Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueLegendary Hall of Famer Mickey Mantle stars with his Yankee teammate Roger Maris in this good-natured story of dreams that really do come true.Legendary Hall of Famer Mickey Mantle stars with his Yankee teammate Roger Maris in this good-natured story of dreams that really do come true.Legendary Hall of Famer Mickey Mantle stars with his Yankee teammate Roger Maris in this good-natured story of dreams that really do come true.
James R. Argyras
- Jackie
- (uncredited)
Joe Hickman
- Joe
- (uncredited)
Chris Hughes
- Phil
- (uncredited)
David Mantle
- Little Leaguer
- (uncredited)
Joe Morrison
- Hank
- (uncredited)
Joe Pepitone
- Joe Pepitone
- (uncredited)
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Safe at Home! (1962)
** (out of 4)
A young boy (Bryan Russell) moves to a new town where he doesn't have many friends so to try and fit in he makes the claim that he knows Roger Maris and Mickey Mantle. When no one will believe him, the young boy heads off to the Yankees spring training camp to try and meet the legends. This film works best as a curio if you want to see the two legends trying to act. It was fun seeing these two men back in their prime and it was also funny that Mantle got top billing even though Maris had just broken Babe Ruth's home run record. There are a few good parts here and there but overall the film is pretty lame. The young Russell gives a good performance and his relationship with his single father are nice but the film is too uneven to hammer home any of the side subjects brought up in the screenplay. Whitey Ford also has a small part.
** (out of 4)
A young boy (Bryan Russell) moves to a new town where he doesn't have many friends so to try and fit in he makes the claim that he knows Roger Maris and Mickey Mantle. When no one will believe him, the young boy heads off to the Yankees spring training camp to try and meet the legends. This film works best as a curio if you want to see the two legends trying to act. It was fun seeing these two men back in their prime and it was also funny that Mantle got top billing even though Maris had just broken Babe Ruth's home run record. There are a few good parts here and there but overall the film is pretty lame. The young Russell gives a good performance and his relationship with his single father are nice but the film is too uneven to hammer home any of the side subjects brought up in the screenplay. Whitey Ford also has a small part.
I first saw this movie in The Bronx as a nine-year old Yankees fan. I loved it then, and still enjoyed seeing it much more recently. Sure the acting was bad (after seeing it one of his teammates advised Roger Maris to end his 1962 holdout and sign his Yankees contract fast), and the script was lame (but with its simple plot and moral not really much worse than the typical Disney or other kid fare of the time), but that was always beside the point. It was and is a chance to see our heroes on the big screen in their prime rather than on a small-screen TV or from the bleachers. We watch 1950s teen movies with their lip-synced performances for the same reason. The game now is to try to identify the players in the background.
Youngster living with his single dad down in South Florida gets into trouble when he convinces the kids on his Little League team that he knows Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris from the New York Yankees; turns out the Yankees are practicing in Fort Lauderdale, so the lad hitches a ride to the stadium to plead for their help. Co-feature from Columbia was probably produced solely as a showcase for the Yankees stars--but if so, they aren't around nearly enough. The boyhood woes of little Bryan Russell are capably captured, and all the children do fine work, but the story is too simple (and too silly) to merit much interest. Nice cinematography from Irving Lippman, whose camera transforms Mantle and Maris into two handsome giants on the big screen. ** from ****
Nice little nostalgia/baseball film that has to do with owning up to one's tall tales and later being greatly rewarded for doing just that. Little Hutch Lawton, Bryan Russell, feeling that his widowed and hard pressed, for cash to pay his bills, dad Dan Lawton,Don Collier, is being put down by the team and school bully Henry, Flip Mark, makes up a story that his dad as well as himself are very close, in fact the best of, friends of New York Yankee superstars Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris.
It doesn't take long for a depressed Henry, feeling he's been shown up, to challenge Hutch to put his money, or his friends Mantle & Maris, where his mouth is and produce the two superstars to show that he's not making that far flung and incredible story up. Hutch realizing that he put his foot in his mouth and is facing the outrage and disdain of his fellow classmates and Little League ball players if he can't produce Mantle & Maris, like Henry demanded him to, hitches a ride to Ft. Lauderdale where the Yankee spring training camp is. Hutch is determined to not only meet his heroes but get them to come back to his home the coastal and fishing town of Palms and show Henry & Co. that he's not lying about his, and his dad's, friendship with them.
Smelling like he just got off from work at the Fulton Fish Market, the ride that Hutch hitched was on the back of his friends dad fish truck, Hutch attracts this cute tabby who follows him throughout the movie thinking that he's a Frisky's seafood treat. Hutch at first gets to meet old and grumpy Yankee trainer, the guy who taught both Mantle and Maris how to hit, Bill Turner, William Frawly, in the Yankee clubhouse that Hutch snuck into as he smelled up, from the fish that he was with on the truck, the whole place.
Finding out from an unusually kind and attentive, he didn't at first look or act the part, Bill Turner that his heroes are staying at the local Yankee Clipper Hotel Hutch again sneaks into their hotel room and later, by again Turner smelling him out, is discovered by the two ballplayers and their trainer hiding under one of the beds in the room.
Surprisingly to Hutch the Yankee players, besides Mantle and Maris, were very considerate and understanding towards him and the mess he got himself into but decided not to go along with him back home in pulling his chestnuts out of the fire. Mickey and Roger tell the star-struck little boy that he has to face his friends back in Palm and tell them the truth about his fibbing, lying in adult talk, to them about being a friend, which in fact Hutch now is, of the two Yankee ballplayers in order to square things with them.
Touching but really not that much of a surprise ending with both Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris coming through in the clutch and hitting a grand slam home run for Hutch in the bottom of the ninth inning with two outs with him behind by three runs. Hutch learned a big lesson in life in that telling the truth is far better them making things up by trying to impress both your friends like Mike, Scott Lane, as well as enemies like Henry. It's a lesson that sadly today most of our elected leaders and aspiring politicians have yet to have mastered.
P.S There's also Yankee southpaw and the teams top pitching ace Whitey Ford, known a the Chairman of the Board, in the movie in a more or less cameo role as well as Yankee manager Captain, or is it Major, Ralph Houk. Houk in fact is so good and convincing at saying his lines in the film that for a moment I didn't think that it was him at all but some actor playing the Yankee manager. There's also Mickey Mantle's real life seven year old son David in the movie playing one of Hutch's fellow little league teammates.
It doesn't take long for a depressed Henry, feeling he's been shown up, to challenge Hutch to put his money, or his friends Mantle & Maris, where his mouth is and produce the two superstars to show that he's not making that far flung and incredible story up. Hutch realizing that he put his foot in his mouth and is facing the outrage and disdain of his fellow classmates and Little League ball players if he can't produce Mantle & Maris, like Henry demanded him to, hitches a ride to Ft. Lauderdale where the Yankee spring training camp is. Hutch is determined to not only meet his heroes but get them to come back to his home the coastal and fishing town of Palms and show Henry & Co. that he's not lying about his, and his dad's, friendship with them.
Smelling like he just got off from work at the Fulton Fish Market, the ride that Hutch hitched was on the back of his friends dad fish truck, Hutch attracts this cute tabby who follows him throughout the movie thinking that he's a Frisky's seafood treat. Hutch at first gets to meet old and grumpy Yankee trainer, the guy who taught both Mantle and Maris how to hit, Bill Turner, William Frawly, in the Yankee clubhouse that Hutch snuck into as he smelled up, from the fish that he was with on the truck, the whole place.
Finding out from an unusually kind and attentive, he didn't at first look or act the part, Bill Turner that his heroes are staying at the local Yankee Clipper Hotel Hutch again sneaks into their hotel room and later, by again Turner smelling him out, is discovered by the two ballplayers and their trainer hiding under one of the beds in the room.
Surprisingly to Hutch the Yankee players, besides Mantle and Maris, were very considerate and understanding towards him and the mess he got himself into but decided not to go along with him back home in pulling his chestnuts out of the fire. Mickey and Roger tell the star-struck little boy that he has to face his friends back in Palm and tell them the truth about his fibbing, lying in adult talk, to them about being a friend, which in fact Hutch now is, of the two Yankee ballplayers in order to square things with them.
Touching but really not that much of a surprise ending with both Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris coming through in the clutch and hitting a grand slam home run for Hutch in the bottom of the ninth inning with two outs with him behind by three runs. Hutch learned a big lesson in life in that telling the truth is far better them making things up by trying to impress both your friends like Mike, Scott Lane, as well as enemies like Henry. It's a lesson that sadly today most of our elected leaders and aspiring politicians have yet to have mastered.
P.S There's also Yankee southpaw and the teams top pitching ace Whitey Ford, known a the Chairman of the Board, in the movie in a more or less cameo role as well as Yankee manager Captain, or is it Major, Ralph Houk. Houk in fact is so good and convincing at saying his lines in the film that for a moment I didn't think that it was him at all but some actor playing the Yankee manager. There's also Mickey Mantle's real life seven year old son David in the movie playing one of Hutch's fellow little league teammates.
This is one of those movies that's really bad but worth watching if you happen to be watching a movie channel on TV on opening day of the baseball season. The acting is mediocre (even William Frawley), the story is thin, and the moral at the end is sappy. But the picture does manage to catch something true and real about boys and their fascination with heroes. It has some interesting shots of spring training circa 1962. It features the glorious beauty of Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris (they are resolutely boring; this is worth knowing). And it gives a bit of the feeling of Florida before the big boom times of the '60s.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesFinal film of William Frawley.
- GaffesEarly in the film, some boys stop to watch two men on a bridge catch a fish. However, the fish doesn't move as they reel it in - its obviously a prop or a dead fish that was previously placed on the line for them to pull out.
- Citations
Hutch Lawton: [repeated] Mickey Mantle! Roger Maris! Gosh! Gee!
- Générique farfeluIntroducing Bryan Russell.
- ConnexionsReferenced in Brad Tries Podcasting: Mango Habanero Fudge (2024)
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- How long is Safe at Home!?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Durée1 heure 24 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Safe at Home! (1962) officially released in Canada in English?
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