1h 30m available with multiple audio tracks and subtitles.

Brett Rapkin
Director

Josh Duhamel
Bill Lee

W. Earl Brown
Dick Dennis

Ernie Hudson
Joe

Winter Ave Zoli
Mrs. Lee

Carlos Leal
Gino Lapue

Stefan Rollins
Claude

Sterling K. Brown
Rodney Scott

Osas Ighodaro
May 29, 2023source: Spaceman

_holics_
Nov 22, 2022This is a biopic of free thinking baseball pitcher Bill Lee (Josh Duhamel), who loved the game, but shared that love with pot and alcohol. His inability to follow authority cut his career short. He life is filled with wonderful baseball stories, none of which we saw because the film basically starts when he gets cut from the Montreal Expos. I tried to get into the film, hoping they would have flashbacks, but alas, we only get to see Bill play in Senior League and pitch batting practice, which he messed up too. Now I love quirky ball players from Bill Lee, to Jay Johnstone, to John Kruk, to Wild Thing. Unfortunately we get to see the uninteresting stuff in Lee's life like losing at pool to a woman in a wheelchair. Bill gets blackballed from baseball which would have been a great story of managerial collusion, but as it was the story started at the end of his career when Bill's life got boring. Guide: F-word. No sex or nudity.

kavya dabrani
Nov 22, 2022Josh Duhamel gives an engaging and spirited performance as over the hill and down in the dumps Bill 'Spaceman' Lee, the Boston Red Sox and Montreal Expos left-handed pitcher whose antics for the wild life and marijuana gave him his trippy nickname. Bill is released by the Expos because he is bad business, despite his talent as a pitcher. Bill has earned a shoddy reputation with his wild living and now he is regarded as being too old. The word is out that no major baseball team should employ him. Pretty soon his personal life hits the skids as his wife divorces him and the only baseball he plays is with a local senior team the Longueuil Senators where he at least enjoys some camaraderie. The film has enough quirkiness to make it amiable, it has too much talking and by the end you think it also did not have too much plot to it.

Prashant Trivedi
Nov 22, 2022You know, it's funny. I imagine that most of the people who watch this movie may not like it. It's not humorous, in fact it's quite sad. The only redeeming value that it should bring is that if you are really good at something it's important to realize that there are always going to be times when you just aren't allowed to be yourself. That's what Bill "Spaceman" Lee found out after pushing the limit one too many times. He was a good pitcher and I grew up in Boston and watched him often, while he was in the prime of his career. He has a great mind for this great game and yet he allowed his inner demons to take that away, albeit is was towards the end of a decent career. There are a lot of people who play this game and to get to the Pro level is not an easy thing to do, never mind win almost 120 games. He did that and I will say that he did it with style. That style is also what ended his career in the Professional level. Was he the worst of the offenders at that time, probably not, but he certainly was one of the most outspoken about it. Josh Duhamel did, what appears to be a fairly decent representation of the character that Bill Lee was and still is today. A man with an abundance of talent who really didn't like being told what to do or when to do it. It's not hard to figure out that at some point that will get you more than a slap on the wrist. With all of that said, if you like baseball and ever felt as if your life would end if you couldn't play anymore then it's possible you will enjoy film for what it is. It's just a story. A story of a guy who never wanted to do anything but play baseball. Inside the lines he followed the rules, outside the lines had a negative impact on his later years, as a Pro. Give it a shot. The acting is fine and the sadness is real. It's not a long time commitment, so I suggest checking it out. I liked it enough to write this review and although I still see Mr. Lee, once in a while in and around Boston, he has the same smile, he's always talking the game and he does hold one pretty impressive record you will see in the credits at the end of the movie. I love baseball and I wish I could be a kid all over again, whenever I watch it live or get to see it in a film. Just my thoughts!