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The Final Season (2007)
Released By: Yari Film Group   Rating: PG   In Theaters: 10/12/2007
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Studio: Yari Film Group
Genre: Drama
MPAA Rating: PG
Director: David Mickey Evans
Language: English
Official Website: http://www.finalseason.com/
Theatrical Release: 10/12/2007
Home Video Release: 4/8/2008
Cast: Mackenzie Astin, Powers Boothe, Sean Astin, Tom Arnold, Rachel Leigh Cook, Michael Angarano
Published ID: 741146
UPC: 043396236387,
Plot: A place where baseball is more than just a game fights to hold on to the national pastime in this drama inspired by a true story. Norway, Iowa is a little town where folks take baseball seriously -- so much so that even though Norway's high school boasts less than a hundred students, their baseball team has brought home the state championship nineteen times. Jim Van Scoyoc (Powers Boothe), Norway High's baseball coach, has received national attention for his skill with players, and when passionate baseball fan Kent Stock (Sean Astin) lands a teaching position nearby, he volunteers to work as an assistant for Van Scoyoc. While Stock cherishes his time with Van Scoyoc, he takes a job working in Saint Louis, where he plans to move with his fiancée. However, he changes his plans when he gets some unexpected news -- due to shrinking enrollment and budget cuts, Norway's high school is soon to close, and their upcoming baseball season is likely to be their last. Over the fierce objections of his girlfriend, Stock passes on the job in St. Louis to spend one last spring in Norway and help Van Scoyoc as he takes one last shot at taking his team to the state championship. Meanwhile, the citizens of Norway wage a legal battle to keep the school open, and the state sends a lawyer, Polly Hudson (Rachael Leigh Cook), to Norway to represent them. While Stock and Hudson are bitter enemies at the start of the season, with time she begins to understand the sense of tradition and love of the game that fuels Stock and the people of Norway. Also featuring Larry Miller, Tom Arnold and Michael Angarano, The Final Season received its world premiere at the 2007 {~Tribeca Film Festival}. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
A Grand Slam....and it's for REAL!
Added 11/21/2009

I like sports drama and own a bunch of them. This is one of the very best.

Why? It is well-filmed, well-directed, well-acted, and it is a real story. Well, well, well. Look up "Norway Baseball" and you get the whole story. The screenplay and the film that came from it are remarkably true to that story. Sure. The story is of a school competing in the smallest school division and the competition at that level is very different from that in the largest divisions, but Norway baseball was legendary. Its head coach was a legend. Its players were picked up time and again to fill rosters in colleges with strong programs.

19 State Titles was the source of extraordinary pride. And then the school board came to a very difficult decision. Here the film plays the members as true villains and that is unfortunate because schools the size of Norway in communities the size of its little farm town do not have the resources needed in a modern high school. Merger with another nearby school with a more up-to-date physical plant and room to grow. Merger was necessary, BUT there was a strange effort made to make the last season less dramatic by gutting the baseball team. Leadership on the Board did not want the baseball team to emerge as a gathering point for continued resistance to the merger. So, the legendary head coach was released and replaced by a young rookie with very little experience. A number of key players did not come out for the team in its final playing season.

The coach ends up being a natural coach. He forges a team whose chemistry is initially difficult. The right players emerge. Virtually none of the drama is manufactured for the film. Check out the newspapers. A strong start is followed by a big slump. A timely push back is good enough to get them into the state playoffs. The team is an underdog up against far larger programs with amazing talent that manages to win the baseball way: sound defensive play, a smart line-up, good scouting, a couple of very talented kids, a bunch of less talented but solid players, and big fan support.

Background stories are equally compelling as a spoiled and angry city-kid is transformed by his coach, his grandparents and his team.....and then meets his father on the field of play, real common ground. A bus driver, a priest, a couple of sports reporters and a girl friend each provided another story that makes the BIG STORY work.

Lastly, there are no ultra-dramatic, over the top, I-Can't-Believe-It moments. These moments are common devices in sports drama. They generate big moments for big feelings. There are lots of little moments that feel very real: mock bets between a pitcher and a catcher, a heart patient/bus driver who sneaks into the championship game, the fired coach returning for the last game, an often disheartened relief pitcher who is scared to death of the opposing pitcher's fast ball but still manages to crowd the plate at a critical moment, a coach who falls in love with a state official who has endorsed the school merger, and so much more.

In the back of the informed viewer's mind is the knowledge that these moments actually took place. Yeah, there is some condensing of action. There is fictionalized dialogue. There are combined characters. But, overall the truth wills out.

This film belongs on your shelf. Watch it with young athletes and discuss it. It's amazing what they have to say. Watch it with your family just for fun.


0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Must See if you are a Sports Fan or from Iowa
Added 11/6/2009

I absolutly LOVE this film! It is a great story for everyone to know, especially if you hail from Iowa like myself. Plus there are many actors and others in the film who are from Iowa! The baseball scenes are amazing! The group of guys they had come in really know what they are doing and it comes across in the film. It is just an all around great movie for young and old.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Great family movie and true story besides
Added 11/5/2009

I've ordered this movie for Christmas gifts to grandchildren, but I know their parents will enjoy it as well and appreciate the story
that is so well told.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
The Final Season
Added 8/25/2009

The Final Season is a great movie; a must see for anyone who enjoys youth sports and inspirational stories. Small town America should be really proud as this movie is set in the smallest of towns but a large town in spirit and character. A family friendly movie for persons of all ages.
1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Final Season deals with real issues
Added 8/10/2009

"The Final Season" is a great family film. It would be good fodder for a group discussion of the behavior of people in small towns, about small-town politics, abut family dynamics and about what you can learn if you're willing to truly listen to someone who disagrees with you. And it's all based on a true story. Not an Academy Award nominee, but a worthwhile film. Gives you things to think and talk about.
1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
A Grand Slam....and it's for REAL!
Added 11/21/2009

I like sports drama and own a bunch of them. This is one of the very best.

Why? It is well-filmed, well-directed, well-acted, and it is a real story. Well, well, well. Look up "Norway Baseball" and you get the whole story. The screenplay and the film that came from it are remarkably true to that story. Sure. The story is of a school competing in the smallest school division and the competition at that level is very different from that in the largest divisions, but Norway baseball was legendary. Its head coach was a legend. Its players were picked up time and again to fill rosters in colleges with strong programs.

19 State Titles was the source of extraordinary pride. And then the school board came to a very difficult decision. Here the film plays the members as true villains and that is unfortunate because schools the size of Norway in communities the size of its little farm town do not have the resources needed in a modern high school. Merger with another nearby school with a more up-to-date physical plant and room to grow. Merger was necessary, BUT there was a strange effort made to make the last season less dramatic by gutting the baseball team. Leadership on the Board did not want the baseball team to emerge as a gathering point for continued resistance to the merger. So, the legendary head coach was released and replaced by a young rookie with very little experience. A number of key players did not come out for the team in its final playing season.

The coach ends up being a natural coach. He forges a team whose chemistry is initially difficult. The right players emerge. Virtually none of the drama is manufactured for the film. Check out the newspapers. A strong start is followed by a big slump. A timely push back is good enough to get them into the state playoffs. The team is an underdog up against far larger programs with amazing talent that manages to win the baseball way: sound defensive play, a smart line-up, good scouting, a couple of very talented kids, a bunch of less talented but solid players, and big fan support.

Background stories are equally compelling as a spoiled and angry city-kid is transformed by his coach, his grandparents and his team.....and then meets his father on the field of play, real common ground. A bus driver, a priest, a couple of sports reporters and a girl friend each provided another story that makes the BIG STORY work.

Lastly, there are no ultra-dramatic, over the top, I-Can't-Believe-It moments. These moments are common devices in sports drama. They generate big moments for big feelings. There are lots of little moments that feel very real: mock bets between a pitcher and a catcher, a heart patient/bus driver who sneaks into the championship game, the fired coach returning for the last game, an often disheartened relief pitcher who is scared to death of the opposing pitcher's fast ball but still manages to crowd the plate at a critical moment, a coach who falls in love with a state official who has endorsed the school merger, and so much more.

In the back of the informed viewer's mind is the knowledge that these moments actually took place. Yeah, there is some condensing of action. There is fictionalized dialogue. There are combined characters. But, overall the truth wills out.

This film belongs on your shelf. Watch it with young athletes and discuss it. It's amazing what they have to say. Watch it with your family just for fun.


0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Must See if you are a Sports Fan or from Iowa
Added 11/6/2009

I absolutly LOVE this film! It is a great story for everyone to know, especially if you hail from Iowa like myself. Plus there are many actors and others in the film who are from Iowa! The baseball scenes are amazing! The group of guys they had come in really know what they are doing and it comes across in the film. It is just an all around great movie for young and old.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Great family movie and true story besides
Added 11/5/2009

I've ordered this movie for Christmas gifts to grandchildren, but I know their parents will enjoy it as well and appreciate the story
that is so well told.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
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