FIELD OF DREAMS (1989) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | Reaction & Commentary | IS this Heaven?!

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  • Опубліковано 6 чер 2024
  • This week I watched FIELD OF DREAMS!!! Wow, what a family-friendly, fun ride! It is indeed a movie about baseball, that much is totally clear. What's not super clear is, did these men age in heaven? Would your uncle throw you off a bleacher to prove a point? Why isn't it "if you build it THEY will come," where did I get that from?! If you've got the answers sound off below. Also sorry for the crazy censoring in this one, UA-cam kept flagging this as 'Inappropriate for ads'-- like okay mom hop off!
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    TIME STAMPS:
    Intros: 00:00
    Start Watching: 02:36
    Wrap-up and trivia 25:37
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 824

  • @ShanelleRiccio
    @ShanelleRiccio  Рік тому +14

    Catch my full-length reaction on Patreon! 🪐
    www.patreon.com/shanellericcio

    • @ROBOTRIX_eu
      @ROBOTRIX_eu Рік тому +1

      Amélie - (The Fabulous Destiny of Amélie Poulain) 2001 French ;; The Grand Budapest Hotel - 2014 ;; Gran Torino - 2008 ;;; Intouchables (french - 2011) ;;;

    • @johncampbell756
      @johncampbell756 Рік тому +4

      "They.look like theu would in 1989." They played in the 1919 world series. They would be 90-100+ years old in 1989.
      John Cusack starred in Eight Men Out about those players.

    • @vikingraiders6703
      @vikingraiders6703 Рік тому +1

      I cry ever time I watch this movie, it's great

    • @vikingraiders6703
      @vikingraiders6703 Рік тому +3

      EIGHT MEN OUT is a very good movie about Shoeless Joe

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Рік тому +4

      @@johncampbell756 good point lmaooo I just felt like they looked like 45 year olds, and baseball guys today look so young 😂

  • @mrwomby5007
    @mrwomby5007 Рік тому +211

    The best part of the movie for me is Burt Lancaster in his last role. I just love his voice. He was the Sam Elliott of the 50s & 60s.

    • @pedroV2003
      @pedroV2003 Рік тому +9

      My favorite scene in the movie - the one that gets to me the most is when Shoeless says to Moonlight, "...you were good." I believe its the affirmation that Doc was looking for that he could have made it in baseball had things gone differently.

    • @ChicagoDB
      @ChicagoDB Рік тому +3

      It was his last big screen role…but not his last role or movie.

    • @jsox1109
      @jsox1109 Рік тому

      My favorite scene of all time

    • @CraigKostelecky
      @CraigKostelecky Рік тому +2

      The man is just so damn charming.

    • @alhollywood6486
      @alhollywood6486 Рік тому +2

      Sam Elliot wishes, although tbf, Roadhouse kicks much ass.

  • @kennethdennis7624
    @kennethdennis7624 Рік тому +107

    I grew up near Dyersville. My father and I are in one of the cars on the road for the last shot. The movie never fails to bring tears.

  • @TheTitandog70
    @TheTitandog70 Рік тому +144

    Ah the movie that will reduce grown men in crying mess wanting to play catch with there father. Everytime I watch this movie just hits me in the feels, every damn time

    • @cctomcat321
      @cctomcat321 Рік тому +3

      It's like the one part that doesn't level me. My dad is still out getting milk. Or cheese... It _has_ been over 30 years.

    • @lanebatts26
      @lanebatts26 Рік тому +9

      Yep, last 5 minutes of this movie gets every son and father. Family in general. Once you lose them you would give anything to see them again

    • @disconnexionsdotcom
      @disconnexionsdotcom Рік тому +4

      Yeah.. this would've been a great Father's Day reaction. Maybe she can watch Rudy.. another movie that makes men cry.

    • @mattx449
      @mattx449 Рік тому +7

      Except there’s no crying in baseball… 😂

    • @TheTitandog70
      @TheTitandog70 Рік тому +3

      Yeah, the universal truth Rudy and Field of Dreams reduce grown men to crying mess by the end of the movie

  • @jthomann71
    @jthomann71 Рік тому +171

    I love the fact that his wife is not the stereotypical opponent who disbelieve and discourages his insane dream. She acknowledges its crazy but still supports him 100%. No manufactured drama.

    • @jmwild1
      @jmwild1 Рік тому +11

      She was part of the 60s counterculture, so it makes sense that she would embrace the supernatural.

    • @adampoveromo2134
      @adampoveromo2134 Рік тому +1

      It's a movie/fictional. Do you really think a modern woman does that. Laughable

    • @alaninsoflo
      @alaninsoflo Рік тому +1

      She is 1000% the weakest character in the movie. A 1960's caricature of the very worst kind.

    • @KS-xk2so
      @KS-xk2so Рік тому +9

      @@alaninsoflo Well that's not true. What about the mustache twirling brother in law who is literally only there to give a face to the money problems and higher stakes to the choices made? Annie is great and she's pretty well fleshed out I think.

    • @jthomann71
      @jthomann71 Рік тому +9

      @@adampoveromo2134 I'm pretty sure no woman would support your dreams.

  • @jthomann71
    @jthomann71 Рік тому +72

    This movie is everything. It's a comedy, a drama, a family drama, a road trip movie, a time travel movie, a sports movie, it's fantasy and magical realism.

  • @fmellish71
    @fmellish71 Рік тому +93

    Burt Lancaster is so effortlessly perfect here. He never took acting lessons; he just started out in film noirs after an injury as a circus acrobat and just picked it up from there. He was actually fortunate enough to have his first film be a starring role in a well-venerated film noir (The Killers from 1946) which immediately established him as a star performer in that genre before From Here to Eternity (1950) made him a household name.

    • @65g4
      @65g4 Рік тому +3

      From Here To Eternity was 1953

    • @3dbadboy1
      @3dbadboy1 Рік тому +1

      He also played Wyatt Earp with Kirk Douglas as Doc Holliday in the Gunfight at the OK Corral.

    • @fmellish71
      @fmellish71 Рік тому

      @@65g4 whoops how did i miss that?

    • @mattruffino6720
      @mattruffino6720 9 місяців тому

      Great in everything! Even Atlantic city

  • @gerardmorris5473
    @gerardmorris5473 Рік тому +27

    Just so you know almost every man cries when Ray says "Dad do you want to have a catch" I am right now while typing this! Great reaction

  • @JeffKelly03
    @JeffKelly03 Рік тому +42

    A fun filming fact about their trip to Minnesota: the people that James Earl Jones is talking to in the bar aren't actors, they're regular people who actually knew the real Moonlight Graham (yes, Moonlight was a real person). All of their anecdotes about Moonlight are 100% real stories.

    • @Joe-gb3lu
      @Joe-gb3lu Рік тому +1

      As she mentioned in the video.

    • @CraigKostelecky
      @CraigKostelecky Рік тому +3

      @@Joe-gb3lu Regular Shanelle viewers know to wait until the end to comment on stuff like that 😎

  • @kevinehle6637
    @kevinehle6637 Рік тому +33

    Major League Baseball has played real regular season games on this Iowa farm the last couple of years. First MLB games ever in Iowa. Very nostalgic.

    • @curtismartin2866
      @curtismartin2866 Рік тому +6

      Actually, the MLB field is right next to the movie field. What I love us that this movie literally came true. People came just to play catch. "For it's money they have, but peace they lack".

  • @bobbabai
    @bobbabai Рік тому +52

    The movie came out in 1989. I had been a father for 6 years and we were about to have our third kid. I was 32, so maybe 2 or 3 years younger than Ray Kinsella.
    My dad died of brain cancer when he was 41 in 1973 when I was 15. He was a very different person the last year or year and a half of his life - we were already losing him just as I was turning 14.
    My dad had spent a lot of time building his radio career, especially after we moved from Pontiac to Minneapolis, Minnesota. He was away a lot and I think it was really hard on my mom. A couple of my favorite memories with him were convincing him to play catch after the end of a Tigers game on TV (we lived in Pontiac, Michigan). It was not easy to convince him. So playing catch with my dad was really symbolic for me after he was gone. I never felt like I got enough - catch, or guidance, or just time. BUT, he did manage to get a couple of radio comp tickets to the 4th game of the 1968 World Series the Tigers played at Tiger Stadium in Detroit, an old ballpark from way back in the Black Sox era of baseball. That day was magical, and we thoroughly enjoyed it.
    The scene at the end of the movie with Ray and his dad playing catch just destroyed me. Face completely wet with tears when the lights came up at the theater - everyone could see me. And Ray's giddiness on the road trip was a huge pleasure, especially when he convinced Terence to go to Minnesota (I've lived in Minneapolis since 1969) - buddies for life.

    • @moeball740
      @moeball740 Рік тому +6

      I'm here as another for whom this film had so much meaning. I was just a wide eyed kid in 1967 when my dad took me to the All Star Game. After the game we even got to meet Hank Aaron in the parking lot. 22 years later in 1989 I was the working adult newly engaged and my dad was retired when I took him to the All Star Game. It was my turn to do something for my dad and my second chance at an All Star game. This movie is all about second chances and it meant so much to me, especially coming out in 1989. My dad is long gone now of course but I still think of him from time to time. I hope he's playing catch somewhere.

    • @msdarby515
      @msdarby515 Рік тому +4

      I am crying all over again after reading your story.
      Mine is different. I'm a girl and my dad is 83 years old now, I didn't lose him in my childhood, or even when I was young. But he was never emotionally available. He wasn't the guy that would play games with us, throw a ball around with us, shoot hoops, any of that. He's still not that guy. So this movie has always represented to me that little piece that I feel like I missed out on.
      I'm so sorry you lost your father so young. I have many friends who lost parents in their childhood and I've always been grateful that I at least got to know mine as an adult, and have adult conversations, and try to understand them as an adult rather than a child.
      I'm so glad you have the memories of having that catch and going to that World Series game. God bless.

    • @bobbabai
      @bobbabai Рік тому

      @@msdarby515 thank you. I'm sorry your dad hasn't been how you wanted or deserved.

    • @4thlinemaniac356
      @4thlinemaniac356 8 місяців тому

      ​@@moeball740 We receive in Life what We need to help Us grow and ascend before We move on to Our next Life.@ Forum Borealis channel Playlist Clif High Beyond the Gates of Death Transmigration,Reincarnation,and the Metemphychosis video I experienced a terrible relationship with my Father also. Never got to say goodbye nor see him due to the false ********* @ Rumble @ Janet Ossebaard channel@ Fall of the Cabal Series Parts #1-27 Kept telling Dad about Part #10 The Return of the King but He would not listen. Enjoy.

  • @pedantech
    @pedantech Рік тому +12

    "There's a man out there on your lawn." All these years later, and it still gives me goosebumps.

  • @chrispittman8854
    @chrispittman8854 Рік тому +12

    Lancaster's scenes are masterful. A man that new his tools and what they looked like behind the lens. Like a tiny little stage just for you. True craftsmanship fitting a legend.

  • @zmarko
    @zmarko Рік тому +18

    I cry every. Single. Time. I watch this movie. It's so heartwarming.

  • @vernonrabbetts
    @vernonrabbetts Рік тому +25

    It's all about second chances to put things right...
    ...for the Eight...
    ...for Moonlight Graham...
    ...for Terence Mann...
    ...for Ray and his father.
    It's lightning in a bottle.

  • @Acoustic_strings
    @Acoustic_strings Рік тому +11

    I have seen this movie countless times and when Doc steps over the line and changes it gets me everytime. And also the end with his dad

  • @chiefknowstomuch
    @chiefknowstomuch Рік тому +18

    My father was on his way to getting a scholarship for playing baseball at Garfield High School in East L.A. back around 1966, while diving to catch a ball in the out field he landed with his knee right on top of a metal sprinkler head ending his chance to further his career in baseball. After 4 year serving in Vietnam with the US Army he came back home to start a family, when I became old enough to start playing little league he was my coach. I only lasted a year and a half, baseball just wasn't for me. Fast forward 30 years my then 8 year old daughter starts playing softball, that made him so happy but a life time of cigarette smoking started to catch up with him and he couldn't make it to most of her games. Her grandfather passed away 7 years ago now, having never seen his youngest granddaughter a pitcher throwing at 53mph at 12 years old. His blood runs through her, that's why she is that good. (its not because of me) This movie hits me a many levels, would I love to play catch with my father one more time? absolutely, but I'd get far more enjoyment watching him play with his granddaughters.

    • @msdarby515
      @msdarby515 Рік тому +2

      Stawwwwwwp! My gosh this comment section is worse than the movie! I'm now on like my fifth round of tears! ❤
      Seriously, tho, beautifully told. I also wish your dad could have a catch with his granddaughters, or even, just go to a game.
      In my family it's theater and music. Our mom was an actress and singer but married and became a stay at home mom. But she encouraged us and we all had experiences in theater and choir/voice throughout our high school and college years, with mom leading bake sales to earn money, volunteering as an escort to take kids to theater experiences, and in the front row for all of our performances even if we were barely on stage without any lines. She went to one college show because my brother had designed the set. 😂
      My brother went the furthest, getting a Master's degree from a prestigious drama program that spends a year on the London stage. He then spent a year working as an actor on Broadway for a season, before he decided it wasn't the lifestyle to raise a family.(late nights, working every weekend, travel, etc., while his wife worked M-F, 9-5)
      Now my nephew has been accepted to the IVY League of drama colleges (he was actually accepted to all four of the ones he auditioned) and will be studying there with an emphasis on opera.
      Mom passed when he was in 7th grade, so she did get to see him perform several times, but he has grown in his skill set, just as your daughters have in theirs.
      And now I need to go snuggle my Goldendoodle. I didn't realize watching this reaction would cause such emotional damage. LOL. God bless! ❤🥰

  • @larrypope5142
    @larrypope5142 Рік тому +23

    Everybody has something in there life, that one regret that if they had just one chance to see it through… When Joe says, “No Ray, it was you.” It was Ray’s feelings of regret that was talking to him that inspired him to build the field the whole time. I believe the field did represent heaven as it is the place where dreams come true and they get to erase that regret. One thing I was wondering was Terrence Man’s dream was to play at Ebbett’s Field, but it was tore down and he never got to play there. What does he see when he goes into the corn, does he cross over and is young again and sees Ebbett’s Field? Does he come back as a younger Terrence and play on the field with the other players, then walks off the field and becomes the older him to write about it. I can see why they didn’t show us that because the writer did not want to take away from Ray and his father, the center of the story. Powerful performance by Burt Lancaster. That scene when Joe says “You were good” and he smiles makes you tear up every time. I also had this other thought. They say ghosts or spirits may be trapped here on earth if they have any unresolved issues in life and maybe god was giving them a chance to resolve their issues because they were fundamentally good people. Like maybe Doc Graham couldn’t move on to Felicia until now. So maybe this isn’t heaven, but a place that gives them the chance to move on to there. Like Joe telling Archie he was good gave him the validation to move on and finally see his wife.

  • @kellifranklin9872
    @kellifranklin9872 Рік тому +54

    One of the few movies that will make the biggest alpha male weep! I saw this in the theater when it came out and it was hilarious to see all of the men in that theater trying really hard not to cry. RIP Ray Liotta. He was a gem in this movie.

    • @kevinramsey417
      @kevinramsey417 Рік тому +10

      You really have to be a dude with a dad to understand.

    • @kellifranklin9872
      @kellifranklin9872 Рік тому +9

      @@kevinramsey417 Please don’t misunderstand me. In no way am I mocking or saying mean things about men. I absolutely get the story and the themes of this movie. I should have been a little more clear. I went to the movie with my dad and he was a big burly macho kind of man. To see him tear up and sniffle watching this made my jaw drop straight to the floor. I looked around the theater and other men were doing that too. I wasn’t making fun. It was just surprising and very funny to me in that moment. I mean no disrespect.

    • @mcjim256
      @mcjim256 Рік тому +4

      There was a lot of dust in the theater that got in my eye when I was this the first time.

    • @glennlesliedance
      @glennlesliedance Рік тому +7

      Likewise, and more for me, I was sitting next to a friend who had lost her mother a few months earlier. We sat there for minutes as she cried. I think the movie speaks to everyone who wishes one more X with a departed loved one.

    • @kellifranklin9872
      @kellifranklin9872 Рік тому +3

      @@glennlesliedance Well said.

  • @jaydisqus3353
    @jaydisqus3353 Рік тому +41

    Annie is absolutely perfect in this movie.

    • @marsfalcon9250
      @marsfalcon9250 Рік тому +13

      I one hundred percent agree. So many great scenes in this film, but my personal favorite is when Annie comes out of the school conference punching the air, all jazzed up from her fiery debate over book-banning. I grin ear to ear each time. Major League salute to Amy Madigan!

    • @jaydisqus3353
      @jaydisqus3353 Рік тому +8

      @@marsfalcon9250 that's exactly the scene I was thinking about. She really is great through the entire movie.

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Рік тому +7

      AGREE I LOVED HER

  • @wunschables
    @wunschables Рік тому +12

    As a native Iowan the “Is this heaven?” line is THE line. 😂 I love when people get to see this for the first time. Great reaction.

    • @Otokichi786
      @Otokichi786 Рік тому +1

      "Is this Heaven?"
      "Yes, it's Iowa."

  • @cleekmaker00
    @cleekmaker00 Рік тому +10

    22:03 Not only a Tribute from his peers, but from the Audience as well. You were good, Burt Lancaster.

  • @donparnell309
    @donparnell309 Рік тому +7

    “There’s no crying in baseball!” I'm crying from the point Archie becomes Dr Graham to save Karin till the credits.

    • @msdarby515
      @msdarby515 Рік тому +1

      You're doing pretty good! I've seen it too many times and I think I cry, off an on, in anticipation. LOL
      I cry when Karin tells him daddy there's a man on your lawn. And to be totally honest sometimes I don't even make it that long and cry when he hears The Voice! And then again when he and his wife have the same dream. Again when the men tell the stories of the real Archie Graham. Anytime Archie Graham mentions Alicia! And then usually from about the moment that Ray and his brother-in-law begin to argue and Karin tells her daddy that the people will come, till the end of the movie. LOL
      And if I dry up anywhere along the way it's guaranteed I will be a blubbering mess when Ray asks his dad if he wants to have a catch. My husband wonders why I even want to watch it. LOL Although he did learn some time ago that sometimes us gals just need a movie to make us cry. It's healthy!

  • @dudieb
    @dudieb Рік тому +5

    Love this movie and yes I cry everytime. Grown men have been known to cry at this one. One of the things I think most people miss is it wasn’t just to ease Ray’s fathers pain but to ease Ray’s pain. Ray Liotta’s quote “no Ray it was you” is usually ignored by most people. One of the things I love is the question of “is this heaven” is left up to each indidvidual’s interpretation. I believe this movie eases all of our pain.

  • @Curraghmore
    @Curraghmore Рік тому +24

    Love Amy Madigan in this. We need more women like her in 2023.

    • @msdarby515
      @msdarby515 Рік тому +2

      We always needed more Amy Madigan in movies! I love her and I'm sorry she wasn't in more movies, but her stereotype was just different and didn't match a lot of movies of that era. She definitely represented that awesome child/young adult of the sixties though. One of the best lines in the movie is when she tells the lady that she had two fifties and went right into the 70s. LOL

    • @benjaminroe311ify
      @benjaminroe311ify Рік тому +1

      @@msdarby515 That whole scene is one my favorite of all time in movies. haha. Classic.

  • @tremorsfan
    @tremorsfan Рік тому +3

    Two old former baseball players where sitting on their porch when they started wondering if there was baseball in heaven. They came to an agreement that whoever died first would come back and tell the other. As is to be expected one of them died and did indeed come back to his friend. "I have good news and bad news for you. The good news is that yes, there is baseball in heaven. The bad news is that you're scheduled to pitch tomorrow.

  • @scottdarden3091
    @scottdarden3091 Рік тому +4

    Shannele the Joe Jackson played for the 1908 Chicago White Sox, he's definitely dead 😂😂 Great movie about them, called 8 Men Out 😊

  • @sandeebuckley694
    @sandeebuckley694 Рік тому +4

    I saw this movie in the theaters when it first came out. I remember so vividly standing in line waiting for the earlier show to get out. What struck me was how many men were wiping tears from their eyes as they were exiting. I thought I was going in to see if baseball movie. What I saw instead was one of the most beautiful stories I had ever seen.

  • @surlycanadian
    @surlycanadian Рік тому +16

    Yeah they say that shoeless joe died a couple decades earlier while you were complimenting Gabby Hoffmans limp sleeping action. Lol
    Also, “No, it’s Iowa” IS a very famous quote from this movie that I’ve heard throughout my life (I don’t live in Iowa, I’m Canadian)
    It’s been 70 years since they got kicked out of baseball, so no, they haven’t aged. It’s just some we’re young (shoeless joe) and some were older on the team.

    • @raybernal6829
      @raybernal6829 Рік тому +2

      Yeah I giggled when Shanelle said that. They would be at least 90 some maybe near 100. 🤔😉

  • @tweak991
    @tweak991 Рік тому +19

    Field of Dreams and Big Fish get me every time. I lost my father when I was 20, and these movies remind me of the things that I missed later in life not having my father around.

    • @JeffKelly03
      @JeffKelly03 Рік тому +2

      Imagine watching both of those movies back to back on Father's Day... Anyone with a heart would be dehydrated from all the tears shed.

    • @tweak991
      @tweak991 Рік тому +2

      @@JeffKelly03 yeah, that would be too much!

    • @brycealthoff8092
      @brycealthoff8092 Рік тому +2

      @@JeffKelly03 you’d need a pack of Gatorade and an IV just to keep from passing out.

  • @estephens13
    @estephens13 Рік тому +9

    Im so glad you did this movie, its one of my all time favorite films.

  • @Mr59Kenzo
    @Mr59Kenzo Рік тому +7

    "I hate when that happens" I see it as a father & son reconciliation and yes happy tears loved this movie.

  • @cpmahon
    @cpmahon Рік тому +13

    I really enjoy this film even though baseball isn't part of my life as I'm from the UK. I've learnt something as I certainly didn't know Moonlight Graham/Doc Graham was based on a real person. The scene with him coming off the field and changing back, is the part that gets me the most I have to say. Thanks as ever for the reaction.

  • @gwaptiva
    @gwaptiva Рік тому +2

    "is this heaven? No, this is Iowa" IS the famous quote... well, A famous quote. This movie is full of them. And now you're done watching this, you're ready to watch the 2021 Field of Dreams game MLB organized... there's documentaries about it all over; it was magical

  • @chrishornbostel9831
    @chrishornbostel9831 Рік тому +10

    It's a crazy phenomenon, but ballplayers of the dead-ball era all DO look like they're middle aged, even when we know they were in their 20s and 30s. There are pictures of Hall of Fame shortstop Honus Wagner at age 29 that look like photos of a 60-year-old man. A lot of these guys came from hard childhoods, I guess. Also: every player depicted in the movie was indeed deceased by the time WP Kinsella wrote the book the film is based on.

    • @rikmoran3963
      @rikmoran3963 Рік тому +2

      I just Googled Honus Wagner and he looked like someone's Grandad! 😁 Holy moly! I thought you were exaggerating.

    • @jennv2948
      @jennv2948 Рік тому

      I read somewhere (not pertaining to this) that the photographs themselves made people look older as well. I don’t remember the reasoning - the longer exposure time required?? They took a picture of the same person with a modern camera and an antique camera, and she did indeed look significantly older.

  • @MikeWood
    @MikeWood Рік тому +5

    A very long time ago in the mid 90s, I met Canadian author WP Kinsella, whose book, Shoeless Joe, was the basis for the movie. Looking him up now while watching your reaction, I found out he died in 2016 at age 81. Somewhere I might still have an autographed copy of his book. It's been sometime since I've watched this. Great reaction.

  • @mikeyseviersspookshow5183
    @mikeyseviersspookshow5183 Рік тому +2

    My whole fam went out on a Thursday night to see Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade at 7:30 but it was sold out so we bought tickets for the next showing and for Field of Dreams which had started 5 minutes before, having never even heard of it. We came in right as Costner first hears the voice. Literally no idea what was going on because we missed the whole little preamble with Shoeless Joe and Ray's histories. We all loved it, peed, got fresh cokes and popcorn and then I got to see my first Indiana Jones movie - in the freakin' theater! First double feature! Latest I had ever stayed out on a school night. Best movie night ever.

  • @Kunsoo1024
    @Kunsoo1024 Рік тому +4

    You should watch Eight Men Out, which is based on the Blacksox incident involving the throwing of the world series.

  • @Cramdeon1969
    @Cramdeon1969 Рік тому +9

    So happy you were able to react to this one. The 'Have A Catch' scene still gives me chills. Caught it in theatre in 1989 and it remains my favorite Kevin Costner movie ⚾️👍

    • @marsfalcon9250
      @marsfalcon9250 Рік тому +1

      ...and Costner has had some classic baseball movies. I'd never argue with someone that lists this one as their favorite. 😁

  • @moonlitegram
    @moonlitegram Рік тому +15

    ^~~ if its not obvious, this is one of my all time favorite films. I never get tired of it and it always tears me up at the end. Also, I'm not even a huge baseball fan, but James Earl Jones' speech about baseball at the end always makes me the biggest baseball fan for that 30-60 seconds of film lol.
    I think a lot of people misremember the quote, not just you. It's been parodied so many times that I'm sure it was probably changed to "they" more than once in those parodies, so that's probably why.

    • @dragon-ed1hz
      @dragon-ed1hz Рік тому +2

      Jones says, "People will come, Ray, people will definitely come." So, "If you build it, they will come" may not be a direct quote, but it can be inferred.

  • @kermitlacock5930
    @kermitlacock5930 Рік тому +3

    Since 1989, I can't watch the end of this movie without tearing up. I loved my dad and their solving their problem gets to me.

  • @brianperkins1850
    @brianperkins1850 Рік тому +6

    This movie takes on a completely different meaning, I believe for men especially after the death of your father. That longing for a single catch again is gut wrenching. I never cried during the first 10 times I watched it before my father’s death. I cried like a baby the very next time, uncontrollably. That’s the powerful story a movie can convey.

  • @TheJamieRamone
    @TheJamieRamone Рік тому +3

    Thanks UA-cam, for POINTLESSLY delaying Shanelle's upload! Oh well, being up on a sunday means a great start to my week with another awesome shanaction! 😃

  • @marsfalcon9250
    @marsfalcon9250 Рік тому +1

    "We're not in Kansas anymore." -Office Space, 1999.
    Disclaimer:
    While that is true, it did occur on the first date scene as our hero read Ms. Anistons' 'flare'...I reallize it is from the Wizard of Oz.

  • @markus1327
    @markus1327 Рік тому +5

    Man, this one makes me tear up, especially since losing my father a few years ago. So, what I remember is back in the early 90s, McDonald's had a deal where you could buy VHS tapes for about $5.00! I still have the VHS to this day, and it has the M logo on the side. There was also a honey bunches of oats commercial that parodied the movie. The player says the classic, "Is this Heaven?" and the kid standing in for Karen replied, "No, it's breakfast." As always, thank you for what you do, and keep up the good work.

  • @happyslapsgiving5421
    @happyslapsgiving5421 Рік тому +3

    Yes, I've watched this movie many years ago, and yet I was weeping while watching the video.
    At work.
    And yes, it's a "Luke, I am your father" situation. It isn't just you.

  • @PerfectHandProductions
    @PerfectHandProductions Рік тому +3

    I really enjoy the wholesome and fairytale feel of this film. That ending gets me every time.

  • @kathyastrom1315
    @kathyastrom1315 Рік тому +6

    Burt Lancaster was my first Classic Hollywood crush, after I saw him just dripping charisma in The Crimson Pirate while dressed in skin-tight leggings when I saw it on tv in the late ‘70s. It was only later that I realized what an amazing actor he was. I love him in The Sweet Smell of Success and then much later in Local Hero.

    • @melanie62954
      @melanie62954 Рік тому +1

      He is absolutely chilling in The Sweet Smell of Success! I think one of his best performances is in Luchino Visconti's The Leopard. It's a great actor whose physical performance shines through even when their dialogue is dubbed in Italian.

  • @joeblankenship377
    @joeblankenship377 Рік тому +1

    "People will come, Ray. People most definitely will come." That's my go-to phrase for trying a James Earl Jones impression.

  • @waynezimmerman1950
    @waynezimmerman1950 Рік тому +1

    The most fun I'd ever seen Burt Lancaster have with a role was in the 1983 film: Local Hero, as an oil mogul whose company sends a top negotiator to buy a small Scottish fishing town for a future refinery site. I've gotten such joy from this movie over the years. I think you'll really fall in love with it too.

  • @stillaboveground2470
    @stillaboveground2470 9 місяців тому +1

    "Moonlight" Graham: "We just don't recognize life's most significant moments while they're happening. Back then I thought, "Well, there'll be other days." I didn't realize that that was the only day."

  • @lajeteefan
    @lajeteefan Рік тому +3

    With any great motion picture score, the key to the music's emotional success isn't just the notes the composer chooses, but the orchestrations (assigning which types of musical instruments on which notes at which moments). It sounds like French horns during the end credits. When the music swells in the scene where Ray and John have a catch, it sounds like string instruments. A classic movie score!

  • @TheJamieRamone
    @TheJamieRamone Рік тому +1

    This is one of the many I caught on cable, several years later. So not when it came out. But I loved it that first time I watched it, and the 57 re-watches that followed. Still love it to this day. So glad you finally got to this one, and that you liked it as much as I did! 😊

  • @805Bruin
    @805Bruin Рік тому +2

    "If you build it THEY will come" is one of the most common "Mandela Effect" mistakes that people make.

  • @josephmayo3253
    @josephmayo3253 Рік тому +2

    Great reaction Shan. This is definitely one of the greatest feel good tear jerkers Hollywood ever produced. "Is this Heaven? No this is Iowa " was probably as famous as "If you build it .." when the movie came out. But pop culture has run with the latter one far more than the first. Not sure why.
    Again fantastic job kiddo. You're one of the best reactors out there. Another nostalgia movie made in the 80s that you might love is The Big Chill. Editing it might be difficult because of how much the soundtrack is woven into the story, but it will be worth it. You'll be dancing in your chair most of the time.

  • @AustinKimberlingPGM
    @AustinKimberlingPGM Рік тому +5

    You have quickly became my favorite reactor, keep up the good work!❤

  • @matthewfike4491
    @matthewfike4491 Рік тому +1

    Thanks for reacting to this, one of my top 10 favorites.

  • @CraigKostelecky
    @CraigKostelecky Рік тому +1

    23:35 This film does a *perfect* job of reminding you of the father and also making it a surprise when he actually shows up.

  • @christophermitchell6307
    @christophermitchell6307 Рік тому +1

    I will admit that every time I watch field of dreams I too get a bit teary eyed towards the end of the film and I have to make faces to stop myself from having tears run down my cheeks and seeing the last few minutes in your video almost done it to me again so your not alone when it comes to that shanelle. Glad you enjoyed field of dreams.

  • @jeffdetmer4681
    @jeffdetmer4681 7 місяців тому +1

    Hi again Shanelle. The field is still there. In fact they built another one right near the one in the movie and every year Major league Baseball plays an actual big league game on the 2nd field. The players enter the field via the corn too.

  • @CanuckDWfan
    @CanuckDWfan Рік тому

    I just keep rewatching the last 5 minutes of your reaction as it all plays out - so wholesome 🥹

  • @Do0msday
    @Do0msday Рік тому +3

    One of the greatest sports movies of all time. It's absolutely beautiful and full of some terrific quotes. This movie oozes nostalgia. It isn't a perfect movie, but I still think it's wonderful and I wouldn't change a thing about it. And I'm so glad they edited in the "dad" part at the end because for me that makes it really hit hardest. This movie will make anyone cry.

    • @marsfalcon9250
      @marsfalcon9250 Рік тому +2

      I can anecdotally concur, it gets me every time for sure. I didn't know about the 'dad' add until this reaction, that word alone floods the ducts for me. o7

  • @stt5v2002
    @stt5v2002 Рік тому +5

    I have watched this film many times and watched every reaction I can find on UA-cam. I tear up every time. This might be a guy thing, but maybe not always. I would like to point out that this is not a baseball movie. It is movie about purpose and regret in men’s’ lives. All of the male characters are examining regret and purpose in their lives. A Baseball field is the setting, but that is because Ray related to his father through baseball.

  • @beannathrach2417
    @beannathrach2417 Рік тому

    Our cul-de-sac diamond had manhole cover as home. Storm drains as first and third, an old road patch as second, and fair was two trees on opposite sides of the culs opening.

  • @krxahfb
    @krxahfb Місяць тому

    Good fun awesome baseball movie, thanks so much for reacting to this. As a baseball fan who’s father passed when I was little “hey dad do you want to have a catch” kills me every time. Great movie

  • @loric7869
    @loric7869 Рік тому

    I grew up in Iowa and "Is this Heaven? No, it's Iowa" was definitely a big movie quote. It was on bumper stickers, t-shirts, etc. I remember going to visit the field in Dyersville where they filmed it when I was a kid.

  • @KS-xk2so
    @KS-xk2so Рік тому +1

    James Earl Jones is everyone's Mufasa lol you know you've got an iconic voice when they remake a movie, and recast every single voice roll.... except yours.

  • @desmonddesjarlais2697
    @desmonddesjarlais2697 Рік тому +1

    the filmmaker perspective here is why i watch these. pure gold. took me a bit to notice that energy. good energy. passes the vibe check.

  • @MaryMuffin520
    @MaryMuffin520 10 місяців тому

    This is one of my most favorite movies. Saw it for the first time in the movie theater, in 1989. "If you build it, they will come" I think it is assumed that because people are coming from great distances to see the players, the quote has morphed into "they" because of what happens at the end of the movie. Annie (the wife, played by Amy Madigan) was also in Uncle Buck with the daughter. She was Chanise Kobolowski of Kobolowski tires, Buck's girlfriend. I love the line "you are guests in my corn." My husband and I love watching your Reactions to movies. Love the trivia at the end.

  • @AndrewSnarls
    @AndrewSnarls 9 місяців тому

    Some of Field of Dreams was filmed in my hometown and it's fun to think about whenever I'm in the area of one of those locations, or visiting the area outside of town where it was also filmed. I was young when it was being filmed in my hometown but I remember stories of my aunt trying to sneak onset because she knew people from her theater group working behind the scenes on the movie, or how difficult it was for the scene at the end with all of the lights from the cars stretching out for such a long distance because a former High School teacher of mine was in charge of that.

  • @RealTechZen
    @RealTechZen Рік тому +2

    Kelly Preston played the love interest/female lead in both "Jerry Maguire" and "For Love of the Game", and died of breast cancer in July of 2020.
    BTW, if you're driving from Boston to Iowa, passing through a corner of Minnesota is no big deal.

    • @htim8997
      @htim8997 Рік тому

      For what it's worth, if you're driving from Boston to DYERSVILLE, Iowa, passing through a corner of Minnesota is not nothing; and passing through CHISOLM, Minnesota is a serious deal. It would be roughly equivalent to doing the return trip by way of Quebec City, Quebec.

  • @757optim
    @757optim Рік тому +1

    This movie was so impactful that MLB started playing a game in Dyersville in 2021.

  • @MichaelHill-we7vt
    @MichaelHill-we7vt Рік тому +1

    When Kevin Costner is interviewing the older townsfolk about "Moonlight" Grahame, they actually WERE genuine townspeople, not actors, they KNEW Doc, and they WERE actually retelling tales of the real person, ......those stories WERE true, he really was a kindly philanthropic sort who looked after the poorer kids of town, those are genuine stories and genuine reminiscences, not fake stuff from the movie script......it's beautiful, I'm British, so I'm indifferent to baseball in general, but this is a movie that touches everyone, and I love it!

  • @Theomite
    @Theomite Рік тому +1

    That scene in Graham's office is ninja-level lethal. Ray is absolutely in the right when he talks about the tragedy of failing to accomplish your dreams and Graham just effortlessly and humorously tells him "If I'd only been a doctor for 5 minutes, that would've been a tragedy" and you see the wind just suck out of Ray's sails as he realizes that he's right. Just humbles a person to the core. The sheer, uncomplicated decency of the man is overwhelming at room tone.

  • @bigjay123
    @bigjay123 Рік тому +2

    James earl jones was the old baseball guy in the sand lot.

  • @MrZackavelli
    @MrZackavelli Рік тому

    "Is this Heaven? ~ No, it's Iowa" *is* an incredibly famous quote from this movie.

  • @scottcollins4849
    @scottcollins4849 Рік тому

    I went on a baseball trip in 1990. One of the places I visited was the field of dreams. I got to play catch on the field and run the bases.

  • @christophercurtis4131
    @christophercurtis4131 Рік тому +1

    I was 18 when this movie came out and, for me, it was the very first movie I saw Ray Liotta in. When I heard about Ray Liotta's passing, this was the movie I watched that day in his memory. And the actor who plays Ray's father, Dwier Brown, was on an episode of my favorite TV series, Firefly. That scene at the end with Ray and his dad was my favorite part.

  • @philmullineaux5405
    @philmullineaux5405 Рік тому +1

    Burt Lancaster, nothing physically that man couldn't do. Old school Hollywood royalty!

  • @TheJamieRamone
    @TheJamieRamone Рік тому +2

    24:21 - Have I told you already how much I love your reactions? 🥰

  • @j.j.h.atemycereal
    @j.j.h.atemycereal Рік тому

    There are so many things you pick up each time you watch it. Like Ray makes sure he introduces John to his granddaughter.

  • @scottdarden3091
    @scottdarden3091 Рік тому +6

    Kevin Costner was just killing it for a long time! So many great movies 😊 and still going 🤠 From the very young Kevin Costner in Silverado to Open Range. And a lot of sports movies. Like For The Love Of The Game.

    • @disconnexionsdotcom
      @disconnexionsdotcom Рік тому +2

      and then.. Waterworld!

    • @fmatson
      @fmatson Рік тому +1

      Fandango is one of my favorite road movies.

    • @scottdarden3091
      @scottdarden3091 Рік тому

      @@disconnexionsdotcom I get it,Waterworld wasn't critically acclaimed. But I didn't think it was bad.

  • @ronalddobis6782
    @ronalddobis6782 Рік тому

    I live in southwest Chicagoland and I took the few hours ride to Dyersville to see the set. It is a special field.

  • @judyodom994
    @judyodom994 Рік тому

    My son and I visited the Field of Dreams in August of 1998.
    We played ball on the field, walked thru the corn and it was magical

  • @nickweig
    @nickweig Рік тому +1

    Highly recommend everyone comes to visit the field of dreams. The field is still there and it's beautiful.

  • @3stacksofHighSociety
    @3stacksofHighSociety 11 місяців тому

    The secret in the story is that
    'The Voice' Ray hears in the cornfield, is actually his own.
    Its his conscience telling him what to do, what he NEEDS to do, in order to fulfill long suppressed dreams, and to have the courage to go through with it.
    Dreams, like having one final' chance to take back that 'awful' thing he said to his dad, and to be able to play catch with him
    one more time.
    By being selfless, thinking only of others, and facilitating their dreams, Ray finally gets,
    "Whats in it for, me?"
    "Ease his pain" is the wish that Ray's heart made for himself.
    He was rewarded.
    His home becomes heaven.

  • @John-ws2zr
    @John-ws2zr Рік тому +1

    Another great movie about the story of the "Black Sox Scandal" of 1919 is Eight Men Out." (1989)
    Its a pretty historical look at the story of the scandle that led to the eight players being thrown out of professional baseball for life

  • @Vulcanerd
    @Vulcanerd Рік тому +2

    Hooray! We got weepy, blubbery Shan for the first time in a little bit.
    (does the wave)

  • @chrisedwards7095
    @chrisedwards7095 Рік тому +1

    The leftfield wall at Fenway (the Big Green Monster) exists because Lansdowne Street cuts across where leftfield should be.
    Humphrey Bogart didn't say "Play it again Sam" either. The impressionists would say it on variety shows when imitating Bogart.
    For the record, "Catcher in the Rye" was supposed to be written for adults, and parents objected to it being taught to kids.

    • @bossfan49
      @bossfan49 Рік тому

      Speaking of impressionists - James Cagney in his acceptance speech for AFI Lifetime Achievement, lightly chastised the impressionist Frank Gorshin, saying, "Oh, Frankie, just in passing, I never said 'MMMMmmmm, you dirty rat!' What I actually did say was 'Judy, Judy, Judy!'"-a joking reference to a similar misquotation attributed to Cary Grant.

  • @tjmccannphotography2786
    @tjmccannphotography2786 Рік тому

    W.P. “Ray” Kinsella, whose book “Shoeless Joe” was the basis for Field of Dreams attended the renowned “Iowa Writers Workshop, the MFA program at the University of Iowa. He is one of many famous attendees-writers honored on the Literary Walk on the campus with bronze plaques in the sidewalk. Kinsella’s includes the quote: “If you build it He will come.”

  • @giovanniantonacci8177
    @giovanniantonacci8177 11 місяців тому

    Hi Shanelle, greetings from Lanciano in Italy (I guess some my parents emigrate in USA near Boston has got a friend family "Riccio") , the line "if you build it, they will come" is based on book "Shoeless Joe" . This moved is based on this book with some little changment. An hug

  • @charlescallen460
    @charlescallen460 Рік тому

    I’ve seen this movie many times. Thank you Shan for helping me truly experience the father/son meeting for the first time with your reaction. You’re great🙂

  • @nataliedepriest9113
    @nataliedepriest9113 Рік тому +1

    This movie makes all men cry. Nothing like playing catch with your dad. Barney Stinson said it best…
    “A Bro never cries. Exceptions: Watching Field of Dreams, E.T., or a sports legend retire.”

    • @bossfan49
      @bossfan49 Рік тому

      Barney Stinson never seemed like he played sports in his life.

  • @RMBittner
    @RMBittner Рік тому

    When Kevin Costner meets Burt Lancaster’s character for the first time at night, where the movie theater is showing “The Godfather,” the scenes were shot in Galena, Illinois. My wife and I were there for our honeymoon in 1988 and were puzzled to see the theater showing a movie from 1972 as if it were current. We asked around and discovered that the film had been shooting there the week before but the theater owners hadn’t changed the sign back.

  • @williampilling2168
    @williampilling2168 Рік тому

    I was randomly thinking about this movie, and when I clicked on YT, this was the first thing that popped up! Maybe I should build a baseball diamond in my backyard.

  • @stonecoldku4161
    @stonecoldku4161 Рік тому

    I'm not sure if they do it anymore, but the Chicago Cubs Triple A club is in Des Moines, IA and almost every year they will play a game on or around the 4th of July and have a fireworks display after the game is over. One year they played the part of the movie where they ask "Is this heaven" and the response "No, it's Iowa" and then the fireworks display would begin.

  • @Warlocke000
    @Warlocke000 Рік тому +1

    I'm pretty sure the line most associated with Field of Dreams isn't even a quote from the movie, and it goes like this, "*sob* I don't even like baseball! Why am I crying? *sob*"

  • @cabowabodude
    @cabowabodude Рік тому +1

    field of dreams is our generations it's a wonderful life. it's all about father's and sons, and is my favorite movie of all time. and yes, i break down and cry like a baby every single time i watch it. i actually cried just watching your reaction. my dad died the same year this classic film came out, and never got to see it.

  • @distemic
    @distemic Рік тому +1

    Went to the site in 1992. So cool. My dads relatives actually own the farmhouse you can see in the distance beyond the field. His cousin had it during the filming

  • @KZSoze
    @KZSoze Рік тому +1

    You can still visit the field today. It’s been kept as a tourist attraction. I went a few years ago, and it’s just like the film.

    • @JeffKelly03
      @JeffKelly03 Рік тому +1

      Not just kept up, but built out. They now host special MLB games there. The first one, obviously, featured the White Sox, but they switched over to the Cubs for last year's game.