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A Quick Tip by Scotman

  • Apr 24, 2010
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Historically accurate, unfocused docu-drama about the Black Sox scandal of 1919 where 8 men threw the World Series for money. Recommended.
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More Eight Men Out reviews
review by . January 10, 2011
posted in Just Baseball
Little kids in movies grate me. Often their presence is nothing more than a cheap directorial tool, and in the case of Eight Men Out, the kids - who weren't present in the book the movie is based on - are completely ubiquitous. Maybe director John Sayles was just trying to use them as a metaphor for the time baseball lost its childlike innocence, but if he was doing that then he's an idiot. Even in his own movie, he shows the era of baseball ever having such a childlike innocence as a mere picket …
review by . December 18, 2008
posted in Just Baseball
One of the finest sports movies ever made!
One of the saddest episodes in the history of professional sports was the 1919 Black Sox scandal.   As a result of this sordid affair where the Chicago White Sox threw the World Series in attempt to get back at their cheapskate owner Charles Comiskey, eight players were banned from baseball for life by Commissioner Kenneshaw "Mountain" Landis.   "Eight Men Out" tells the dramatic story of how a team loaded with extremely talented players allowed itself to …
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Eight Men Out
is an American dramatic sports film, released in 1988, based on 8 Men Out, published in 1963, by Eliot Asinof. It was written and directed by John Sayles.[1]

It is a dramatization of Major League Baseball's 1919 Black Sox scandal, in which eight members of the Chicago White Sox conspired with gamblers to intentionally lose the World Series. Much of the movie was filmed at the old Bush Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana.

The Black Sox Scandal refers to a number of events that took place around and during the play of the 1919 World Series. The name "Black Sox" also refers to the Chicago White Sox team from that year. Eight members of the Chicago franchise were banned for life from baseball for throwing (intentionally losing) games, giving the victory to the Cincinnati Reds. The conspiracy was the brainchild of White Sox first baseman Arnold "Chick" Gandil, who had longstanding ties to petty underworld figures. He persuaded Joseph "Sport" Sullivan, a friend and professional gambler, that the fix could be pulled off. New York gangster Arnold Rothstein supplied the money, through his lieutenant Abe Attell, a former featherweight boxing champion.

Gandil enlisted several of his teammates, motivated by a dislike of penurious club owner Charles Comiskey, to implement the fix. All of them were members of a faction on the team that resented the better-educated and higher-paid players on the team, such as second baseman Eddie ...

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