Japan is also all about family and ancestry, so the story of aman reconciling with his father really resonated with the Japanese moviegoers.
Having grown up in a baseball family this is the ultimate childhood fantasy - being able to play catch with your father when you were about same age. No man can get through that ending - "Hey Dad, want to have a catch?" - without that strong, heartfelt emotion. Maybe this is heaven.
Hello DN This movie in based on a real-life story. An Iowa farmer ACTUALLY build a baseball field on his land. Whether everything happened as in this film, it is hard to know for sure since we were not there at the time. They did make enough money to save the farm. They were at risk again to lose it because of Covid or farming shortages (I forget), but as far as I know, they still own it to this farm. So now analyze from the perspective of a real story / event. Somehow, maybe as Terence Mann said, it gave people a positive sense of nostalgia and inner understanding of what is truly important and to follow a dream ("Go the Distance") no matter how crazy / hard it is or may seem.
Some of the best baseball films: "Angel's in the Outfueld"( 1951 and the remake in 1994), "Major League"(1989), "Bull Durham " (1988), "A League of their Own,"(1992), "Eight Men Out," (1988),"The Natural1984), "42"(2013),"Pride of the Yankees," (1942) "61*"(2001).
Field of Dreams was all about second chances. Everyone got their chance to do something again that they regretted once in their life, including Ray playing catch with his father. Shoeless Joe Jackson got to play again. Terrance Mann got to find peace and write again (yes he was probably already dead the whole time - lol). Moonlight Graham got to bat and wink at a major league pitcher. My favorite all time movie. I cry at the end every single time!
There is nothing like the smell of a good leather glove, the crack of a bat hitting a ball and the smell of freshly cut grass wafting through the air on a warm summer day.
When ever I watch this movie, two minutes into it there are tears in my eyes. And it has one of the most beautiful music sound tracks ever. Don't try to analyze it, just love it.
The most interesting part of this movie is that the field they used as the set for filming was left as a baseball field, and it operates as a tourist attraction for sightseeing around Iowa City still to this day. You can visit it.
They've been having 1 MLB game a year there since 2021, but right now they are expanding it, so the yearly game has temporarily been moved to Alabama until construction is complete.
"Field of Dreams" is the best example I know of magical realism, in which magical elements exist in a story set in the real world. Terence Mann was based on the writer J.D. Salinger, whose books include "Catcher in the Rye" and "Franny and Zooey." At some point he gave up writing and withdrew from public life, just like Mann. When Salinger threatened to sue when he learned they were planning to make him a character in the film, so they changed the character enough to avoid a lawsuit. I don't think Terence Mann was dead, or that he died in the end. He was going to see what was on the other side, and then come back and write about it. That may seem impossible, but so many things happen in this movie that are impossible. What's one more? If you want to react to another baseball movie, I recommend "Bull Durham." It also stars Kevin Costner, along with Tim Robbins and Susan Sarandon. "A League of Their Own" is also very good. There's a movie called "Eight Men Out" about the Black Sox scandal, but I don't think it's as good as the others I've recommended.
If you know about Ty Cobb's reputation as....well.....not a nice person, you'll appreciate when Shoeless Joe is telling Ray about all the players who wanted to come play on Ray's field and he says "Ty Cobb wanted to play, but none of us could stand the son-of-a-bitch when we were alive, so we told him to stick it!" Cobb was one of the greatest hitters ever. His lifetime .367 average is still a record nearly 100 years after his retirement, and he was baseball's all time hits leader for 57 years until Pete Rose (ironically, another rule breaker, like Shoeless Joe) broke his record in 1985.
@@DNReacts Cobb was famously asked by a reporter in 1960 what he thought his batting average would be if he played in today's game. Cobb replied "About .300." The reporter seemed puzzled and asked "Why so low (Cobb was a career .367 hitter)?" Cobb replied "Well, I am 73 years old."
Costner loves baseball and he's made a few films on it...FYI - This was Burt Lancaster's last film, hence we got the tip of the hat moment from the other baseball players.
Why the cornfield? As a boy in 1971 in rural Maryland. We started little league baseball in the spring just before school was out. The corn was just planted in the nearby fields. By the end of season the corn was near harvest. I think for americans baseball is a fertility ritual. Its a symbol of springs rejuvenation.
You can visit Dyersville IA and visit the Field of Dreams. You can run the bases, have a have a catch, it is absolutely magical to pop into the corn. There are a couple of museums to baseball and to the movie in the town.
It all happened. It was magical. Terrence Mann was alive (and made the national news apparently) until he walked into the corn, and then who knows, there's no telling the future.
The beauty of Kevin Costner is he played ball in college and has a beautiful swing. He looks like a slugger who hits for batting average and would be a career .300 hitter.
To show the impact this movie has had. That field is still there and Major League Baseball will occasionally play a game there. The last one was in 2022. I read some place that Ray Liotta never watched this movie.
Yes, the little girl was eating a hot dog earlier in the scene. "Doc" Graham was played by Burt Lancaster, in his final film appearance. And of course James Earl Jones, Terrance Mann, was the voice of Darth Vader in the Star Wars movies. He also had a part in another baseball movie called "The Sandlot", which is mostly about some kids, it's good. The farm where the movie was filmed has been preserved, plus another, more permanent, baseball field was installed by Major League Baseball across the way, and every year for the last three or four years two MLB teams play a regular season game at the field. Special uniforms, and a corn crop in the outfield. The teams change, but the field remains the same.
The team you recognized as the Oakland Athletics were actually the Philadelphia Athletics at the time Shoeless Joe played. They later moved to Kansas City and finally to Oakland. Of course, they're now going to move to Las Vegas.
Terrence Mann wasn't dead. He chatted with the people in Minnesota--remember he told the old woman that she was a good writer and she said, "So are you." Back when this came out, people didn't go crazy over theories, we just took stories as they were presented to us. I don't think the author or the filmmakers ever intended for it to make logical sense. And if dead people can come back into the world of the living, there's no reason why a living person couldn't visit the world of the dead.
This movie hits hard for those who have lost their dad's. Especially if you had a complicated relationship with him. Now you have to watch Bull Durham, also starring Kevin Costner. It's another baseball classic, albeit a completely different kind of movie. You'll love it.
This film is based on W.P. Kinsella's short story "Shoeless Joe". Here is an audiobook version: ua-cam.com/video/bM9RwlKMo1o/v-deo.htmlsi=_UJltLMK0AMNvsFL Another great baseball film is "The Natural" (1984) with Robert Redford, also based on the novel by Bernard Malamud (1952): Trailer ua-cam.com/video/rgzypQRl6Lc/v-deo.htmlsi=R3KLA8pwwh9Xd-ja
This is such a great movie, and its a movie about so much more than baseball, but baseball runs through it as the vehicle to carry all these stories home. I think it hits everyone different, and there are so many things to latch on to. You can pick any of them and feel a warmth in your heart. My father passed when I was 11, and he was in a coma for a couple of years before he died. I played with him, of course, before then, but it was a child playing with his father. To have some time to "have a catch" with him, as an adult, that would have been a pretty amazing thing. Another is "listening" to those voices - following your heart. There is magic in the universe and things we cant explain. Is there something out there that has the ability and willingness to bend rules for my well being? You can go on and on about just how many elements there are in this movie and what they mean to you. It is ultimately re-watchable, but instead of finding things in the movie that you didn't catch the first time, you find things in yourself that you didn't see on previous watches. I will leave this, though. You mentioned that reconciling with his father was a dream of his since the start of the movie - and maybe it was deep down, but I don't think he realized it. There was anger and shame (or guilt) mostly at the beginning, but as the movie went on, you can see that softening, and by the end I think he really did want to share this experience with his father - if only his dad can see Jackson playing again, and they could talk and reconcile. Ray really went on a journey in this movie - some could say repentance, others could say therapeutic, whatever it may be. I think that's the one that gets me.
Thanks for doing this movie. The scene where Ray says. “It’s Iowa”. The background with the sky being golden, reminds me of an orthodox icon, which further drives home how baseball is the cultural glue that has kept the USA together.
I got a chance to go to Iowa and see the field last year. It was amazing! I saw a father and son in the middle of the field playing catch and I literally could not hold back the tears.
The Mann character is based on J.D. Salinger who wrote Catcher in the Rye. He was a character in the book this was based on but, didn't want to be a character in the movie. That's how they wound up with James Earl Jones. "Rye" had a profound influence on youth in the 50s and 60s. He became somewhat of a recluse, probably partly due to obsessive fans. On the negative side, 2 of his obsessive fans were the guys who shot John Lennon and Ronald Reagan. The guy who shot Lennon had a copy of Catcher in the Rye with him when he did his evil.
Love this movie. I live in the city where Shoeless Joe Jackson was born. We have a statue of him in front of our baseball stadium downtown. All Americans have a baseball or at least a sports connection. ❤
That field and house are still there. Thousands of people go there every year. I don't think any movie caused such feelings in so many people before. There are MLB games that play there now.
Terrance was alive, he did those interviews at the bar asking about Grahm. Even his dad listed him as missing in the papers. He died when he walked thru the cornfield, but he'll be back just like the ballplayers
I’m glad I saw this movie as a kid back in the 90’s-it was magical-and I watched it then with my dad. It hits different now. Our adult brains often forget what it’s like to have that childlike innocence. Little Karen had no trouble believing. Even Annie had no trouble believing because she trusted her husband. Everything that happened was real.
I live about an hour from the site where they filmed this movie in Dyersville, Iowa. It really is just a baseball field in the middle of a cornfield. It's very cathartic to go there. I try to visit at least once every summer. They also have a "ghost players" show for kids/families, a live camera feed on their website where you can see the field 24/7, and recently they've also played a couple of actual MLB games there.
James Earl Jones (also known for being the voice of Darth Vader) plays Terrence Mann in this movie. He also starred in The Sandlot as he was the owner of The Beast.....
even after all these years everybody has a diff idea of what really happened. I did a deep dive into it years ago and every answer I found created another question. The only answer I have is that I will always love this movie.
My thinking was that the field was heaven for the players. Kostner was the vehicle used to make the field come into being for them, including his own father.
Terrence Mann was not dead. He ordered two hot dogs and the attendants took his order. The people he interviewed about the doc to include the secretary told him he was a good writer. Also the brother shook his hand and he introduced himself as the Easter Bunny to Terrence. You are overthinking it. The movie is about unresolved issues and dreams. This wasn’t all in his head, because his family saw the ghosts. His daughter saw shoeless Joe first when she said there’s a man on the lawn.
Playing catch with your dad is something kids remember their entire lives. Baseball is special in this country, it reaches far beyond the idea of a sport and is deeply ingrained in our culture.
@@DNReacts Absolutely, watch all of yalls videos. Found you folks as one of your vids was shared on a Sports message board. It helps me see my sport through a different lens.
@@DNReacts Tigerdroppings. An LSU message board. One of the bigger ones in college sports. I live in Alaska, but LSU is my team as thats where I am from.
One of the Neatest things is The Major Leagues embraced this and play a game there EVERY year. The first years game was the New York Yankees vs Chicago White Sox, ended with a Walk Off home fun in the bottom of the ninth.....
My theory is that Terence Mann doesn't die when he goes with the ballplayers. I base that on the original book. In the book, the writer was a very real JD Salinger, the author of Catcher in the Rye. Salinger was still alive when both the book and film were made. Since he went with the players into the corn in the book, I assume he came back as well. And so, I believe, did Terence Mann in the film.
I am 67 years old and every time I feel like that I need a good cry, I watch this movie or at least the last ten minutes...lol. For people like me that never did much with my dad this movie really hits home. I played baseball since I was 9 and lots of other sports after that but never once played catch with my dad or do much of anything wth him. I like to think of it like this...The baseball gods knew that Ray wasn't living his best life because of the issue with his dad that he never got to reconcile, so they (baseball gods) decided to step in and make things right. EASE HIS PAIN was to ease Ray's pain. It was all about Ray...If I can give you some advice from a loyal long time movie watcher....stop trying to figure movies out...just enjoy them. I used to do that and now I love moves even more by sitting back and getting drawn in to the movie...They will tell you what you need to know when you need to know...lol. Enjoy.
If you get a chance to visit the field in Iowa in the summer, don’t pass it up. It’s quite special. I went a few years ago and loved how a couple dozen kids (who were strangers to each other) just formed a game without any adult guidance. No adult intervened. They just got to play the way I did when I was a kid. It’s a magical game to grow up playing.
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You CANNOT try to make logical sense of this film. It’s not possible. You must simply give in to the fantasy of it and experience the journey. I love this movie so much. I’ve seen it dozens of times, and I still cry at the end.
We realised that after haha! Such a great film!
@@DNReacts I wonder also how much of the movie is missed by any non-American, and generally non-male, people watching. In the US, with Baseball being what it is (or at least was until the real rise of the NFL in the 90's-2000's), baseball and playing catch were an integral part of father son relationships. I think the part where it is Ray's Heaven is just that metaphorically it is "every" adult American male's heaven to have another chance to go play catch with his dad just one more time.
@@fjvarro Agreed. But not just father son relationships. As a woman, one of my fondest memories with my dad is having a catch in the backyard.
What?
This story is pure Frank Capra.
It's A Wonderful Life.
It makes perfect sense.
Believe in your dreams.
It's right there in the title.
Duh?
One of the best sports movies. It was me and my dad’s favorite movie. I haven’t been able to watch it since he passed away. It’s such a wonderful movie. Even if you aren’t into baseball.
Baseball isn't just a sport for Americans; it's a deeply ingrained part of our cultural DNA. When outsiders watch films like 'Field of Dreams,' they often approach it with a more analytical eye, lacking the emotional connection we Americans feel. For us, it's not just a game; it's a flood of memories and emotions that awaken our inner child.
The sights, sounds, and smells of baseball-the crack of the bat, the scent of popcorn and hotdogs, the feel of a well-worn glove-transport us back to simpler times. Even the sight of a Little League game can evoke nostalgia. While I may watch more football and basketball these days, baseball retains a special place in my heart, and I believe, in the hearts of many Americans.
There's something magical about experiencing baseball in person. The energy of the crowd, the intimacy of the stadium-it's an experience that television simply can't replicate. And when you add the layer of learning the game from a loved one-whether it's a father, brother, uncle, or grandad-the emotional connection deepens even further.
'Field of Dreams' captures all of this beautifully, reminding us why we fell in love with baseball in the first place. As I grow older, its impact on me only intensifies, serving as a poignant reminder of the timeless bond between the game and the American spirit.
Love this, thank you for the comment; this is a great read! Hope you enjoyed the video. Thanks again 🙏
Well said sir, and exactly correct.
I am going to be 67 at the end of the year and every Spring, about late March here in the North, when the whether is still cool but getting a little milder and flowers are blossoming on crab apple, cherry and Mountain Laurel, the smell of that immediately gives me a sense memory of being 11 and going to the first practices of little league at Jefferson Jr. High in Mt. Lebanon, PA. It is almost a little frightening that I can remember my teammates and their faces and what we joked about as knuckleheads in the Spring of 1969 (and some kid with his radio tuned the local "counterculture" FM radio stations in Pittsburgh--one of the first--WDVE playing "White Room" by Cream--specifically) all of the smells-- my glove (oiled over the Winter to help break in a new one), dirty hands and uniform, coaches hitting fly balls and grounders to us (taking one in the face on a bad hop for a bloody nose and of course the other kids laughing--typical boys in my area). So strange. But in the late Summer, Fall/Autumn I get a similar sense memory for football. This movie resonates.
This post was RIGHT ON! I have loved baseball my whole life. On a friend level me and my father bonded because of this game. In turn me and my son bonded on this game, as friends. It's too long to react to, but I suggest the documentary, "Baseball" by Ken Burns. It shows how this game has impacted America. Not just from an entertainment basis, but society basis.
Perfect! So true!
Fellow Englishman here, this film was on one Christmas not long after I was married ( 1989 ). We watched it as a family, with my parents and younger sisters. When Ray asks his Dad to play catch, my typically reserved English Dad burst into tears and left the room, it was the first time I saw him cry ... As a 7 year old in July 1943, he'd waved his Dad off as he went off to his Royal Signals posting ... two days later, two Officers arrived at my Gran's door with the news that he'd been killed trying to save people during a bombing raid on the Rolls Royce Aero Engine factory in Derby .. I think the film brought all those suppressed feelings about his father to the surface, and the emotional dam burst ...
In 1996, he suffered a heart attack on holiday in New England, and had a 6 way by-pass at a hospital in Boston, performed over 8 hours by a Professor of Cardiology at Harvard. Eighteen months later, he, me and my 12 old son played a round of Golf, and had a bite to eat together afterwards. We said our goodbyes, and when I got home, it was my turn to cry like a baby ... my wife understood, " It's your Field of Dreams moment, you've done something today you thought you'd never be able to do " . Dad's 88 now, suffers from bad vascular Dementia and is in a Residential home. I love this film ...
Thanks for sharing your beautiful story - the cycle of life.
Thats a great story. So heartfelt. Three generations now four with your son, and I’m so glad you get to spend your Dads final days appreciating him and thinking about how much he means to you.
@@TheRealdal Thank you for that, Dad now also has two beautiful Great-Granddaughters aged 3 and six months ... I am of course, their doting " Pops " ... 🥰
Thank you for sharing. This moved to tears a second time.
Very moving story. Thank you for sharing it.
When I saw this movie when it first came out, I didn't think about baseball or Ray's dad. I thought about my mother and how I couldn't connect with her. I realized that by the time children "know" their parents, their parents have been worn down by life. Your parents have compromised in order to make your life better. I cried at the end of that film, not because of Ray but because of myself and my mother. What I didn't know or appreciate about my mother and how much I missed. That's what this film is about. It's about the desire to connect with those you love and the dreams you share, even though you have those dreams at different times chronologically -- your parents having aspirational dreams unrelated to you a generation earlier than you -- but not different in terms of the actual dreams of fulfillment, or pursuing what you love.
Wow this is a great comment, thank you so much for posting, we really appreciate it 🙏 Hope you enjoyed the video. Thank you again
You have put this beautifully and exactly how I relate to this "perfect" movie.
I’m 40 years old and have seen this movie hundreds of times and I cry every time he ask his dad to play catch
Hope you enjoyed the video. Appreciate the comment, thank you 🙏
@@DNReacts It was interesting watching a couple of British blokes react to this American classic, which I consider the best baseball film ever made. The second best baseball film ever made, IMO, should be next on your list of reactions. The 1976 comedy, *Bad News Bears,* starring Walter Matthau and a young Tatum O'Neal. It is fantastic! (Be sure to react to the original from '76.)
I'm 20 years older than you and female and this is true for me, too.
Burt Lancaster shows what a real movie star is. Every word drips with drama and warmth.
Appreciate the comment, thank you. Lots of love for Burt Lancaster in these comments. Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
Absolutely. He was great in it.
And his last movie
On the 25th I'm going to meet my seven year old nephew. He plays baseball. I told him I'm bringing my glove. My brother told me how excited he is. I can't wait.
That’s so cool! I hope you both have the best time!
Enjoy that moment. It will mean a lot to him.
Dam this movie made me cry as a 18 year old father and now I'm a 54 year old grandfather and this movie makes me cry for a whole other reason. Miss you Dad and sorry to my children for my mistakes.
All the players mentioned in the film were real, including Archibald "Moonlight" Graham. It was exactly like it was in the movie; he played in 1 game but never got to bat.
Those old men in the bar that told Terence about Doc Graham were telling stories about the real Doc Graham. They weren't actors.
That is awesome! We had no idea they were friends of the real Doc Graham. Thank you for posting this, we really appreciate the comment!
I didn’t know this but that’s exactly the vibe I got. In my head I asked if we just went from a movie with actors to real people interviewed
Also, the obituary they read was his real obit, and the woman who wrote the obit in real life starred as herself.
Most of the details about Doc Graham's life as shown in the film were pretty accurate as well. The one big thing that wasn't is the year of his one MLB inning. In real life, it was 1905, not 1922. The writers moved the date forward because the story required it to be plausible that he still be alive until they get to Minnesota and find out he's dead.
I also read someone describe something meaningful regarding the at bat, but I can't remember what it was.
Grown men cry at the end of this movie. I’m a 63 year old man and I can relate to the relationship I wish I would have had with my father who is long gone
So many comments on here hit hard. Thank you for posting, we appreciate it. Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
The English girl I was with for awhile loved baseball. She said that 'rounders' was still played by girls in the UK, and she understood most of the basic rules the first time I took her to an Atlanta Braves game.
That’s pretty cool, rounders isn’t just played by girls. It’s still played in schools. I remember playing when I was younger!
This movie is a tear jerker every time. Dreams came to pass for all these men at that field in Iowa. MLB built a ballfield next to this one and a Field of Dreams game was played there between the White Sox and Yankees in the old uniforms. It was introduced by Kevin Costner walking out of the corn. You can see it on UA-cam and it had an epic ending! Cheers!
There was a second game played there. Construction kept them from playing there in 2024, so a game was played in an old park in Alabama., where Willie Mays had played. He died shortly before that game happened.
James Earl Jones character was real and alive. Recall that Ray’s brother in law could see and interact with him. He is healed as well by getting back into writing, which is his happy place and is a way back into society, rather than isolating himself.
"He stopped writing books because he masturbates." That's true, he opens up a book shows his wang between the pages and goes to town.
The Moonlight Graham character is my favorite. Beautifully acted, beautifully written. And, technically, he never had an at bat because a sacrifice doesn't count as an at bat. He never got his wish but he got his dream.
Couldn't have put this any better myself. Thank you for the comment, we really appreciate it!
most people miss the fact that Graham's only hit was a sacrifice fly...mirror reflection of his life as a doctor
Thank you for posting, we mention this in the uncut recording. Love the mirror reflection connection there, appreciate the comment!
It wasn't the 'sacrificial fly' if you look closely, you'll see that the ball goes to Archie's right, not left. Also, unless he runs faster than Usain Bolt, he wouldn't make it all the way round before it was thrown back in.
@@tonyhaynes9080 it was a pop fly to the right fielder - who caught it and then threw home to try to get the runner - it was a sacrifice fly and actually - doesn't count (in the scorebook) as an at bat - so he still doesn't have an official at bat
@@blueboy4244 But he does get an RBI.
I think your interpretation of the film is pretty good.
I know you guys have become very fond of baseball, but I do think there might be something lost in translation compared to if you were American men. There's something about baseball that is just so intertwined with our history that feels very personal, even for some of us who don't watch as often as we could. I'm not even a Red Sox fan, but when I visited Boston last year I absolutely had to go to a game at Fenway. I took a tour of the park a couple of hours before the game and they let us walk down onto the field, just in the backstop area, and I swear there was a magical feeling to it. Hell, it was Fenway.
Ray's issues with his dad were left vague, but there was a huge generation gap here during the '60s and there were many stories like theirs. Fathers and sons just didn't understand one another. I don't know if that era was quite the same for people there in the UK at that time or not.
This movie is one that makes grown men here in the states absolutely sob.
It's nostalgia. It's daddy issues. It's baseball.
Next you should watch Bull Durham if you haven't seen it yet. One of the great romantic comedies of the '80s set with a minor league baseball team in what was once my home town of Durham, North Carolina. Absolute classic.
Understand what you’re saying and appreciate the comment and context around the in depth emotions this movie brings to so many, thank you 🙏 Have made a note of the suggestion too
I showed this to my dad decades ago, and he cried like a baby at the end. Missing his dad. I have to say I've never heard two people grapple so endlessly about this lovely movie. Just to enjoy it and feel it. Nothing sinister or complicated. Laughter, tears, life.
Nice to see famous actor Bert Lancaster as Doc in one of his last roles.
Burt
Absolutely legendary actor. Should see him in Elmer Gantry or the movie about Jim Thorpe. Burt was an acrobat in the circus before acting. Oh I forgot From Here to Eternity
This is the only movie I've seen of his. He is so damned charming in this and one of these days I'll find one of his older films to check out.
It was his last role and I think he was handsome with white hair and moustache!
@@Maya-bu2rf So beautiful that the last line said to him was "you were good!"
The movie Karen was watching was "Harvey" staring Jimmy Stewart. You need to check that out.
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The journalist in Minnesota did interact with Terrance, she told him he was a good writer and answered his questions as well as the town folk who knew Doc Graham. I see it as a way for him to be re-inspired to write again because he made a difference when he did.
Mark also talked to him and shook his hand.
Good spot, I think we got so caught up in trying to untangle a mystery that didn’t exist 😅 Appreciate the comment, thank you. Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
It also would have been really weird for Mark to just let him monologue so long, he only spoke when Terry wasn't.
I think I cry every time I watch this movie. I've probably seen it 20 times.
Ending was really emotional and raw. I had chills. Appreciate the comment, thank you 🙏
Some trivia for you... the land on which the baseball field was built was originally owned by two different families. The Lansing Family owned the farm house and the ball diamond. The Ameskamp family owned left and center field. When shooting for the movie ended, the Ameskamp portion was plowed into farm ground again but the Lansing family kept the diamond and people did in fact come to see the now famous ball diamond. After a year, the Ameskamp family rebuilt the left and center field but due to some disagreements between the two families, they operated each part separately. In 1990, a neighboring farmer started a baseball team called the "Ghost Players" who would play at the famous ball park to entertain visitors once a month, increasing the number of people who would go to experience the site. In 1991 and 1992, celebrity games were held with Hall of Fame ball players and movie celebrities playing to raise money for local charities. In 2006, the Ameskamp land was sold to the Lansing family so for the first time, the entire field was owned by one family. In 2011 the family sold the entire farm and the Go The Distance Baseball organization has been taking care of it since. (Go The Distance is now primarily owned by former baseball star Frank "The Big Hurt" Thomas) Major League Baseball has held at least two games there and there are plans to do more as the attendance and viewership of the games were very good. If you like the farmhouse, you can rent it for $2200-$2500 a night. The site now gets about 100,000 visitors per year so Karen's words in the movie "People will come." came true.
Thank you. 🙂
RIP Ray Liotta Goodfellas Legend!
An absolute legend!
@@DNReacts Except Ray Liotta looked nothing like the real shoeless joe
@@DNReactsand now "Terence Mann" went through the corn.
Blessed Memory of James Earl Jones.
I live about 50 miles from the field. MLB has built a stadium on the site, now too. There is one MLB game played there every year, in August. This only started 2 or 3 seasons ago. Terrance Mann was played by James Earl Jones (Darth Vader voice from Star Wars) an American Treasure among actors. Another giant among actors was Burt Lancaster (Doc Graham).
James Earl Jones starred in his own great baseball movie back in the day, "The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars & Motor Kings", which I personally think is why he may have been thought of for this role.
Love this Darrin, thank you for posting, love the context 🙏
Its a father, son relationship movie wrapped in a baseball metaphor. Terrance Mann upon first meet. "Dont blame me your father never played catch with you" End of movie, Ray, " Dad , wanna have a catch?". They reality of it could be a single dream all the way to actually happening, leaning maybe more to the latter with the appearance of all the cars coming.
Costner was actually a pretty good ball player in college, he went to Cal State Fullerton here in SoCal. He’s one of the few actors that can look good out there playing baseball on film.
This is an awesome piece of info. Love facts like this, thank you for this comment and for posting 🙏
@@DNReacts I highly recommend you watch For Love of the Game and Bull Durham if you haven't already.
@@jonsoule7421 If Costner is NOT the first saint in the Church of Baseball, then I'm rioting.
He probably has at least 3 baseball movies. They are all good. I think he loves the game. I can't blame him for that
years ago, some team was inviting him to spring training - so he went for a couple years and ran around with the pros and would be pros
If you're interested in the 1919 World Series and Shoeless Joe, You should react to the movie Eight Men out, it's an 80's movie with John Cusack and big ensemble cast about the 1919 World Series and the Black Sox Scandal. The book Eight Men Out is loaded with even more details, but the movie does a good job of covering the basic story.
Thank you for the suggestion James, we really appreciate it. Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
Major League Baseball now holds a “Field of Dreams” game each year. This years game will be June 20th with the Giants facing the Cardinals at Rickwood Field. The oldest professional ballpark in the US. They do a great job with these games. Pretty magical.❤
Field of Dreams is a wonderful, whimsical fantasy movie. My interpretation is that everything was real and Terrance Mann is alive in the movie. The Field of Dreams movie site is in Dyersville, Iowa. They hold youth travel baseball tournaments there. It is also a tourist destination with a couple baseball museums in town. One about the movie and one owned by Dwier Brown, the actor who played John Kinsella, Ray's dad. So people are actually coming there for real. They also are building a major league stadium next door to hold MLB games. I traveled there from Michigan with my family for our son's travel baseball tournament last year. We rented the movie site for a team practice and it was magical. The players played catch with their parents and they even had a Ghost player come out. The house can be rented out too. It was so fun that we are going again this season.
The movie that is guaranteed to make grown men cry
Ending was definitely emotional. I had chills during the final scene. Appreciate the comment 🙏
@@DNReacts Kevin Costner had a watching of the movie with Johnny bench,George Brett and Bret saberhagen, and they discussed it on the impact the movie had made on them being major league players
When Dennis Quaid runs on the field in The Rookie it makes me cry everytime lol
It's the moment Ray realizes that Doc can't go back that hits me every time. The minutes following are perfect.
In the book, the field is in Iowa. The lesson is that heaven is where YOU MAKE IT.
Love this, makes a lot of sense too! Hope you enjoyed the video. Thank you for the comment 🙏
@@DNReacts love you guys!
Th Fields in Iowa in real life too.
@@supersasukemaniac , yep. I've been there a couple of times, and MLB stages an annual game there. It's very cool.
@@mikeg.4211well they did for two years. No word as to whether it’ll happen again in the future. They’re currently renovating the field.
One little fun fact about the scenes they shot in Fenway Park: two of the extras (who, as far as I can tell, were never actually on camera but were in the crowd) were Ben Affleck and Matt Damon. I can't remember exactly what they said but they've talked about how, being Boston guys, they just looked for any way/excuse to get into Fenway and jumped on the chance to be extras so they could hang out in there.
That’s a very cool fact! Thank you sharing!
His brother in law gets a bad rap. He can’t see it and he’s trying to help his sister and her family stay there.
You make a good point to be fair. I know exactly what you mean! Thanks for the comment
I cry my eyes out every time he plays catch with his Dad. I wish there really was a Field of Dreams and I could play with my Dad.
Really nice comment, thank you. Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
The Field of Dreams is still in Dyersville in Eastern Iowa where it was filmed. I grew up a few miles away. Lots of people still visit and “have a catch” there.
I'm an atheist, have been since my early teens in the '70s, and as such, I don't believe in any of the spirit-realm and/or Heaven bullshit... But I cry every fucking time I see this movie! ...Even an edited reaction video on UA-cam has me balling like a little girl whose pet hamster just died! lol
TBH, it might have something to do with not really getting to know my dad as well as I should have, before he passed. We were always supposed to go fishing, just me and him... we never got around to it.
@Vlasko60 yep, me too! 😂
Loved this movie as a kid, and even got to visit the actual place in Iowa back around 1991 which was amazing and it still exists today. The ending still to this day brings tears of happiness to my eyes.
That’s awesome, really appreciate the comment! Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
This film is baseball meets magical realism. It’s what a baseball movie written by Gabriel Garcia Marquez would look like🤣
THIS! It's one best representations of Magical Realism in American Cinema.
I am glad you liked this movie. Most men in the US cry at the end though! Two more baseball movies you should watch are Bull Durham, also with Kevin Costner, and A League of Our Own, about women playing baseball during WWll when the men were at war. Both are terrific!
You guys should watch the highlights from when the Yankees and white sox played at the field of dreams field
Appreciate the suggestion, this sounds awesome, thank you for this! 🙏
@DNReacts I'd say to watch the full game instead of highlights, it's such a great game. Highlights might not do it justice... just don't look at the final score on it... let someone else look it up for you guys lol
@@bigernmacrackin6176 that too!
You guys laughed a lot. It's not a comedy. For laughs though, check out Major League 1 and 2.
@@DNReactsNext: "A League Of Thier Own" Starring Thomas (Tom)Hanks Singer,Dancer Madonna (Mae #5) in her 2nd movie role "Desperately Seeking Susan" was the other in 1986.Actress Geena Davis (Dottie) FACT:Geena Davis tried out for The USA Archery Team for the 2002 Winter Olympic Games in Salt Lake City,Utah.She just missed qualifying for the team by a few points.She was really,really,good at Archery.It wasn't a celebrity publicly stunt,or a role for an upcoming movie.She made it through the preliminary rounds.Lori Petty (no relation to music rocker Tom) is really the better athlete in real life she's the faster runner.The game's last action scene that Lori,not a body double. ⚾
I visited the Field of Dreams as a kid many times. Even as a fueld trip in school lol I found a baseball in the cornfield and "knew" it was from the movie. Obviously there are plenty of balls out there from all the games actually played there but it was so cool having that memory.
This is awesome, love this! Thanks for the comment, we appreciate it 🙏
This movie still brings tears to my eyes. A true classic. Glad you gents got to see it.
Really glad we watched this one, was a great watch and a perfect ending. Thank you for the comment 🙏
If Terrence was dead they wouldn't be talking about him writing again. The only ghosts were the ballplayers.
The movie Karin was watching near the beginning was "Harvey" starring James Stewart. That would be a great one to watch.
This movie reminded me of my father who played semi-pro basketball in the Midwest. He got invited to a tryout for the Cardinals. The day of the tryout it rained, and it was canceled. That was his one shot. Years later he taught his sons how to pitch.
So glad you all finally reacted to this movie. I'll be 41 this year and played little league baseball for about 10 years when I was kid, back in the late 80s and 90s, and remember vividly all the days I spent with my dad playing catch in the front yard trying to get better. I still cry every time he asks his dad to have a catch at the end. That part hits home so well for me. Great reaction!
Great reaction guys! And I agree with the previous poster who said you can't try to make logical sense of this film, it's a fantasy. BUT this was the first time I've seen male reactors and no tear was shed. I always choke up at, "Hey Dad, you wanna have a catch?"
Thank you so much, we really appreciate it! From the comments we’ve understood so much about how ingrained this is in American Culture. Was a really great film to watch, thanks again 🙏
Here’s another word for you; “Phantasmagorical”. - “They are a reality, whereas the guerrillas are only a dream”. -The Cambridge English Corpus. This is a classic. Makes grown men cry.
My personal favorite baseball movie, and probably my favorite sports movie. Such an iconic film with a beautiful message!
It’s a great movie!
@@DNReactsBull Durham is another great baseball film.
I had to laugh when you saw he left the bats and balls out, that you hope there's no youths around to mess with them. I grew up about 45 minutes from this location and not only would that just never happen, you literally knew every person who lived within 20 square miles and everybody always looked out for everybody. I still appreciate the absolutely true aspect of what is known as "Iowa nice," except when you are at a stop sign and the person with the right-of-way waits for you instead of just getting out of the way.
😅 Thank you the context and the comment. We appreciate it. Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
@@DNReacts Oh, yes, DM - You have often entertained me. I have lived all over America (I'm 59) and I moved back to Iowa City in 2008. We just completed our epic era of Caitlin Clark here in Iowa and tomorrow she is most likely going to be drafted by the Indiana Fever. I got to watch her live a few times as a freshman and sophomore. I maybe should have gone to see her these last two years, but I'm not into the crowd scene and you get a better view of games with other Hawkeye fans at our beautiful smallish downtown restaurant and bar area. A piece of info I am sure you are not aware of is that this locale is also known as "Wrestle-town USA." The UI men's wrestling team has been a national powerhouse for 40+ years and just this last year, the state sanctioned women's wrestling for high school and the UI had their first women's team competing nationally. Those women went undefeated and won the national championship in their first year!
Kind of a quintessential American movie--and yes about 99% of boys learn how to catch first by catching with their Dad. I did. I remember how much it hurt until I learned to catch in mostly in the webbing (and slide my index finger to the outside finger holes of the glove). He was a pitcher when he was young--and I became one, too.
My dad taught me how to catch, but he wasn't that athletic, so I quickly surpassed him in ability. But he was always up for going to a game, professional or semi-pro!
*based on a Canadian story.
@@alittlebitgone Canadian author, but the book is set in Iowa 🙂. But I like that sports are one of the things we share, Gridiron Football, even if the rules are a bit different and we both call it Soccer. Hockey, Baseball, Basketball ( developed by a Canadian living in Massachusetts), Lacrosse. Toronto even had a baseball team in the International League all the way back in the late 19th century.
Appreciate the comment Greg, thank you. Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
My parents were in their 30s when they had my brother and I, they’d originally planned on 3-6 kids, but chose to stop at 2 because my dad worried he’d be “too old to play catch” with kid #3. He never played catch with my brother or I, either, too much of a workaholic. This movie still gets to me, though, because of the missed opportunities for quintessential bonding. Plus it’s just a good movie. (Side note I think they stopped at 2 because I had a few health issues and my brother was autistic so we were a handful as it was- but we both wanted another sibling thinking we’d have a buddy when mom’s focus had to be more on one or the other of us so we got the playing catch line tossed at us a lot as to why we didn’t have another sibling).
Walking on that field, the grass feels like clouds under your feet.
They built a stadium about 100 yards away from the Field of Dreams they used in the movie and played an MLB game in Aug 2021. It was a really cool moment.. Same teams played a game in Iowa and they entered the field through the cornfield from center field like they did in the movie. Pretty cool moment in history. Kevin Costner also played in another movie called, "Bull Durham" as a catcher which got really good reviews and was nominated for an Oscar for best original screen play. Funny enough he plays a pitcher in For Love of the Game.
"Bull Durham" is another must-watch baseball movie that should be on your list, as is "The Natural." Since y'all have started watching "Ted Lasso" I think you should also check out "Major League" as there is a lot of overlap with the plot of Lasso S1. @DNReacts 👀
The game they played in 2021 (?) between the White Sox and the Yankees at this field in Iowa had one of the BEST endings of any game-Hollywood couldn’t write the ending they had to that game. It is available for viewing on UA-cam, and worth a look. Look up “White Sox Field of Dreams” game.
Cubs vs Reds also played there in 2022
A lot of Americans have nothing really in common with each other, but can always bond over baseball. That’s kind of why this movie is so important to people. Other baseball movie recommendations: Bull Durham (Kevin Costner as a veteran catcher stuck in the minor leagues helps a young pitching prospect who has a great fastball but is childish and immature), Mr. Baseball (Tom Selleck is a struggling veteran in the MLB who nobody wants anymore, so he decides to play in Japan), A League of Their Own (a story about how when all of the men fought in WWII, a professional women’s baseball league was formed).
Thank you for the recommendations! Really appreciate it 😀
@@DNReacts no problem. Great videos.
I remember the first baseball game ,I went to in Houston Texas, when I was a little girl.I still think about it today. my brother was on a little league baseball team as a boy.we also played softball in school! you all to see when they played like that today on tv,and players come walking out of the corn field. you get a chill watching that today on tv!
@@DNReacts He left out The Natural. Another novel adapted into a fantastic period piece starring Robert Redford and Glenne Close' You guys should react to more movies . 👍👍
Well said.
Fun fact: this movie was even more popular in Japan.not only is Japan just as baseball crazy as america, even have their own 12 team Professional baseball league (Go Hanshin Tigers), if not even more so. Japan is also all about family and ancestry, so the story of aman reconciling with his father really resonated with the Japanese moviegoers.
This is a fun fact! Definitely not something I was aware of so thank you for posting this 🙏
Having grown up in a baseball family this is the ultimate childhood fantasy - being able to play catch with your father when you were about same age. No man can get through that ending - "Hey Dad, want to have a catch?" - without that strong, heartfelt emotion. Maybe this is heaven.
Hello DN
This movie in based on a real-life story. An Iowa farmer ACTUALLY build a baseball field on his land. Whether everything happened as in this film, it is hard to know for sure since we were not there at the time.
They did make enough money to save the farm. They were at risk again to lose it because of Covid or farming shortages (I forget), but as far as I know, they still own it to this farm.
So now analyze from the perspective of a real story / event. Somehow, maybe as Terence Mann said, it gave people a positive sense of nostalgia and inner understanding of what is truly important and to follow a dream ("Go the Distance") no matter how crazy / hard it is or may seem.
Hey, appreciate the info and the comment, was a good read. Thank you for this. Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
Some of the best baseball films:
"Angel's in the Outfueld"( 1951 and the remake in 1994), "Major League"(1989), "Bull Durham " (1988), "A League of their Own,"(1992), "Eight Men Out," (1988),"The Natural1984), "42"(2013),"Pride of the Yankees," (1942) "61*"(2001).
Thank you for this list of suggestions, we really appreciate it. Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
Field of Dreams was all about second chances. Everyone got their chance to do something again that they regretted once in their life, including Ray playing catch with his father. Shoeless Joe Jackson got to play again. Terrance Mann got to find peace and write again (yes he was probably already dead the whole time - lol). Moonlight Graham got to bat and wink at a major league pitcher. My favorite all time movie. I cry at the end every single time!
Love this comment, really well thought out! Thank for posting, we appreciate it. Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
Annie's brother introduced himself to him. Terrance Mann was alive.
@@cindyknudson2715 Yup and Archie Graham rode all the way from MN to Iowa with Ray and Terrence. Was he alive too???
A baseball movie you have yet to watch that is fantastic is called 'The Natural' with Robert Redford.
Thank you for the recommendation!
Robert Redford's "The Natural" is one of my favorite movies. Great one to watch!
Great reaction..
Lololol..
" My bag has more fries in it"....
I LOVE IT...!!!
There is nothing like the smell of a good leather glove, the crack of a bat hitting a ball and the smell of freshly cut grass wafting through the air on a warm summer day.
Love this! Thank you for the comment, hope you enjoyed the video! 🙏
@@DNReactsDefinitely enjoyed the video and really liking your reactions to Ted Lasso as well. Cheers!
@MichaelRBlair That’s great to hear, thank you and love that you’re enjoying these
@@DNReacts just wondering if there is any film in British culture related to sport that British people have a special connection to?
When ever I watch this movie, two minutes into it there are tears in my eyes. And it has one of the most beautiful music sound tracks ever. Don't try to analyze it, just love it.
Love this! Very well put. Thank you for the comment. Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
The most interesting part of this movie is that the field they used as the set for filming was left as a baseball field, and it operates as a tourist attraction for sightseeing around Iowa City still to this day. You can visit it.
I would love to visit!!
It also hosts Little League.
They've been having 1 MLB game a year there since 2021, but right now they are expanding it, so the yearly game has temporarily been moved to Alabama until construction is complete.
"Field of Dreams" is the best example I know of magical realism, in which magical elements exist in a story set in the real world.
Terence Mann was based on the writer J.D. Salinger, whose books include "Catcher in the Rye" and "Franny and Zooey." At some point he gave up writing and withdrew from public life, just like Mann. When Salinger threatened to sue when he learned they were planning to make him a character in the film, so they changed the character enough to avoid a lawsuit.
I don't think Terence Mann was dead, or that he died in the end. He was going to see what was on the other side, and then come back and write about it. That may seem impossible, but so many things happen in this movie that are impossible. What's one more?
If you want to react to another baseball movie, I recommend "Bull Durham." It also stars Kevin Costner, along with Tim Robbins and Susan Sarandon. "A League of Their Own" is also very good. There's a movie called "Eight Men Out" about the Black Sox scandal, but I don't think it's as good as the others I've recommended.
Love the views and the context, thank you for this comment! Appreciate the suggestions too and hope that you enjoyed the video 🙏
If you know about Ty Cobb's reputation as....well.....not a nice person, you'll appreciate when Shoeless Joe is telling Ray about all the players who wanted to come play on Ray's field and he says "Ty Cobb wanted to play, but none of us could stand the son-of-a-bitch when we were alive, so we told him to stick it!"
Cobb was one of the greatest hitters ever. His lifetime .367 average is still a record nearly 100 years after his retirement, and he was baseball's all time hits leader for 57 years until Pete Rose (ironically, another rule breaker, like Shoeless Joe) broke his record in 1985.
Love this, appreciate the info. We didn’t know about Ty Cobb’s reputation. Thank you for the comment. Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
@@DNReacts Cobb was famously asked by a reporter in 1960 what he thought his batting average would be if he played in today's game. Cobb replied "About .300." The reporter seemed puzzled and asked "Why so low (Cobb was a career .367 hitter)?" Cobb replied "Well, I am 73 years old."
When I was little I saw an old ball player who's leg was scared by Ty Cobb sliding into second with spikes up.
In theater release, pretty much every show let alone with a stream of weeping dudes.
Good poll winner, one of the classic American sports movies of all time
It was so good!
*from a Canadian story.
Costner loves baseball and he's made a few films on it...FYI - This was Burt Lancaster's last film, hence we got the tip of the hat moment from the other baseball players.
Love this, we’ve had a few other Costner films suggested to us. Thank you for the comment, hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
Why the cornfield? As a boy in 1971 in rural Maryland. We started little league baseball in the spring just before school was out. The corn was just planted in the nearby fields. By the end of season the corn was near harvest. I think for americans baseball is a fertility ritual. Its a symbol of springs rejuvenation.
You can visit Dyersville IA and visit the Field of Dreams. You can run the bases, have a have a catch, it is absolutely magical to pop into the corn. There are a couple of museums to baseball and to the movie in the town.
This is so awesome, absolutely love this. Thank you for the comment, hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
It all happened. It was magical. Terrence Mann was alive (and made the national news apparently) until he walked into the corn, and then who knows, there's no telling the future.
The beauty of Kevin Costner is he played ball in college and has a beautiful swing. He looks like a slugger who hits for batting average and would be a career .300 hitter.
That’s so cool! Thank you for the info!
To show the impact this movie has had. That field is still there and Major League Baseball will occasionally play a game there. The last one was in 2022. I read some place that Ray Liotta never watched this movie.
If you come to visit ,the ballpark is still there & open to the public. Most of the time there's a pick-up game going.
Yes, the little girl was eating a hot dog earlier in the scene. "Doc" Graham was played by Burt Lancaster, in his final film appearance. And of course James Earl Jones, Terrance Mann, was the voice of Darth Vader in the Star Wars movies. He also had a part in another baseball movie called "The Sandlot", which is mostly about some kids, it's good. The farm where the movie was filmed has been preserved, plus another, more permanent, baseball field was installed by Major League Baseball across the way, and every year for the last three or four years two MLB teams play a regular season game at the field. Special uniforms, and a corn crop in the outfield. The teams change, but the field remains the same.
The team you recognized as the Oakland Athletics were actually the Philadelphia Athletics at the time Shoeless Joe played. They later moved to Kansas City and finally to Oakland. Of course, they're now going to move to Las Vegas.
Thank you for the context, appreciate it Jim. Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
As a San Diegan I feel your Padres pain. Just try rooting for them _and_ the Chargers. We're the city of almost'ers. 😂
Ah, Dan Fouts.
Kellon Winslow.
Terrence Mann wasn't dead. He chatted with the people in Minnesota--remember he told the old woman that she was a good writer and she said, "So are you." Back when this came out, people didn't go crazy over theories, we just took stories as they were presented to us. I don't think the author or the filmmakers ever intended for it to make logical sense. And if dead people can come back into the world of the living, there's no reason why a living person couldn't visit the world of the dead.
That’s so true, great spot thank you. I didn’t even think about that 😅 Appreciate the comment, hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
@@DNReacts Great reaction! I need to check out your other videos.
Thank you, I’ve been getting the hand of editing (I think this was my best attempt yet) but we do have a handful of other movies and TV shows too
This movie hits hard for those who have lost their dad's. Especially if you had a complicated relationship with him. Now you have to watch Bull Durham, also starring Kevin Costner. It's another baseball classic, albeit a completely different kind of movie. You'll love it.
Appreciate the comment and the suggestions, have made a note of these. Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
This film is based on W.P. Kinsella's short story "Shoeless Joe". Here is an audiobook version:
ua-cam.com/video/bM9RwlKMo1o/v-deo.htmlsi=_UJltLMK0AMNvsFL
Another great baseball film is "The Natural" (1984) with Robert Redford, also based on the novel by Bernard Malamud (1952):
Trailer
ua-cam.com/video/rgzypQRl6Lc/v-deo.htmlsi=R3KLA8pwwh9Xd-ja
This is such a great movie, and its a movie about so much more than baseball, but baseball runs through it as the vehicle to carry all these stories home. I think it hits everyone different, and there are so many things to latch on to. You can pick any of them and feel a warmth in your heart.
My father passed when I was 11, and he was in a coma for a couple of years before he died. I played with him, of course, before then, but it was a child playing with his father. To have some time to "have a catch" with him, as an adult, that would have been a pretty amazing thing. Another is "listening" to those voices - following your heart. There is magic in the universe and things we cant explain. Is there something out there that has the ability and willingness to bend rules for my well being? You can go on and on about just how many elements there are in this movie and what they mean to you. It is ultimately re-watchable, but instead of finding things in the movie that you didn't catch the first time, you find things in yourself that you didn't see on previous watches.
I will leave this, though. You mentioned that reconciling with his father was a dream of his since the start of the movie - and maybe it was deep down, but I don't think he realized it. There was anger and shame (or guilt) mostly at the beginning, but as the movie went on, you can see that softening, and by the end I think he really did want to share this experience with his father - if only his dad can see Jackson playing again, and they could talk and reconcile. Ray really went on a journey in this movie - some could say repentance, others could say therapeutic, whatever it may be. I think that's the one that gets me.
Thanks for doing this movie. The scene where Ray says. “It’s Iowa”. The background with the sky being golden, reminds me of an orthodox icon, which further drives home how baseball is the cultural glue that has kept the USA together.
I got a chance to go to Iowa and see the field last year. It was amazing! I saw a father and son in the middle of the field playing catch and I literally could not hold back the tears.
The Mann character is based on J.D. Salinger who wrote Catcher in the Rye. He was a character in the book this was based on but, didn't want to be a character in the movie. That's how they wound up with James Earl Jones.
"Rye" had a profound influence on youth in the 50s and 60s. He became somewhat of a recluse, probably partly due to obsessive fans. On the negative side, 2 of his obsessive fans were the guys who shot John Lennon and Ronald Reagan. The guy who shot Lennon had a copy of Catcher in the Rye with him when he did his evil.
Love this movie. I live in the city where Shoeless Joe Jackson was born. We have a statue of him in front of our baseball stadium downtown. All Americans have a baseball or at least a sports connection. ❤
That field and house are still there. Thousands of people go there every year. I don't think any movie caused such feelings in so many people before. There are MLB games that play there now.
Terrance was alive, he did those interviews at the bar asking about Grahm. Even his dad listed him as missing in the papers. He died when he walked thru the cornfield, but he'll be back just like the ballplayers
Appreciate the comment and context, thank you. Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
I’m glad I saw this movie as a kid back in the 90’s-it was magical-and I watched it then with my dad. It hits different now. Our adult brains often forget what it’s like to have that childlike innocence. Little Karen had no trouble believing. Even Annie had no trouble believing because she trusted her husband. Everything that happened was real.
I know what you mean, appreciate the context and the comment, hope you enjoyed the video, thank you 🙏
I live about an hour from the site where they filmed this movie in Dyersville, Iowa. It really is just a baseball field in the middle of a cornfield. It's very cathartic to go there. I try to visit at least once every summer. They also have a "ghost players" show for kids/families, a live camera feed on their website where you can see the field 24/7, and recently they've also played a couple of actual MLB games there.
That’s awesome, love the annual trip there too. Appreciate the comment and hope you enjoyed the video!
I love how they made the old school uniforms for the players. Shoeless Joe is actually wearing the 1919 White Sox Jersey.
That is pretty awesome, thank you for the comment, we appreciate it. Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
James Earl Jones (also known for being the voice of Darth Vader) plays Terrence Mann in this movie. He also starred in The Sandlot as he was the owner of The Beast.....
OMG how did we miss that he was in Sandlot! That is unbelievable!! Thank you so much for posting this, I feel silly now 😂
even after all these years everybody has a diff idea of what really happened. I did a deep dive into it years ago and every answer I found created another question. The only answer I have is that I will always love this movie.
My thinking was that the field was heaven for the players. Kostner was the vehicle used to make the field come into being for them, including his own father.
I love the varied ways everyone sees the message of the story! Really appreciate the comment, thanks. Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
Terrence Mann was not dead. He ordered two hot dogs and the attendants took his order. The people he interviewed about the doc to include the secretary told him he was a good writer. Also the brother shook his hand and he introduced himself as the Easter Bunny to Terrence. You are overthinking it. The movie is about unresolved issues and dreams. This wasn’t all in his head, because his family saw the ghosts. His daughter saw shoeless Joe first when she said there’s a man on the lawn.
Yeah, we were overthinking it massively 😂
Playing catch with your dad is something kids remember their entire lives. Baseball is special in this country, it reaches far beyond the idea of a sport and is deeply ingrained in our culture.
Love this! The comments on this video have been an incredible read and so eye opening! Hope you enjoyed the video 🙏
@@DNReacts Absolutely, watch all of yalls videos. Found you folks as one of your vids was shared on a Sports message board. It helps me see my sport through a different lens.
@rick5440 Thanks awesome, love that you’re enjoying the videos. Which sports board was that if you remember?
@@DNReacts Tigerdroppings. An LSU message board. One of the bigger ones in college sports. I live in Alaska, but LSU is my team as thats where I am from.
"Field of Dreams": "Shoeless Joe" Jackson: "Is this Heaven?" Ray Kinsella: "Yes, it's Iowa."
One of the Neatest things is The Major Leagues embraced this and play a game there EVERY year. The first years game was the New York Yankees vs Chicago White Sox, ended with a Walk Off home fun in the bottom of the ninth.....
My theory is that Terence Mann doesn't die when he goes with the ballplayers. I base that on the original book. In the book, the writer was a very real JD Salinger, the author of Catcher in the Rye. Salinger was still alive when both the book and film were made. Since he went with the players into the corn in the book, I assume he came back as well. And so, I believe, did Terence Mann in the film.
I am 67 years old and every time I feel like that I need a good cry, I watch this movie or at least the last ten minutes...lol. For people like me that never did much with my dad this movie really hits home. I played baseball since I was 9 and lots of other sports after that but never once played catch with my dad or do much of anything wth him. I like to think of it like this...The baseball gods knew that Ray wasn't living his best life because of the issue with his dad that he never got to reconcile, so they (baseball gods) decided to step in and make things right. EASE HIS PAIN was to ease Ray's pain. It was all about Ray...If I can give you some advice from a loyal long time movie watcher....stop trying to figure movies out...just enjoy them. I used to do that and now I love moves even more by sitting back and getting drawn in to the movie...They will tell you what you need to know when you need to know...lol. Enjoy.
If you get a chance to visit the field in Iowa in the summer, don’t pass it up. It’s quite special. I went a few years ago and loved how a couple dozen kids (who were strangers to each other) just formed a game without any adult guidance. No adult intervened. They just got to play the way I did when I was a kid. It’s a magical game to grow up playing.