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Sugar

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Sugar (2009)

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Reviews Counted:99

Fresh:92

Rotten:7

Average Rating:7.8/10

Consensus: Sugar is an exceptionally-crafted film -- part sports flick, part immigrant tale -- with touching and poignant drama highlighted by splendid performances.

Rated: 15 [See Full Rating] for language, some sexuality and brief drug use.

Runtime: 2 hrs

Genre: Dramas

Theatrical Release:05-06-2009

Synopsis: Sugar follows the story of Miguel Santos, a.k.a. Sugar, a Dominican pitcher from San Pedro De Macorís, struggling to make it to the big leagues and pull himself and his family out of poverty.... Sugar follows the story of Miguel Santos, a.k.a. Sugar, a Dominican pitcher from San Pedro De Macorís, struggling to make it to the big leagues and pull himself and his family out of poverty. Playing professionally at a baseball academy in the Dominican Republic, Miguel finally gets his break at age 19 when he advances to the United States’ minor league system; but when his play on the mound falters, he begins to question the single-mindedness of his life’s ambition.

The baseball academy where Miguel Santos has been training as a pitcher since he was signed at age 16 is a breeding ground for major league talent. Living at the facility during the week, players go through rigorous daily training, while scouts observe and grade their abilities. Sugar’s uncommon ability on the mound is apparent, but there are thousands of teenagers across the island just like Miguel, all of whom hope for the opportunity to advance to the United States minor league system – just the first step of many on an arduous journey to the big leagues.

Miguel spends his weekends at home, passing from the landscaped gardens and manicured fields on one side of the guarded academy gate to the underdeveloped, more chaotic world beyond. In his small village outside San Pedro de Macorís, Miguel enjoys a kind of celebrity status. His neighbors gather to welcome him back for the weekend; the children ask him for extra baseballs or an old glove. To his family, who lost their father years before, Miguel is their hope and shining star. With the small bonus he earned when he signed with the academy some time ago, he has started to build his family a new house – one that has a bigger kitchen for his mom and a separate room for his grandmother.

Towards the end of their winter season, Miguel is called up to spring training in the United States – the next small step on his way to achieving his family’s dream of a big league contract. Family and friends come out of the woodwork to celebrate, and Miguel is on his way.

Miguel travels with several other Dominican rookies to the team’s spring training facility in Arizona. It’s his first time on a plane, his first time in a hotel room, his first time in a foreign land where a foreign language is spoken, his first time away from home. Miguel experiences a lot of firsts before he even sets foot on the enormous, immaculate spring training complex. Miguel quickly finds that he’s not the only superstar at spring training; there are hundreds of highly talented prospects all trying to land spots on one of the team’s minor league affiliates, including Brad Johnson, the highly touted 2nd baseman, who landed a million-dollar contract out of Stanford. Despite this new level of competition, Miguel proves himself exceptional on the mound even here, and lands a spot with the Single-A affiliate in Bridgetown, Iowa – the Swing. Brad Johnson and Jorge Ramirez, an old friend from the academy who was called up a couple years before, but has been slowed down by a lingering leg injury, are among the other players placed on the Swing.

In Bridgetown, Miguel is assigned to a host family, the Higgins, an aging Christian couple who live in an isolated farmhouse. The Higgins are devout Swing fans, and every year they house a new young player from the team. They try to treat Miguel like part of the family, inviting him to dinners, bringing him to church, and even encouraging a tenuous friendship between Miguel and their teenage granddaughter Anne.

Jorge, the more veteran player and the only other Dominican on the team, also tries to help Miguel learn the ropes.

However, despite the Higgins’ welcoming efforts and Jorge’s guidance, the challenge of Miguel’s acceptance into the community is exposed in small ways every day, from his struggle to communicate in English to an incident of casual bigotry at a local bar.

Miguel’s domination on the mound masks his underlying sense of isolation, until he injures himself during a routine play at first. While on the disabled list, Jorge – his one familiar connection to home in this strange new place – is cut from the team, having never fully regained his ability following off-season knee surgery.

The new vulnerability of Miguel’s injury, coupled with the loneliness of losing his closest friend, force Miguel to begin examining the world around him and his place within it. Pressure mounts when Salvador, a young pitching phenom who used to play with Miguel, is brought up from the Dominican Republic to join the team. Miguel’s play falters, and the increased isolation begins to take its toll on him. As his dream begins to fall apart, Miguel decides to leave baseball to follow another kind of American dream. His odyssey finally brings him to New York City, where he struggles to find community and make a new home for himself, like so many before him. --© Sony Pictures Classics [More]

Starring: Algenis Perez Soto, Rayniel Rufino, Andre Holland, Michael Gaston

Starring: Algenis Perez Soto, Rayniel Rufino, Andre Holland, Michael Gaston, Jaime Tirelli, Jose Rijo, Ann Whitney, Richard Bull, Ellary Porterfield, Alina Vargas, Kelvin Leonardo Garcia, Joendy Pena Brown

Director: Ryan Fleck, Anna Boden

Director: Ryan Fleck, Anna Boden
Screenwriter: Ryan Fleck, Anna Boden
Producer: Paul Mezey, Jamie Patricof, Jeremy Kipp Walker
Composer: Michael Brook
Studio: HBO Films

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Reviews for Sugar

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1 - 20 (sorted by fresh rating; UK critics are listed first)
Text View | 1 2 3 4 5 >> >|
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The story's slow-burn never quite flares into dramatic wildfire.

Full Review Source: Independent | comment Comment
06/05/09
Anthony Quinn
Anthony Quinn
Independent

Naturalistic performances, even-handed characterisation and the utter eschewal of genre cliches ensure that this tale of a stranger in a strange land hits home.

Full Review Source: Channel 4 Film | comment Comment
05/27/09
Anton Bitel
Anton Bitel
Channel 4 Film
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

Sugar is a slow-burning exploration of the immigrant experience that grows more compelling as Miguel starts to realise he might not be good enough to realise his dream.

Full Review Source: Daily Express | comment Comment
06/05/09
Caroline Jowett
Caroline Jowett
Daily Express

Great cinema can extend our own experience by making us understand how it must feel to be somebody else - and this is, in its gentle and unpretentious way, great cinema.

Full Review Source: Daily Mail [UK] | comment Comment
06/05/09
Christopher Tookey
Christopher Tookey
Daily Mail [UK]

A compelling and compassionate stranger-in-a-strange-land drama, it's a film brimming with insight, integrity and life. I reckon we're looking at one of the films of 2009.

Full Review Source: Daily Mirror [UK] | comment Comment
06/05/09
David Edwards
David Edwards
Daily Mirror [UK]

In ‘Sugar’, the pair skilfully dismantle the timeworn themes, characters and story patterns of the conventional sports movie and then reassemble them as a rich, socially astute realist drama.

Full Review Source: Time Out | comment Comment
06/05/09
David Jenkins
David Jenkins
Time Out
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

Sugar is a human story told with immense skill, right down to the deft transitions and the soft fuzz of the electronic score.

Full Review Source: Total Film | comment Comment
06/05/09
Jamie Graham
Jamie Graham
Total Film

Poignant and beautifully written, directed and performed, Sugar confirms Boden and Fleck as eloquent chroniclers of the underbelly of the American dream.

Full Review Source: Little White Lies | comment Comment
06/05/09
Jason Wood
Jason Wood
Little White Lies

Brilliantly directed, superbly written and thoroughly engaging drama that skilfully blends sports movies, immigration dramas and coming of age movies, while avoiding the usual cliches.

Full Review Source: ViewLondon | comment Comment
06/05/09
Matthew Turner
Matthew Turner
ViewLondon

Sugar might look like a typical underdog sports movie on the surface, but over the running time it transforms into something much more interesting.

Full Review Source: Digital Spy | comment Comment
06/05/09
Mayer Nissim
Mayer Nissim
Digital Spy

Sugar is dazzlingly free of message creep. We are perplexed, yet fully persuaded.

Full Review Source: Financial Times | comment Comment
06/05/09
Nigel Andrews
Nigel Andrews
Financial Times

A powerfully engaging coming-of-age immigration sports documentary-style drama. And this unpredictable genre mash-up is pure magic.

Full Review Source: Shadows on the Wall | comment Comment
06/05/09
Rich Cline
Rich Cline
Shadows on the Wall

The final reel veers away from the sports movie formula – and the narrative loses some of its drive – yet there’s a believability about the twist. If anything, Sugar underlines the fact that this particular immigrant experiences is not all sweetness.

Full Review Source: Sky Movies | comment Comment
06/05/09
Tim Evans
Tim Evans
Sky Movies

Sugar, winningly played by the complete newcomer Soto, isn't a cut-out ingenu but a testy, competitive, driven but fallible person. The road he follows is modest, but the film is beautiful and searching in letting him find it for himself.

Full Review Source: Daily Telegraph | comment Comment
06/05/09
Tim Robey
Tim Robey
Daily Telegraph
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

As a sports movie the film perhaps lacks the pace and punch to capture the genre’s traditional audience. But Sugar is much more than a sports movie. It is a picture of integrity, intelligence and empathy that studiously avoids cliché.

Full Review Source: Times [UK] | comment Comment
06/05/09
Wendy Ide
Wendy Ide
Times [UK]
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

Sugar is a revelation, not least in the way it ducks an onrush of cliche to expose the whole rags-to-riches mantra as a bright and shining lie.

Full Review Source: Guardian [UK] | comment Comment
06/05/09
Xan Brooks
Xan Brooks
Guardian [UK]
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

A quietly surprising drama.

Full Review Source: Wall Street Journal | comment Comment
04/02/09
Wall Street Journal

It is both sad and hopeful, but the film’s sorrow and its optimism arise from its rarest and most thrilling quality, which is its deep and humane honesty.

Full Review Source: New York Times | comment Comment
04/02/09
A.O. Scott
A.O. Scott
New York Times
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

With spring flowers busting out all over and Major League Baseball's opening day just around the corner comes the release of Sugar

Full Review Source: Salon.com | comment Comment
04/03/09
Andrew O'Hehir
Andrew O'Hehir
Salon.com

With the moving, absorbing drama Sugar, Boden and Fleck not only avoid the sophomore slump, they demolish it, delivering a film of rare intelligence, beauty and compassion.

Full Review Source: Washington Post | comment Comment
04/30/09
Ann Hornaday
Ann Hornaday
Washington Post
 
 
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