The Benchwarmers

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The Benchwarmers
Benchwarmers poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byDennis Dugan
Written byAllen Covert
Nick Swardson
Produced byAdam Sandler
Jack Giarraputo
Starring
CinematographyThomas Ackerman
Edited byPeck Prior
Sandy Solowitz
Music byWaddy Wachtel
Production
companies
Distributed bySony Pictures Releasing
Release date
  • April 7, 2006 (2006-04-07)
Running time
85 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$33 million[1]
Box office$65 million[1]

The Benchwarmers is a 2006 American sports-comedy film directed by Dennis Dugan and starring Rob Schneider, David Spade, Jon Heder, Jon Lovitz, Craig Kilborn, Molly Sims, and Tim Meadows. It is produced by Revolution Studios and Happy Madison Productions and is distributed by Columbia Pictures. It has developed a cult following over the years since its release, especially amongst baseball fans.[citation needed]

A direct-to-video sequel titled was released on July 2018.

Plot[]

Gus Matthews (Rob Schneider), Richie Goodman (David Spade), and Clark Reedy (Jon Heder) are adult "nerds" who spent their childhoods longing to play baseball, but never got the chance.

When a nerdy, unathletic boy named Nelson Carmichael (Max Pardo) and his friends are bullied and kicked off a baseball diamond by a local little league team, Gus and Clark chase the bullies away. When Gus and Clark go with Richie to the field, the bullies return and demand that they leave. Gus challenges the bullies to play them for the field. They win the game due to Gus's surprising aptitude. A man named Brad (Sean Salisbury), one of Clark and Richie's childhood bullies, challenges them to another game, but the three friends win again.

After an encounter with Richie and Clark's childhood bully Jerry (Craig Kilborn), they and Gus are approached by Nelson's billionaire father Mel (Jon Lovitz) who tells the trio about his plan to hold a round-robin with all the little league teams in the state, plus their team. The winners will be given access to a new multimillion-dollar baseball park. The three name themselves the Benchwarmers and join the tournament. Mel and his robot Number 7 (Doug Jones) cover up Gus' involvement with his wife Liz (Molly Sims).

Jerry and the coaches of the little league teams start meeting to think of plans to defeat the Benchwarmers. The Benchwarmers win every single game, with Clark and Richie's abilities gradually improving, Richie's brother Howie (Nick Swardson) facing his fears, and the team becomes popular among many nerds, children with poor athletic abilities, and the general public.

At the semi-final game, the competing team's coach Wayne (Tim Meadows) enters a 30-year-old Dominican professional baseball player named Carlos (Amaury Nolasco) into the league claiming going with Jerry's claim that he is 12 years old. The Benchwarmers eventually defeat Carlos by getting him too drunk to pitch properly.

After multiple unsuccessful attempts to derail the trio, the Benchwarmers' adversaries finally find a weakness that they can exploit. Brad find evidence that Gus was a bully himself as a child from his poker buddy Steven (Terry Crews), known for using name calling over physical force and had bullied one boy named Marcus (Joe Gnoffo) so intensely that he had to be sent to a mental institution. Seizing this opportunity, Jerry and Steve expose Gus' secret to the public, shaming Gus into resigning from the team. After a talk with Liz, Gus sincerely apologizes to Marcus just before the final game.

Mel enlists Ultimate Home Remodel to build his stadium. When it came to the big game against Jerry's baseball team, Marcus forgives Gus in front of everyone at the beginning of the final game. Gus re-joins the team, announcing that Marcus is the Benchwarmers' new third-base coach.

In the final game, Gus, Clark and Richie let a team consisting of Nelson and other non-athletic children play, to give them a chance to play. In the final inning, the Benchwarmers are losing, but Jerry's team sees that the Benchwarmers are having fun playing the game anyway. Seeing how heartless and uncaring Jerry is and realizing the true spirit of the game, they decide to let Nelson score a run, saying that Jerry is "the loser". The Benchwarmers storm the field, celebrating the fact that they were not shut out.

The entire Benchwarmers team, along with the kids from Jerry's team, Marcus, and even Carlos and Wayne, celebrate at Pizza Hut. Richie and Clark get girlfriends, Howie informs Wayne that he's not a big fan of the Moon, and Gus announces that he is going to become a father.

Cast[]

  • Rob Schneider as Gus Matthews, an adult nerd and reformed childhood bully who works as a groundskeeper and is good at baseball.
  • David Spade as Richie Goodman, an adult nerd and video rental store worker at Video Stop who is one of Gus's friends.
  • Jon Heder as Clark Reedy, an adult nerd and paperboy who is one of Gus's friends.
  • Jon Lovitz as Mel Carmichael, a billionaire who funds the Benchwarmers.
  • Craig Kilborn as Jerry McDowell, a mean-spirited little league coach that picked on Richie and Clark.
  • Molly Sims as Liz Matthews, the wife of Gus.
  • Tim Meadows as Wayne, a little league coach who is one of Jerry's friends.
  • Nick Swardson as Howie Goodman, Richie's agoraphobic and heliophobic brother.
  • Max Prado as Nelson Carmichael, the son of Mel.
  • Erinn Bartlett as Sarah, the Pizza and Salad Girl
  • Amaury Nolasco as Carlos, a Dominican man who Wayne recruits to his little league team.
  • Bill Romanowski as Karl, a little league coach who is one of Jerry's friends.
  • Reggie Jackson as himself, he is recruited by Mel to help train Gus, Richie, and Clark.
  • Danny McCarthy as Troy
  • Sean Salisbury as Brad, a little league coach who picks on Richie and Clark.
  • Matt Weinberg as Kyle
  • John P. Farley as Swimmer Boy
  • Jackie Sandler as Female Video Stop Customer
  • Jared Sandler as Autograph Kid
  • Rachel Hunter as a hot mother who becomes Clark Reedy's first kiss
  • Patrick Schwarzenegger as Jock Kid Game #3[2]
  • Terry Crews as Steven (Poker Guy #1), a man in a wig who Gus used to pick on psychologically.
  • Dan Patrick as O'Malley (Poker Guy #2)
  • Rob Moore as Poker Guy #3
  • Blake Clark as Umpire, who Wayne bribes to allow Carlos play for his team.
  • Dennis Dugan as Coach Bellows
  • Joe Gnoffo as Marcus Ellwood, a man who Gus used to pick on when they were boys.
  • Jillian Henry as Gretchen Peterson, one of the child commentators for the Benchwarmers' baseball games.
  • Garrett Julian as Mitchell, one of the child commentators for the Benchwarmers' baseball games.
  • Alex Warrick as Sammy Sprinkler, a spit-talking boy who helps out the Benchwarmers.
  • Jonathan Loughran as Brad's assistant coach
  • Mary Jo Catlett as Mrs. Ellwood
  • Lochlyn Munro as Ultimate Home Remodel Host
  • Matt Willig as Jock Guy
  • Cleo King as Lady Customer
  • Bob Sexton as Karl's assistant coach
  • Tom Silardi as Candia Coach
  • Michael Moore as Candia Assistant Coach
  • J.J. Darwish as Goth Kid
  • Ellie Schneider as Carol, the girlfriend of a goth kid.
  • Gabriel Pimental as Little Man
  • Jon Moscot[3]

Voices[]

Production[]

The Benchwarmers was shot at various locations in California, mostly in Agoura Hills, in Chumash Park and at a Pizza Hut. Other locations were Chino Hills; Chino; Culver City; Glendale; Watson Drug Store – Chapman Avenue, Orange; Simi Valley; Westwood, Los Angeles and on Mulholland Hwy, Malibu (Mel's house).

Reception[]

On Rotten Tomatoes The Benchwarmers scored 13% based on 71 reviews, with the site's consensus reading, "A gross-out comedy that is more sophomoric than funny, The Benchwarmers goes down swinging."[4] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 25 out of 100 based on 17 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".[5] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B" on an A+ to F scale.[6]

Manohla Dargis of The New York Times wrote: "The Benchwarmers is the sort of trash that Hollywood does really well" and noted it was only in theaters to raise awareness for the home-rental market. Dargis concludes by quoting Schneider, who called it "a master's thesis on the form of a quintessential Adam Sandler comedy."[7]

Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly gave it a positive review: "This morphing of "The Bad News Bears" and a "Three Stooges" episode parades its dumbness with such zip that it almost passes for clever."[8]

Box office[]

The film was a box office success. In its opening weekend, it grossed $19.6 million, ranking second at the North American box office behind Ice Age: The Meltdown. The film finished with $59,843,754 domestically and $5,113,537 in other markets, totaling $64,957,291 worldwide.[1] The film held the record for the highest opening weekend gross for a baseball genre film,[9][10] until 2013 when it was surpassed by the Jackie Robinson film "42".[11]

Award nominations[]

2006 Teen Choice Awards:

2006 Stinkers Bad Movie Awards:

  • Worst On-Screen Hairstyle (David Spade)

2007 Razzie Awards:

  • Worst Actor (Rob Schneider)

2010 Razzie Awards:

  • Worst Actor of the Decade (Rob Schneider)

Home media[]

The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray on July 25, 2006.

Sequel[]

In July 2018, Revolution Studios and Universal 1440 announced a direct-to-DVD sequel titled . The film was released on January 29, 2019 with Jon Lovitz reprising his role as Mel Carmichael.[12] The rest of the cast consists of Chris Klein, Chelsey Reist, Lochlyn Munro, and Garfield Wilson.

References[]

  1. ^ a b c "The Benchwarmers (2006)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved December 2, 2009.
  2. ^ Cindy Adams, Patrick Schwarzenegger: Acting is how I bonded with Arnold, Pagesix.com, 26 March 2018
  3. ^ "Jon Moscot Bio". Pepperdine University Official Athletic Site.
  4. ^ "The Benchwarmers Review". Retrieved 31 August 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^ "The Benchwarmers". Retrieved 2021-08-31.
  6. ^ "Find CinemaScore" (Type "Benchwarmers, The" in the search box). CinemaScore. Retrieved March 7, 2021.
  7. ^ Dargis, Manohla (April 8, 2006). "'The Benchwarmers': 3 Amigos of Baseball in a Yuk-fest". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 2017-06-18.
  8. ^ Owen Gleiberman (2006-04-12). "The Benchwarmers". Entertainment Weekly.
  9. ^ John Young. "'Lion King 3D' defends crown with $22.1 million". EW.com. CNN. If the estimate holds, that'll represent the best opening ever for a baseball film
  10. ^ Ray Subers (September 22, 2011). "Forecast: Odds Favor 'Moneyball'". Box Office Mojo. just a little bit lower than the best opening ever for a baseball movie, which belongs to the 2006 comedy The Benchwarmers
  11. ^ Smith, Grady (April 14, 2013). "Box office report: '42' knocks it out of the park with $27.3 million; 'Oblivion' huge overseas". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved April 14, 2013.
  12. ^ "From Universal 1440 Entertainment And Revolution Studios: Benchwarmers 2" (Press release). Universal City, California: Universal Pictures Home Entertainment. July 19, 2018. Retrieved December 17, 2018 – via PR Newswire.

External links[]

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