In The Time Of The Time Of America’s Pastime-Robert Redford’s
Film Adaptation Of Bernard Malamud’s ‘The Natural” (1984)
DVD Review
By Sandy Salmon
The Natural, starring Robert Redford, Glenn Close, Robert
Duvall, Kim Basinger, directed by Barry Levinson, based on the novel of the
saem name by Bernard Malamud, 1984
In my growing up time in the 1950s the premier American
sport of the time was baseball, baseball played from sandlot to professional.
And in an easier time, a less rushed time when one had the hours to devote
attention to the sport from neophyte player to avid sport’s fan that made
sense. Although today football in all its glory and precision has taken its
place I believe that one would be hard-pressed to write a book or produce a
movie about the saga of any individual football player like Bernard Malamud and
later Barry Levinson was able to do with the story line of the ballplayer under
review, The Natural. Somehow the simplicity of picking up a ball and bat and
running to some sandlot for a pick-up game evokes a lot more of the American
spirit than the necessarily more organized, team-driven precision and expensive
game of football.
This is the way an American sports’ story, maybe the
best baseball story ever written played out (with due apologies to Ring Lardner
and his You Know Me, Al and its
wonderful sociological insights series). A fair-haired All-American boy from
out in the farmlands of the Midwest Roy Hobbs, played by fair-haired
All-American boy actor Robert Redford (who else in the 1970s or 1980s would be
able to play the role as well) dreams the big time dream of becoming a
professional baseball player with all the trimmings. A dream which ironically
would include not just professional status but to be known by the man or woman
on the street, by young impressionable boys too, as the “greatest to ever tread
the bases.” He had it all, all the talent, all the desire and best of all a
devastating fast ball which would cower even the great sluggers of his day like
the fabled Ruth, the Babe, and the machine-like Hack Wilson. That, however,
would be his downfall once he got tagged by a woman, an unstable woman who
wanted to take down somebody who was either the greatest at what he did or was
as with Roy going to be the greatest. So in answer to her straight-forward
question about his potential status in the baseball Hall of Fame firmament he
got a few bullets, a few silver bullets for his efforts. She was no rookie at
that game either having wasted a couple of other wannabes but this time she
capped off her efforts with a big fall from a high hotel window, End of career
before it started, end of story.
Well no wait a minute it would be a very short
story, although hardly an unusual one, where a prospect in any sport came up
short and went back down to the dunghill from whence he came. So Roy, no longer
the boy wonder, no longer with any illusions, longer, much longer in the tooth
than in those first scenes but still with a mountain of talent and
determination showed up sixteen years later in New York, in the “bigs” with a
shot, one last shot at glory before he has to hang up the cleats (while the
young players have visions of eternity the reality of time and younger faster talent
eventually catches up with even the best). Somehow out in the boondocks some
professional scout for the lowly New York Knights saw something in Roy and
signed him to a contract-past unknown.
Those lowly Knights were something like the New York
Mets of my youth-the gang who couldn’t hit, pitch, field straight and so were
mired in the cellar of the league they were in much to the chagrin of the
manager-owner of the club, Pops. But get this that Connie Mack kept Roy’s light
hidden under a bushel for about as long as he could until one day he in
desperation let Roy take batting practice. Naturally the Natural banged them
out of the park like clockwork and after a weird accident to the troublesome
“franchise” player he took over the right field in order to get that last
chance to produce his credentials-and win that doubting manager a coveted pennant.
Well it still would be a short uneventful story if
there wasn’t some greed, sex, and redemption to round the drama out. The greed
came in two parts-one, Pops had under financial duress made a deal with the
devil selling part of his franchise, enough to lose control of the club-unless
he won a pennant. The other was the Chicago Black Sox-like gambling gag that has
always followed sports and which always will in the hands of some Abe
Saperstein-type looking for whatever edge he could get when putting down those
big pay-out dollars. The best way to do that was to have, let us say, the star
player under his wing. Especially a guy like Roy who could turn it on and off
like a faucet. But big time gamblers don’t get to be big time gamblers eating
fancy steaks and living the high life depending on quirky unknowns so our Gus,
the gambler, had two ways to try to squeeze the play. One, providing Roy with some
high-end sex with Memo, played by Kim Basinger, and the other digging out the
dirt on why a 35 year old guy with plenty of talent never came up on the radar
before. The emissary for the dirty work was a flinty sports’ writer named Mercy,
played by Robert Duvall, who dug deep and found out that whole sordid deal with
that crazy woman who wasted Roy in that dreaded hotel room in his youth and her
subsequent suicide out of the that same hotel room window. Judge Landis would
not like that image of baseball splattered all over the back pages of the newspapers.
The redemption. Well one day when Roy, living that
high life with Memo, was in a deep slump from not taking care of baseball business
in Chicago (in Wrigley Field until recently the graveyard of many Cubs fans
dreams so why not Roy’s) a vision in white dress showed up in the stands and
the slump was over. Turned out that the lady, Iris, played by Glenn Close was
Roy’s back home sweetheart long abandoned after Roy headed out to seek fame and
fortune. Turned out too that Iris has a son, a son say sixteen years old, not
living with the boy’s father who was living in New York (yeah, I know a weak part
of the plotline). Eventually with the pennant on the line (and ownership of the
Knights slipping from Pop’s hands) and that gambler having taken extra
insurance by having another player on the team in the bag Roy had one last
chance to go for glory. It was a close thing though, his favorite bat exploded
on him and Iris also had to pull out the old chestnut that her boy was Roy’s
son. You know Roy popped one out of the stadium. Yeah, Roy the All-American Boy
could hit that thing. Could make that boyhood dream come true even if only for
a minute. Hell most of us don’t get one chance much less two. Great baseball
movie.