Cobb (1994)
Facts
| Directed by | Ron Shelton |
| Cast | Tommy Lee Jones, Robert Wuhl, Lolita Davidovich, Ned Bellamy, Scott Burkholder, J Kenneth Campbell, Rhoda Griffis and Lou Myers |
| Theatrical Release | December 2, 1994 |
| DVD Release | September 2, 2003 |
| Running Time | 129 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 085392799329 |
| Buy this item | $17.99 at Amazon.com As of Sep 6 15:18 EDT (details) 1 DVD, Warner Brothers, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language) Or 37 new from $13.22, 9 used from $13.22 |
About Cobb
Tyrus Raymond Cobb played baseball like a man charging a machine-gun nest. He gave no quarter, took no prisoners. And when his Hall of Fame career was over, Ty Cobb attacked life the same way. Tommy Lee Jones portrays the legendary - and equally cheered and detested - Georgia Peach in this acclaimed film from writer/director Ron Shelton (Bull Durham, Dark Blue), also starring Robert Wuhl and Lolita Davidovich. From its recapturing of the outfielder's playing days (Roger Clemens portrays a rival pitcher) to its recreation of a 1961 Hall of Fame banquet, Cobb is a movie grand slam. Product Description
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Like Being Spiked By A Runner Swiping Third Base |
Tommy Lee Jones portrays Cobb in this no-holds-barred account of his final years, as cancer was destroying the "Georgia Peach" from the inside and his vile, crazed actions shredded any grudging respect that a controversial, all-time great should receive in the ninth-inning of life.
Cobb biographer Al Stump is played by Robert Wuhl. Stump is as much a confidant as a writer attempting to piece together the real story from fiction, fact and fear fueled by Cobb's unstable rantings - oftentimes induced through a prodigious consumption of alcohol.
At one point, in a rambling diatribe, Jones belts out the line, "Life's too short to be a diplomat." And that was Cobb coming in spikes-high into third base...on the diamond of life.
June 17, 2008
| Amazing! |
| Cobb |
| One of Jones' best performances to date |
One of the men is called away from the table and he's jubilant. Ty Cobb has called him to do a book about his life.
Al Stump (Robert Wuhl) is quickly of two minds. There's nothing heroic about Cobb--although he understands greatness and has achieved it. Cobb goes from one misbehavior or abuse to the next without question, pause, or apology--he doesn't accommodate others and he doesn't let up.
Stump's got a problem. He's got two stories to tell--the one Cobb wants told and the real one. Which one does he want to tell--Cobb's or the one Cobb's told him in confidence? And which one should be told?
If you ever question Tommy Lee Jones' acting ability, watch "Cobb" and "Valley of Elah". Both performances show the actor at his top form and not just 'playing himself.'
"Cobb" is a hard film to watch--it's two hours of bare knuckle fighting and abuse, but it's well worth the time for the performances. November 19, 2007
| Thought Provoking film about a great baseball player |
The prophetic statements about the stock market were interesting, as Cobb was an avid investor up to the end. "They are going to start putting coca cola in these cans made out of aluminum" he says. Remember, the 60s had just started so even at that time for Cobb to have the open mind to accept a progressive future in technology was incredible, considering the film shows his final years spent in a large, dark house out in the middle of nowhere. The musical score is also impressive and does nothing but add to the film.
August 8, 2007
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