Customer Reviews


19 Reviews
5 star:
 (14)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
 (2)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
 
 
Only search this product's reviews

The most helpful favourable review
The most helpful critical review


5.0 out of 5 stars Up with The Natural/Major Leagues in baseball greatness
Tyrus Raymond Cobb was unbeieveable on the diamond and as we learn in this masterpiece off the diamond as well. This movie cronicals the last few years of Cobb's life from his violent personality to his love on fine and hot women to his fued with his daughter. Tryus hires Al Stupp (played wonderfully by that guy from Arli$) to write a book about him. However, Cobb wants...
Published on Feb 21 2004 by Jer2005

versus
2.0 out of 5 stars Not what I expected
Based on the autobiography by Al Stump, this movie is not what I expected. Up front, I think Ty Cobb is the greatest ballplayer who ever lived. This movie did not do justice to his playing days. Most of the movie focused on his later life, and more so on his interaction with Al Stump. Very little was shown specifically related to his younger days or playing ball. If...
Published on Feb 23 2002 by warrior1978


‹ Previous | 1 2 | Next ›
Most Helpful First | Newest First

5.0 out of 5 stars Up with The Natural/Major Leagues in baseball greatness, Feb 21 2004
This review is from: Cobb (DVD)
Tyrus Raymond Cobb was unbeieveable on the diamond and as we learn in this masterpiece off the diamond as well. This movie cronicals the last few years of Cobb's life from his violent personality to his love on fine and hot women to his fued with his daughter. Tryus hires Al Stupp (played wonderfully by that guy from Arli$) to write a book about him. However, Cobb wants to be remebered as a nice friendly person not the SOB jagbag he really was(I assume he was, I wasn't around to ever see Cobb play, but i was at the Cubs/Sox game on 5/5/98 when Brant Michael Brown hit a homerun in the 12th inning to beat those jabronis on the South SIde 6-5) Anyway Cobb sees that Arli$ is secruetly writting notes about what a Jagbag he is so Cobb goes nuts and nearly kills Arli$.
Cobb does not kill Arli$ but we do see Cobb as he goes crazy on a nurse and guzles pills with booze.
There are some great lines like when Arlis and his jpurnlists buddies are at the bar and they ask each other who was the greatest babeball player that ever lived and they all say: Ty Cobb, except one guy who says Babe Ruth and they give him some Chit, not Sugar.
Also when Cobb is drunk and tired and Mickey Lolich doesnt want to talk to him Cobb tells Arliss "Carry me back to Georgia"
If your looking for a movie that focuses on Cobb's days w/ the Detroit Tugers then this isnt the movie for you, but if your looking beef, nudity, swears, car chases, Rajaah Clemens (F-Houston, Go Cubdom!!), pills, booze, a deer that gets shots and a scene of a mosaleum then this is the movie for you. I was looking for all those things so thats why I loved this movie.
T-Lee does a great job as Tryus Raymond Cobb. The only other person that could have pulled off this role was Ben(jamin) Geza Affleck, but T-Lee is supurb.
Keep in mind that the VHS/DVD covers differ. The VHS has a great shot of Cobb smoking a cigar while the DVD has Cobb playing baseball, personally i like the VHS cover better but there are some good special feautrues.
Rated R for violence, language, nudity and the killing of a deer.
Great movie to buy or obtain through Inter-library loan but you'll want a copy of this dousie.
Thank you T-Lee, Warner Bros. and Cobb
F-Houston, Bob Pulford and the cancalation of the XFL
I have reiceved 94% helpful votes so I am a trustworty source.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


4.0 out of 5 stars The supposedly "real" story of a baseball legend, Nov 23 2003
By 
Linda Linguvic (New York City) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Cobb (DVD)
Ty Cobb was called "the greatest baseball player of all time" and he enjoyed the spotlight. He was also known as "difficult person" to put it mildly. He drank hard, was prone to violence, insulted everybody, beat his wife, alienated his children, was a racist, beat a man to death and was accused of fixing games. In 1960 he had his biography written by a sportswriter named Al Stump. At the time Al Stump wrote a flattering portrait. Later, Stump wrote another book, telling the "real" story about Cobb. And this 1994 film is based on this second book.

The film is set in 1960 when Cobb, then 72 years old, engages Al Stump to write his biography. Stump's a young sportswriter who's flattered by the assignment. At first he hates the arrogant Cobb, but later finds himself admiring him for his "bigger than life" personality. And so he winds up being Cobb's only friend, traveling with him, drinking with him and playing nursemaid to his wild rages and need for constant medication.

Tommy Lee Jones is cast as Cobb, in a larger-than-life performance that humanizes the aging Cobb in spite of his raging racism and generally obnoxious behavior. Robert Wuhl is cast as Al Stump and his performance is equally good as we see him starting to have sympathy for the aging man. Lolita Davidovich is cast as a Reno cigarette girl who is pursued by both Al Stump and Cobb. She gives a good performance but I think the main reason she's in the film is to liven it up with a bit of flesh. There's also a small role played by Roger Clemens, the real-life pitcher in a scene of a baseball game played around 1916. Wisely, the camera doesn't stay too long on Tommy Lee Jones for this scene because he just can't look like a very young man.

The screenplay was ambitious but it lacked something. It was overlong and tended to be boring. Once the general situation was set, there was just one kind of outrageous behavior after another to prove the point that Cobb was difficult and that Stump was starting to admire the old man. In my opinion, the whole film could have been condensed to a one-hour television movie. As I'm interested in baseball, I did enjoy the film. But it certainly isn't one that I can highly recommend.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


4.0 out of 5 stars Not your typical "HERO" movie, Sep 25 2003
This review is from: Cobb (DVD)
To me, this movie is a dark comedy. Ty Cobb is obviously a racist, abusive mean spirited human being who also happens to be a baseball legend. This movie is about Cobb off the field during his last days as he plans an autobiography on his baseball career. Throughout the movie, he is verbally and physically abusive to those around him. Tommy Lee Jones manages to make his character, at times, sympathetic towards the end of the film as he gets sicker and sicker from one of his many illnesses. This does not change the fact that Ty Cobb was a vicious human being and writer/director Ron Shelton writes the character in a way that makes him funny in some ways. I can't imagine this movie being what it is without Tommy Lee Jones. Jones tends to play arogant know-it-all characters in movies and this one tops them all. This movie was not a hit because of limited release(40 theaters instead of the planned 400 according to Shelton's commentary) but it is easily one of the best movies made about baseball and the people who play the game. Without a doubt Tommy Lee Jones' best performance. Worth taking the time to watch despite the wretched character he portrays in the movie.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


5.0 out of 5 stars Cobb: A man with demons that made him a legend, Sep 6 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Cobb (DVD)
A must have entertaining DVD. The dark side of Cobb, with a touch of humor. Includes TWO commentary tracks (Director, and Jones and Wuhl), a few deleted scenes, the real Al Stump, and on the field with Roger Clemons You will not be disappointed..
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


5.0 out of 5 stars Baseball's First "Charlie Hustle", July 2 2003
By 
J. Magin (Ellicott City, MD United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Cobb (VHS Tape)
If Ty Cobb were playing today, he would receive the finest counseling and support his team could provide. Because despite his greatness, Cobb was a very sick man.

"Cobb" is not about baseball, but a film about "greatness" and America's need for heroes. While anyone can be a drunken SOB, not everyone can hit .367 lifetime.

Through an Oscar-caliber performance by Tommy Lee Jones, we see the tortured life of "The Georgia Peach" through the eyes of Al Stump, the sportswriter Ty Cobb hired to write his autobiography. The few scenes on the diamond include a cameo by Roger Clemens as he and Cobb trade insults while Cobb aloofly takes two strikes, then doubles, mowing down three infielders en route to the plate.

Robert Wuhl plays the naive Stump who cannot believe he's being paid by the wealthy Cobb to elaborate on such topics as how to steal second base, when the despised Cobb's real story is much more fascinating. Did he sharpen his spikes before games? Did he beat a heckling cripple and kill another? Disruptive, bigoted and mean, Cobb alienated his family and teammates throughout his life, allegedly due to a tragedy he witnessed as a boy.

As Stump drives Cobb from California to his native Georgia, he secretly compiles a second book about Cobb's ugly side and, has to wonder if he himself is emulating Cobb. When the dying Cobb finds Stump's scribbled notes, he realizes he's been betrayed. Still, the odd friendship between these two men continues with Cobb on his deathbed and Stump pondering which version of the biography to publish.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


5.0 out of 5 stars Great bio movie!!!, April 7 2003
By 
W. P. Danitz "Man about Town." (Conshohocken, PA., USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Cobb (VHS Tape)
If you like biography or baseball, you'll LOVE this film. Tommy Lee Jones plays a fantastic Ty Cobb. I can watch this over and over!!! EXCELLENT!
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


1.0 out of 5 stars An El Crapola baseball movie, Feb 18 2003
By 
David Apelt (Albany, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cobb (VHS Tape)
Basically a hatchet job on Cobb; this movie focuses on
a few episodes from the year Cobb spent with writer
Stump composing his autobiography. It is very disturbing,
dark, and does not bring the classic game of the early
century to life, just the latter-day mean-spirited aspect
of Cobb. You would be far better off reading Stump's bio,
"Cobb",or Charles Alexander's Cobb bio. The acting is ok;
it's hard to argue with the casting of Wuhl and Jones, but ...

This movie left me feeling queasy and in an angry mood.
There is so much more to Cobb than portrayed here. Sorry
this isn't the typical Amazon gushing 4-star review, but
this trashy film does nothing for baseball fans.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


5.0 out of 5 stars Not a well know movie, but worth viewing!, Feb 14 2003
By 
Mike Harris (Cincinnati, Ohio USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cobb (VHS Tape)
First off I want to say that although this movie revolves around Ty Cobb, it is not only about baseball. This movie probes deep into a very driven and disturbed ballplayer and husband. While watching the movie you go through what the director is hoping to convey to the viewer...first you hate Cobb, then you start to think that he may not be the monster he has been made out to be.

The acting of Tommy Lee Jones is stellar! One of his finest performances of his well established career. This movie is hard to find on store shelves due to it was not very popular and still isnt, however that should not impeed you from seeing this 5-star film. There are many lines that are quotable for the rest of your life in this film. Cobb's view on the world in general is very entertaining. I laughed out loud many times during his frequent outbursts. My wife, who doesnt like baseball all that well, recommended this film to her grandparents, and they loved it.
So in closing, take two and a half hours and watch a film that will become a sought after movie for your own personal collection!

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


5.0 out of 5 stars Very, Very Good, Nov 29 2002
This review is from: Cobb (VHS Tape)
Tommy Lee Jones is incredible as Ty Cobb. The movie is basically the first few pages of Al Stump's biography of Cobb he wrote sometime in the early 90's. Cobb is old and dying and we see his life through flashbacks and such. Jones becomes Cobb and gives truly superb performances throughout the film. This movie should spark an interest in Ty Cobb which you should act on, he was a very interesting individual who lived a very hard life. He was a tragic figure in baseball. A must see!
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


5.0 out of 5 stars The man-Ty Cobb, Oct 8 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Cobb (VHS Tape)
This is an excellent movie for the baseball lover. Good context as well as very funny!
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


‹ Previous | 1 2 | Next ›
Most Helpful First | Newest First

This product

Cobb
Cobb by Ron Shelton (DVD - 2003)
Used & New from: CDN$ 69.99
Add to wishlist See buying options