| 100 |
USA Today
Though his film is like no other baseball movie, it may remind you of Paul Newman's hockey comedy Slap Shot: a knowing look at sport's underbelly - punctuated by jelly-belly laughs. [15 June 1988]
|
| 100 |
Time
Shelton has written the wittiest, busiest screenplay since Moonstruck, and his three stars do their very best screen work. [20 June 1988]
|
| 90 |
Los Angeles Times
It's just that when a movie is this close, with so much of the sports flavor (co-producer Thom Mount is co-owner of the real Durham Bulls), you like to see it perfect. [15 June 1988]
|
| 90 |
Chicago Reader
The movie evokes Howard Hawks (in spirit if not to the letter) with its tight focus on a snug, obsessive world of insiders and camp followers where the exchanges between buddies and sexes have a euphoric stylishness and a giddy sense of ritual.
|
| 90 |
Washington Post
Hal Hinson
It eases up on you, lazy as a cloud, and carries you off in a mood of exquisite delight. To borrow W.P. Kinsella's phrase, it has the thrill of the grass.
|
| 88 |
Chicago Sun-Times
A treasure of a movie because it knows so much about baseball and so little about love.
|
| 88 |
The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
A loopy, loving nine innings full of comic curve balls, emotional home-runs and euphoric, summertime music.
|
| 80 |
Film Threat
The best movie ever made about baseball, and it's not even really that close... "Major League" was funny, but Bull Durham is funny, literate, romantic, and overwhelmingly adherent to the idiosyncracies of the game.
|
| 80 |
Washington Post
You may catch yourself trying to remember where you parked a little before the end.
|
| 75 |
Chicago Tribune
Successfully avoids the grandiose mythmaking that has been the bane of the baseball movie from ''Pride of the Yankees'' to ''The Natural.'' Rather than a vapid national epic, it is a warm, droll, deftly cracked romantic comedy. [15 June 1988]
|
| 75 |
Christian Science Monitor
Even if baseball isn't your favorite sport, or if you don't like sports much at all, you'll find something to catch your attention in this smartly made (if unblushingly vulgar) new comedy. [7 July 1988]
|
| 70 |
Variety
Staff (Not Credited)
A fanciful and funny bush league sports story where the only foul ball is its overuse of locker-room dialog.
|
| 70 |
TV Guide
Staff (Non Credited)
Featuring outstanding lead performances by Kevin Costner, Susan Sarandon, and Tim Robbins; a witty, literate script; and an insider's familiarity with life around minor league baseball--Bull Durham is both one of the best films ever made about the national pastime and a charming romantic comedy.
|
| 40 |
The New York Times
Dialogue that strains to be colorful, indiscriminately piled-on pop songs, plot developments that aren't followed through on, and minor aspects of motivation that are never known. [15 June 1988, p.C20]
|
| 40 |
The New Republic
What is outstandingly incredible are the high-flown pronouncements, including literary judgments, given suddenly to Costner. They make him sound like a dummy for Shelton the ventriloquist. [1 Aug 1988]
|
| 25 |
San Francisco Chronicle
Gerald Nachman
In a word, bull - cruddy, foul-smelling and fly-specked, an excuse for a series of cheap sex scenes and single-entendre gags. [15 June 1988]
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