Large Association of Movie Blogs
Large Association of Movie Blogs

Saturday, February 22, 2025

Spring Training 2025



MLB spring training has started in Scottsdale, not far from where the Arizona Diamondbacks play, but all I can think of is that episode of The Munsters in which Herman swings the bat.



Significantly less big-budget than Pixar's recent baseball-related TV series WIN OR LOSE but equally satisfying is Pantomine Pictures' funny and satiric Roger Ramjet.



The Roger Ramjet cartoons were produced back in the 1960's halcyon days when MLB Hall Of Famers Willie Mays, Hank Aaron, Roberto Clemente, Frank Robinson and Mickey Mantle were tearing it up on the diamond.



The knowledgeable and entertaining Toon Heads at Anthony's Animation Talk reviewed a lesser known albeit genuinely charming classic from the Looney Tunes Merrie Melodies archives, HOBO BOBO (1947), directed by Robert McKimson.



Friz Freleng and his talented crew made several outstanding baseball cartoons.



Arguably the greatest of all animated cartoons about the sport is BASEBALL BUGS (1946), still unsurpassed after all these decades.



Not as well known but also wonderful is Freleng's 1936 Merrie Melodie The Boulevardier From The Bronx.



Its star is a rooster variant on flashy St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Dizzy Dean.



When the topic of baseball comes up, the first person from the world of entertainment one thinks of is Buster Keaton.



Knowing Buster's love of the game, it seems rather amazing that Buster did not devote an entire feature film to baseball. Hollywood legend has it that the first question in a job interview with Buster Keaton Productions was "do you play baseball?" One imagines an incredible action-packed comedy feature co-starring Buster with his mentor Roscoe Arbuckle, Roscoe's ever-acrobatic and quadruple-jointed nephew, Al St. John, and the ever-menacing Big Joe Roberts as the umpire.



That said, this entry from Buster's mid-1930's series of Educational Pictures comedy shorts, One Run Elmer, threadbare budget notwithstanding, has its charms. It's impossible for Keaton to be anything but fascinating onscreen.



Another baseball-loving movie comedian was vaudeville star, singer and rubber-legged eccentric dancer Joe E. Brown.



He's best known today for his key role as "wild and crazy guy" Osgood Fielding III in Some Like It Hot (1959).



Joe both worked as a broadcaster for the New York Yankees and starred in immensely entertaining baseball comedies, Elmer The Great and Alibi Ike.



The latter is my favorite of the two and a terrific showcase for the gangly but athletic comic.


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