Bull Durham



Bull Durham is a 1988 Sports/Romance comedy by Ron Shelton, and starring Kevin Costner, Susan Sarandon, and Tim Robbins.

It's the Carolina Leagues and the last-place Durham Bulls are working out a rookie pitcher Ebby LaLoosh (Robbins). LaLoosh has a "million-dollar arm and a five-cent head," so the ownership sends down "Crash" Davis (Costner), an aging catcher who'd been working his whole adult life to make the Majors, to teach and guide the new kid. Angry he's been sent down instead of up, Crash almost refuses to take the assignment to help the new "Meat".

Mixing into the conflict is Annie Savoy (Sarandon), long-time resident of Durham and a long-time fan of baseball. A sports groupie, she takes it upon herself to latch onto a promising new talent every year and train him on the mysteries of baseball, sex and life (the coaches don't mind: every rookie she beds has a great season). She spies both LaLoosh and Crash and invites them to compete for her affections: Crash, every bit her spiritual and intellectual equal, notes he's too old to "try out" for anything and leaves her with LaLoosh by default, whom Annie quickly beds and nicknames "Nuke".

Now with Crash and Annie teaching him - sometimes in conflict, but more often than not in concert - Nuke goes through the trials and errors of a pitcher: knowing when NOT to shake off a catcher's sign, the value of a rain-out, how bondage and poetry improve sex, how to hold a ball like an egg, how NOT to think when pitching, how to have actual fun during a game, and which way a garter belt ought to be worn ("Rose goes in front, big guy.") But while all that's going on, Crash and Annie get to realizing that the two of them might be perfect for each other, except that she's with Nuke...

Critical reception for Bull Durham was mostly positive when it came out and was a moderate success, but in the 20-plus years since its release the film has been re-assessed as a full-out classic among sports film: critics, sports columnists, and baseball fans argue it may be the best baseball movie ever.

This movie contains examples of baseball and sex, and a few of these tropes:
"A guy will listen to anything if he thinks it's foreplay."
 * All Men Are Perverts

"Annie: Walt Whitman once said, "I see great things in baseball. It's our game, the American game. It will repair our losses and be a blessing to us." You could look it up."
 * All Women Are Lustful: Annie and Millie, although Annie tempers hers with roleplay.
 * The Art of Gartered Stocking Removal: Nuke has as much trouble with Annie's garters as most men do in the standard version of the trope.
 * The Bechdel Test: It has two women (check) who are friends and who chat (check) about baseball... except that their baseball talks are about their relationships to the men who play baseball. (Ummm...) It might pass the test, considering that Annie and Millie are complex and likable characters.
 * Big Game: Subverted. In a baseball season even in the minors, there's no one big game outside of the playoffs, and the movie ends well before the season does.
 * Bittersweet Ending: The movie ends on a rain-out and Annie returns to her home to find Crash having played his last game, hitting his record-setting home run for another team. Crash reveals he's quitting as a player, while Annie reveals that she's quitting too (just boys, not her love of baseball).

"Nuke: A woman's pu ... pussy ... um, well, you know how the hair is kind of in a V-shape?
 * Book Ends: "La Vie En Rose" plays while Annie has Nuke tied up in bed and reads poetry to him towards the beginning of the film, and it plays when she says goodbye to him towards the end. (But neither scene opens or begins the entire film).
 * Brick Joke: At one point, Crash teaches Nuke all the cliches he's going to have to tell reporters when he gets to the majors ("We gotta play it one day at a time"). At the end, when Nuke is in the majors, and speaking to a reporter, he's using them all.
 * The Cameo: some of the background characters were real-life persons involved with the Durham Bulls organization when the film was made.
 * Captain Obvious

Annie: Yes. I do."

"Crash: Never fuck with a winning streak."
 * Catch Phrase: To this day, minor league pitchers want to "announce my presence with authority!"
 * Centipede's Dilemma: One of the best examples of this. Nuke has no control when he thinks about what he's doing. He can't even hit Crash in the chest from five feet away when he thinks about what he's doing. Once he learns how to focus on something else, his control greatly improves.
 * Chained to a Bed: part of the light bondage Annie uses on Nuke.
 * Cluster F-Bomb: Half the dialog is spiked with profanity. If you ever watch Bull Durham on a basic cable channel, you're missing probably thirty percent of the movie.
 * There's also the Precision F-Strike for when the F-word helps make a point:

"Millie (listening to a game on the radio as Crash gets thrown out): Must have called him a.
 * There's apparently one word you're never supposed to say to an umpire.

Annie (sighs): How romantic."

"Crash: Yeah, I was in the Show. (all the rookies except Nuke perk up) I was in the Show for 21 days once - the 21 greatest days of my life. You know, you never handle your luggage in the Show, somebody else carries your bags. It was great. You hit white balls for batting practice, the ballparks are like cathedrals, the hotels all have room service, and the women all have long legs and brains..."
 * Deconstruction: Before this, sports movies had clean-cut heroes, outright villains, and every problem resolved by a Big Game that saves the day. This movie dumps all of that for serious character development and introspection, and that winning the game is unimportant compared to coming to terms with who you are. By playing by none of the rules, Bull Durham is considered one of the best sports movies ever.
 * Did Not Do the Research: Averted, big time. Shelton was a long-time minor league player who knew from experience how life went in Carolina Leagues. Nearly everything in the movie (including the scene of the radio announcer faking a live broadcast from a studio as they couldn't afford the road trips) happened in the minors when the movie was made.
 * The one thing Shelton didn't get right was . It could be explained away as how.
 * Enforced Method Acting: Batboy tells Crash "Get a hit, Crash." Crash responds, "Shut up." That was an ad-lib by Costner, and it reduced the batboy to tears (off-camera, though).
 * Fourth Date Marriage: Millie, Annie's friend and fellow groupie, has basically slept with half the Carolina League right up until she tries hooking up with the overtly religious Jimmy. After just one night, the two of them get engaged.
 * Glory Days: Crash once spent 21 days in the major leagues (what he calls "The Show".) He's spent the rest of his minor league career hoping and praying to earn his way back ever since.

"Nuke: This underwear feels kinda sexy. That don't make me queer, right?"
 * In a non-sports way, Annie. She keeps wanting to relive the magic of seducing and mentoring a hotshot ball player every year... but even she realizes she's getting too old for that now...
 * Good People Have Good Sex
 * Informed Ability: Let's just say that while Costner does a pretty good job playing a ballplayer, some of the others don't. Tim Robbins is a big tall guy who fit the physical profile, but his pitching motion is a pretty poor imitation of the real thing.
 * Ironic Echo: When they first meet, Crash taunts a half-drunk Nuke into starting a fight outside a bar by challenging him to nail him with a fastball. Nuke smashes a door window instead and Crash punches him out. After Nuke gets called up to the majors, he finds Crash (who knows it means the end of his stay on the team) getting drunk and taunting Nuke with baseball stats. Trying to get into another fight, Crash smashes a nearby mirror, forcing Nuke to punch Crash out. Crash then uses the moment to see if Nuke punched with his throwing hand (he didn't)... showing that Nuke has the instincts not to fuck up his career if he ever gets in a bar brawl.
 * Life Imitates Art: The bull billboard offering a "free steak" if it gets tagged by a home run was created for the film. The real-life team kept it, even after moving to a newer bigger stadium.
 * Even with the adult frankness about sex and relationships, and the level of profanity, the Durham Bulls organization heavily promote their tie-in to the movie. After all, it made the franchise one of the best-known minor league teams on the planet.
 * Manic Pixie Dream Girl: Annie. It's subverted a bit in that she does what she does because she enjoys it; she's not just a character-building device for the male characters.
 * A Man Is Not a Virgin
 * Meaningful Name: Annie gets her name from the nickname given to baseball groupies.
 * Everyone gets a nickname - like "Nuke" and "Crash" - they deserve.
 * No Celebrities Were Harmed: Nuke LaLoosh was based on Steve Dalkowski, a legendary minor league pitcher who like Nuke could throw it fast... and throw it wild, which is why Dalkowski never made the majors.
 * Crash Davis got his name from the real-life Lawrence "Crash" Davis, who did make The Show as a second baseman for the Philadelphia A's in the 1940s. He got a quick bump in celebrity when Bull Durham became a hit.
 * "Not Wearing Pants" Dream: Annie tries to get Nuke to focus his energies elsewhere by insisting he wears a woman's garter belt. He has a horrifying nightmare of being on the mound wearing just the garter belt (and a jock strap), and refuses to. When he finally relents, Crash is the one who spots him trying it on... and doesn't mock Nuke for wearing it. He even tells him "Rose goes in front, big guy."
 * Oh, Crash mocked him, all right-- he was just snarky about it. Slapping him on the ass and saying, "That's really hot."

"Jimmy: Oh, my Lord!"
 * The Obi-Wan: Crash. The rookie players flock to his leadership and wisdom real quick, except for Nuke, who eventually comes around when Annie insists on him following Crash's advice... and it actually improves his game.
 * Annie's insistence on Nuke following Crash's advice comes back to bite her on the ass when Nuke's re-channels his sexual energy into his pitching, which helps him go on a fantastic winning streak. Annie, being monogamous in the framework of the baseball season, starts getting very sexually frustrated... even though she's the one who suggested the re-channeling before the streak. But when Nuke admits to Crash that he's thinking about having sex with her just to get her out of his hair, Crash basically says, "Are you crazy? Never fuck with a winning streak." So Nuke stays out of Annie's bed, and when Nuke tells her why, she gets pissed off at Crash.
 * And Crash calls her on it, pointing out that Annie (as much an expert on baseball as he is) should know full well that no one should ever fuck with a winning streak. Annie quickly realizes he's right... and also realizes she really loves Crash.
 * Precision F-Strike:
 * "Don't fuck with a winning streak."
 * Straight-arrow Christian Jimmy gets what counts, for him, as a precision F-strike when he sees the "special wedding cake" the boys get him: