Deliberately Louisville-slugs its audience over the head.
Mr. 3000 (2004)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:102
Fresh:57
Rotten:45
Average Rating:5.9/10
Consensus: Bernie Mac demonstrates he can play the game even if the movie's a few innings short of a complete game.
Runtime: 1 hr 44 mins
Genre: Comedies
Synopsis: You only get one shot at greatness, and if that one chance slips through your fingers, it's game over. Or is it? After years of retirement from pro sports, Stan Ross is about to discover that there... You only get one shot at greatness, and if that one chance slips through your fingers, it's game over. Or is it? After years of retirement from pro sports, Stan Ross is about to discover that there are such things as second chances – in sports, in love, in life – but first, you've got to undo the mistakes that fouled you up the first time around. The signature comic style of Bernie Mac comes to the fore in his first leading feature film role, starring as Stan Ross in the uplifting comedy MR. 3000. Mac portrays a man who, smack in the middle of his middle-aged retirement, gets a wake-up call that forces him to start all over again, with hilariously humbling, and ultimately unexpected, results. Given a rare opportunity to do things right the second time around, will Stan be able to seize it? Ten years ago, Stan Ross was a pro ballplayer blessed with one of the sweetest swings – and one of the worst attitudes – in the league. A man with big talent, a bigger mouth and an even bigger ego, he was clearly on his way to becoming a legend. The day he batted his 3,000th hit, assuring him of an eventual place in the Hall of Fame, Ross instantly quit the game, leaving his teammates in the lurch. Never looking back, Ross began his 'Mr. 3000' shopping empire, fueling his self-satisfaction solely with that one magical number. But now, just as Ross is about to be voted at last into the Hall of Fame, an error is discovered: the man who thought he was 'Mr. 3000,' is actually . . . 'Mr. 2,997.' Three hits shy of the landmark number, Ross has only one choice: get up off the couch, pick up his bat and rejoin the Milwaukee Brewers for the most unlikely comeback sports has ever seen. Literally going back to first base, Ross has no idea what he's in for. Out of shape, over the hill and in deep denial, he quickly becomes a joke to the press, the bane of his teammates and a juicy story to Mo Simmons (Angela Bassett), the tough-minded reporter who once had a memorable fling with Ross back in the day. But just as Ross thinks it's all about the numbers, he finally begins to see what really counts. Soon, the cocky, self-absorbed, ego machine is trying a different tactic: discovering the fun of teamwork, ethics and even falling in love...as he learns the difference between a successful life and a meaningful one. Starring Bernie Mac, MR. 3000 is directed by Charles Stone III ("Drumline") from a screenplay by Eric Champnella & Keith Mitchell and Howard Michael Gould and a story by Eric Champnella & Keith Mitchell. The film is produced by Gary Barber, Roger Birnbaum and Maggie Wilde and the executive producers are Jonathan Glickman, Frank Marshall, Steven Greener and Timothy M. Bourne. Co-Producer is Derek Evans. The film co-stars Paul Sorvino, Chris Noth, Michael Rispoli, Brian White and Angela Bassett. -- © Disney Pictures [More]
Starring: Paul Sorvino, Bernie Mac, Angela Bassett, Chris Noth
Starring: Paul Sorvino, Bernie Mac, Angela Bassett, Chris Noth, Michael Rispoli
Director: Charles Stone
Director: Charles Stone
Screenwriter: Eric Champnella, Keith Mitchell
Producer: Gary Barber, Roger Birnbaum
Composer: John Powell
Studio: Buena Vista Pictures
Reviews for Mr. 3000
Although the writing and direction are flabby, the drama contrived and the romance utterly unbelievable.
A sports movie that lacks any suspense or dramatic tension about what transpires on the field, and Mac plays such a self-absorbed jerk through most of the film that rooting interest is minimal.
Mr. 3000 ends with a terrific joke involving Viagra that coldly reminds just what type of film this could’ve been had Charles Stone allowed Bernie Mac to run with it.
Slumps under the weight of product endorsements and a misguided romantic subplot.
Well, sports fans, it looks like Hollywood has underestimated our collective intelligence again.
It’s something that goes through the motions of being a movie without really bothering to make it all the way through.
Somewhat surprising twist at the end makes MR. 3000 interesting, but this happens too late to improve generally disappointing impression of this film.
Akin to a baseball game turned into a feature film, Mr. 3000 isn't so much bad as it is terminally empty.
It's not that the jokes aren't funny. It's that the jokes aren't THERE.
It's a team sport, but the story belongs to the individual, which gives the otherwise comfortable corniness of Mr. 3000 its meta-celebrity subtext.
Squanders Mac's natural gift of salty gruffness by shoehorning him into a dull, heartwarming cinematic lesson on humility and the joys of teamwork.
Some of the screenplay is so skillful that one wonders who the hell wrote the other parts.
A cinematic foul ball that, despite all Mac's efforts, doesn't reach the comedy playoffs.
Mid-life change is a difficult subject to depict on the screen, and this predictable film misses the mark by making it look too easy.
Latest News for Mr. 3000
August 12, 2008:
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