Trouble With | The Curve

It portrays the struggle to maintain dignity and purpose while facing physical decline. Listen to that bat sing movie review - Roger Ebert

The story follows Gus Lobel (Eastwood), a legendary but aging baseball scout for the Atlanta Braves whose career is threatened by failing eyesight and the rise of modern digital analytics. His best friend and boss, Pete Klein (John Goodman), recruits Gus’s estranged daughter, Mickey (Amy Adams), to join him on a high-stakes scouting trip to North Carolina. Mickey, a high-powered lawyer on the verge of partnership, reluctantly leaves her firm to help her father evaluate a top prospect, Bo Gentry. Key Themes Trouble With The Curve

The film moves beyond baseball to explore several deep-rooted emotional and social themes: It portrays the struggle to maintain dignity and

The central arc is the thawing relationship between Gus and Mickey as they confront years of abandonment and emotional distance. Mickey, a high-powered lawyer on the verge of

Trouble with the Curve (2012) is an old-fashioned, sentimental sports drama that serves as a vehicle for Clint Eastwood’s late-career "grumpy old man" persona. While it doesn't reinvent the wheel, the film offers a comfortingly predictable story anchored by strong performances from its lead trio. Plot and Core Conflict

Similar to a counter-argument to Moneyball , the film pits old-school "gut instinct" and experience against the cold, computer-driven statistics favored by young executives like Phillip Sanderson (Matthew Lillard).