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Catching Hell

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Catching Hell

After the Chicago Cubs blow an opportunity to reach the World Series in 2003, Cubs fans blame the team's misfortune on fellow fan Steve Bartman, who interfered with a foul ball and prevented Moises Alou from making a catch.

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Release : 2011
Rating : 7.9
Studio : Jigsaw Productions,  Triple Threat Television, 
Crew : Director,  Writer, 
Cast : Bill Buckner Bob Costas Alex Gibney Vin Scully Michael Wilbon
Genre : Documentary

Cast List

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Reviews

Rijndri
2018/08/30

Load of rubbish!!

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VeteranLight
2018/08/30

I don't have all the words right now but this film is a work of art.

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Micransix
2018/08/30

Crappy film

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Erica Derrick
2018/08/30

By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.

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DarthVoorhees
2014/01/14

'Catching Hell' is a tough one for me to review. It is about a subject very near and dear to my heart. I have a passion for Cubs baseball that is insatiable. My heart was broken when the Cubs lost the NLCS in 2003. If a lynch mob were formed right then and there to get Bartman and crucify him, I'm not proud to admit it but I'd probably say go for it. It takes a little more than a masochistic edge to be a Cub fan. There's a lot of misery and heartache that has to be endured but there is a promise of a just reward. I am convinced that when the Cubs win the World Series it will be one of the most cathartic and joyous occasions in the history of sports. Make no mistake catharsis is a huge part of being a Cub fan. In 2003 we were robbed of our catharsis and we needed an external scapegoat. Unfortunately for Steve Bartman it became him. This isn't a documentary about baseball. It's a documentary about being human. There is a brilliant moment in the beginning of the documentary where Director Alex Gibney describes the aspects of being a fan better than I have ever heard before. Being a fan is putting yourself as the 26th man on your baseball team on an emotional and almost spiritual level. Baseball is an escape from the drudgery's of life and when your team wins you win with it. When you lose however you take the scars with the team. The weight though of the scars weighing down on Cubs and Red Sox fans is enormous. This is the culture the media fed Bartman to. I think the media above anyone else becomes the real villain in this fable. Was it right for Cubs fans to blame Bartman? I don't' know if we ever really did. He became a face to the pains and frustrations and inadequacies of what the Cubs culture meant. Do I understand the anger? Yes. I feel angry myself. I don't think the Bartman wound will ever heal as long as the Cubs continue their title drought. There's a moment at the end where Gibney simulates Alou making that fateful catch. It was like him reopening the 2003 wound in this Cubs fans chest. It isn't' rational but it exists.

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Sean Lamberger
2012/01/11

The oft-delayed "lost chapter" of ESPN's 30 for 30 series, this strives to be more than just a routine examination of the infamous Steve Bartman incident that may (or may not) have cost the Chicago Cubs a shot at the 2003 World Series. With the famously publicity-shy Bartman refusing to take part, the film instead leans on interviews with several of the fans to rub elbows with him that fateful evening and insightful confessionals from the announce crew that called the game, a good portion of the Cubs' starting lineup, the local news team that outed Bartman's identity to the public and several of the security guards that escorted him to safety as the situation escalated. Director Alex Gibney deserves credit for not only painting a broad, fair portrait of a chaotic, emotionally charged situation, but for rightly comparing it to other instances of misplaced blame and shameless scapegoating in pro sports and asking the difficult question of what exactly spins a knee-jerk reaction into a bonafide vendetta. Though the scrutiny of the Bartman play itself is a bit too intense at times, resulting in a run-time that's about 30 minutes too long, it accomplishes much more than a simple reenactment and should leave any serious sports fan wondering how many times they've reacted with the same brainless mob mentality over the years. Smart, challenging and honest; it's what any good documentary should strive to be.

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metalrox_2000
2011/10/05

Im not sure how ESPN goes about choosing those who direct the documentaries in the 30 for 30 series, but they always seem to find the best.The documentary is as much about Bartman as it is the overall reaction of long suffering Cubs fans. Add in the description of how the Cubs securities forces got Steve Bartman out of there alive, and you have a fast moving, very entertaining and informative docudrama.And there is plenty of new light shed on the infamous incident. Testimonies from fans that sat near Bartman (many of whom sympathize with the hapless Cubs fan) and learning that Bartman was actually at the game with friends was interesting. However, this pails in comparison when there is focus on the little league team (whose sweater Bartman was wearing that night) that Bartman was coaching at the time, and those young ball players support of their coach.If anyone comes out the villain, it's the arrogant Cubs fan who left his seats in the nose bleed section to yell at Bartman, a man who to this day admits that he'd do it again, and blames Bartman for the Cubs lose.Moises Alou doesn't come off too good at all. Alou comes off arrogant, and dismissive of the suffering that Bartman went through. Even with Alou's thick accent, you can tell that he still deep down blames Steve Bartman for the Cubs never making it to the world series.This film not only manages to shed tons of new details on the incident, but also manages to have the viewer walk away wanting to buy Steve Bartman a beer and pat him on the back, instead of crucifying him.And maybe that's what the Cubs (and their fans) need to do. It's time for the Cubs to forgive Steve Bartman the way the Red Sox forgave Bill Buckner.PS It was interesting to know that Buckner was wearing a Cubs batting glove on his hand when he missed the bunt from Mookie Wilson.

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Michael_Elliott
2011/09/27

Catching Hell (2011) **** (out of 4) Terrific documentary from ESPN about Chicago Cubs fan Steve Bartman, the man who would walk into Game 6 of the 2003 NLCS hoping to see history with the Cubs reaching the World Series but instead became history after interfering with a foul ball, which many fans fill caused their beloved team to lose the game, the series and a chance at breaking the "curse" on their team. Director Alex Gibney spends the majority of the time going over the Bartman play but he also starts the film off by flashing back to 1986 when another cursed team, the Boston Red Sox, lost their game 6 game when Bill Buckner let a ball go between his legs. As with the Cubs in 2003, the Red Sox would lose that game six and then lose the next game to lose the series. The documentary does a very good job at connecting the two men but it also asks the question on why both men were as hated considering there were other people to blame during both games and not to mention that both teams had a game 7 that they could have won. The documentary features interviews with Bob Costas, Steve Lyons who was calling the game for Fox, a Fox producer, several security guards working at the game and we also get interviews with many of the people who were at the game. Some of those at the game include people sitting right around Bartman and one idiot who would go down and confront Bartman and throw beer on him. CATCHING HELL is a terrific little documentary because it's not just for baseball fans because its story is almost like a Shakespeare play or some sort of Greek tragedy. The human side of the story of a man making one mistake and becoming the most hated person is quite a tall order. There's some footage of Bartman being led out of the stadium where all sorts of things are thrown at him and even to this day he hasn't really came out of hiding. I think it should be noted that the documentary reveals that the man has been offered at least two-hundred thousand dollars to tell his story but he refused to make a profit off of it. I think he speaks a lot more highly than most people in this story. With that said, it should come as no shock that Bartman is not interviewed here and that there would have been the only thing that could have improved the film. The argument is also made that the story will never go away until the Cubs win the World Series but others seem to think that Bartman could take some heat off of himself simply by talking. CATCHING HELL is a perfect documentary that fans of the sport should love but I think just about anyone will be able to feel for the characters of this play.

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