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Reel Baseball - Baseball Films from the Silent Era (DVD)

Directed by : (various)
Crew : Jessica Rosner
Available Date : 04/03/2007
Release Year : 1899
Running Time : 253
UPC : 738329052928
Country : U.S.
Subject : History, American Studies, Sports
Genre : Sports, Silent
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$14.99 (DVD)
MSRP: $29.95
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Baseball films from the silent era
REEL BASEBALL 1899-1926
2 Features 11 Shorts 2 DVDs
Featuring Babe Ruth in the 1920 drama 'HEADIN' HOME'

This DVD collection features a cornucopia of early - and, in many cases, extremely rare - baseball films, offering privileged peeks into early twentieth century American lifestyles and values. It includes newly remastered and scored versions of two important early baseball features: The Busher (1919), a delightful comedy-drama featuring silent cinema legends Charles Ray, Colleen Moore, and John Gilbert; and Headin' Home (1920), spotlighting a young, shockingly svelte Babe Ruth in his first motion picture starring role. Other items include Casey at the Bat or The Fate of a "Rotten" Umpire (1899), one of the first representations of baseball on celluloid; a 1922 experimental sound film featuring aging matinee idol DeWolf Hopper reciting "Casey at the Bat" Hearts and Diamonds (1914), a comedy with roly-poly screen star John Bunny; One Touch of Nature (1917), which features New York Giants Hall of Fame manager John McGraw; and Felix Saves the Day (1922), an animated short starring Felix the Cat. His Last Game (1909) and The Ball Player and the Bandit (1912) blend baseball with the American West.

So kick off your spikes, slip on your favorite baseball cap, and prepare to be transported to an earlier, more innocent age.
- Rob Edelman

DVD 1

  • Headin' Home
    featuring Babe Ruth
    1920 73 Min.
  • Kinogram
    featuring Babe Ruth
    undated 1 Min.
  • His Last Game
    1909 12 Min.
  • The Ball Player and the Bandit featuring Harold Lockwood
    1912 12 Min.

DVD 2

  • The Busher
    featuring Charles Ray, Colleen Moore, John Gilbert
    1919 55 Min.
  • Casey at the Bat or The Fate of a "Rotten" Umpire
    1899 1 Min.
  • How the Office Boy Saw the Ball Game
    1906 5 Min. (fragment)
  • Hearts and Diamonds featuring John Bunny
    1914 33 Min.
  • One Touch of Nature featuring John McGraw
    1917 18 Min. (excerpt)
  • Felix Saves the Day featuring Felix the Cat
    1922 7 Min.
  • Casey at the Bat featuring DeWolf Hopper
    1922 6 Min.
  • Butter Fingers featuring Billy Bevan
    1925 16 Min.
  • Happy Days
    1926 14 Min.

Produced for video by Jessica Rosner
Music composed and performed by David Drazin, David Knudtson, and Ben Model.
Film elements provided by Dennis Atkinson, Film Preservation Associates, the Larson-Casselton Collection, the Library of Congress, and Lobster Films.
Special Contents of This Edition Copyright 2007 Kino International Corp.

Publish Date : 2007-04-03
UV Canada Link : https://unobstructedview.com/reel-baseball-the-busher-heading-home-shorts-kin052928-web.html
  • (various) - Director
  • Babe Ruth - Actor
  • Harold Lockwood - Actor
  • Charles Ray - Actor
  • Felix the Cat - Actor
  • Colleen Moore - Actor
  • Jessica Rosner - Producer

Reviews

I know about as much about baseball as I do about quantum physics, but I found much of the material in this two disc-set, recently released by Kino, absolutely fascinating. Cinephiles who reflexively avoid sports movies (not the most distinguished of genres) will find "Reel Baseball: 1899-1926" a thinly disguised attempt to smuggle some lesser-known early films onto the DVD market. Baseball fans will be delighted by the dramatic presence of a young, slim Babe Ruth, playing an imaginary version of himself in the 1920 feature Headin' Home, and by the great New York Giants manager John McGraw, playing himself in an excerpt from the 1917 Edison feature "One Touch of Nature.". - Dave Kehr, The New York Times

"Though the silent films in 'Reel Baseball" (Kino), a two-disk set of features and shorts made from 1899 to 1926, are of minor artistic value, they offer fascinating glimpses of the state of the game - and of the union - in that era." - THE NEW YORKER Read the full review.

To watch Kino's two discs full of fable and lore - everything from Casey to Felix the Cat, varied shorts and scattered rarities set to piano and organ - is to see how that would come to be. If you'll always have the old ball game and the old, weird America (with apologies to Greil Marcus) in your heart, you'll want to have this well-produced set in your collection. - The Austin Chronicle

For press and publicity inquiries, please email [email protected]. A selection of press materials for this title may be available for download here.

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