| Index | 4 reviews in total |
3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
A lukewarm two-part comedy about golf and football fans, 8 September 2002
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Author:
George Parker from Orange County, CA USA
"The Sports Pages" consists of two completely separate mini-movies in tandem. The first is a droll tale with Newhart on a courtroom witness stand explaining to a jury how he justifies killing an old friend and golfing companion (Grammer) by whacking him over the head with a club. Part two is a raucous tale about the "facts" behind the "Heidi Bowl" (look it up). Neither film has much sporting action and both focus on the fans (golf and football respectively). I don't care much for either sport and liked the first bit better. However, fans and nonfans alike should expect little more than a mildly amusing watch from "The Sports Pages". (C-)
2 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
1st half smart, 2nd half disappointing, 22 March 2002
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Author:
Jeff Koval (dekker0) from Marquette, Michigan
Bob Newhart and Kelsey Grammer perfect. Who can't relate with Bob? Second half should have climaxed with the 7:00pm changeover. Missed opportunity to capture the sheer sorrow and desperation of having the game cut off - grown men sinking to their knees with cries of anguish - I've been there. Ruined by unnecessary sub-plots.
0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
2 stories - One really good, the other not so good..., 10 March 2006
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Author:
Malcatraz from Iceland
How Doc Waddems Finally Broke 100: Doc Waddems (Newhart) had been
trying to break his 100 score in golf, and when he's starting to get
lucky Howard Greene (Grammer) starts messing with his game, causing him
to loose it, and in the end kill him. The whole story is in the
courtroom were Doc Waddems (Newhart) is explaining everything that
happened.
The Heidi Bowl: The is a true story that takes place in New York about
the "Heidi Bowl" football event
When I had watched about 30 min. of this movie I was really impressed;
the story + the actors were really good. And when I had finished the
first story, the grade 4/5 or even 5/5 came in my head. Then the second
story began... The actors (except Eugene Levy) were all terrible, and
the story was not good!..
So I give the first story 10/10 and the second 4/10 > final grade: 7/10
3 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Too good for the viewer, 19 October 2002
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Author:
Barboelsch from Munich, Europe
It is tricky to write a review of the "Sports Pages" as it consists of two
almost independent stories, "How Doc Waddens finally broke 100" and "The
Heidi Bowl".
While the Heidi Bowl describes an event that actually happened and that is
still in the mind of pretty much every US football fan, the Story of Doc
Waddens is entirely fictionuous.
Well, I happened to see the "Sports Pages" twice during my two-week
holiday
in Varadero. However, the most disappointing issue is that obviously US
viewers don't seem to understand it at all.
Part one - Doc Waddens - is full of between-the-lines humor and Bob
Newhart
plays his role as good as a Brit would do. Ever imagined you have just
been
pleaded 'not guilty' after killing a Golf enthusiast friend, and now you
want to buy the victim's set of clubs from the widow? Weird ideas of that
kind by the truckload and a brilliant performance by the
staff.
The "Heidi Bowl" sports the well-known football event but wrapped in half
a
dozen of small or not-so-small stories that all lead to the big final. A
well-filmed view on the typical American everyday-craze that make them
look
so stupid everywhere else in the world. Yet they, themselves, just don't
get
it.
Go and watch it, it's great!
Barboelsch
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