
The Kid from Left Field
Comedy · Family · TV Movie
Overview
A bat boy guides the San Diego Padres to the World Series with the secret help of his dad, a baseball has-been who now sells refreshments in the stands.
Top Cast


Gary Coleman
Gary Coleman
Jackie Robinson 'J.R.' Cooper
Gary Coleman
Jackie Robinson 'J.R.' Cooper


Robert Guillaume
Robert Guillaume
Larry Cooper
Robert Guillaume
Larry Cooper


Gary Collins
Gary Collins
Pete Sloane
Gary Collins
Pete Sloane


Ed McMahon
Ed McMahon
Fred Walker
Ed McMahon
Fred Walker


Tricia O'Neil
Tricia O'Neil
Marion Fowler
Tricia O'Neil
Marion Fowler


Tab Hunter
Tab Hunter
Bill Lorant
Tab Hunter
Bill Lorant


Rick Podell
Rick Podell
Leonard Hyams
Rick Podell
Leonard Hyams


Alberto Vazquez
Alberto Vazquez
Juan Telles
Alberto Vazquez
Juan Telles
Steve Tannen
Steve Tannen
Orlando
Steve Tannen
Orlando


Ken Medlock
Ken Medlock
Grosso
Ken Medlock
Grosso
Similar Movies

Casey is a slovenly junk man in a turn of the twentieth century hick town who has a remarkable ability to play baseball. An unscrupulous New York scout signs him up, so Casey and his equally dishonest manager go to the big leagues. Eventually, the scout and manager conspire to get him drunk and bet against him for a crucial game with the pennant at stake.

Actress JoBeth Williams directed this Showtime family feature starring The Sixth Sense's Mischa Barton for Barbra Streisand's Barwood Films. Barton is Frankie and Ingrid Uribe is Hazel, Frankie's neighbor and best friend. Frankie is an orphan who lives with her imperious grandmother, Phoebe (Joan Plowright), while Hazel lives with her father and older brother. Frankie's mother was a prima ballerina--killed in a car crash along with her father--and Frankie's been following in her toe shoes ever since. Although she's the best dancer in her class, she'd rather play baseball, whereas Hazel's a local activist who'd rather be mayor. The story strains credibility when 13-year-old Hazel runs for office against the middle-aged incumbent, but Frankie's goal is more understandable, and both actresses make their characters sympathetic and believable. It's as hard not to like them as it is not to root for them to succeed.

Two generations of professional baseball players return for a reunion game at one of their minor league stops en route to the big leagues. Unbeknownst to them, the owner of the club, on his way to a month of rustic living in the high Asian elevations, and desiring a connection to home, arranges an inducement to get the players to reveal novel anecdotes from their past 'on and off the field' baseball lives. The only apparent commonality between the two groups is their success on the ball field, each team providing the locals with the only two minor league championships for the small town nestled in the valley of the Allegheny Mountains.

When his star recruit botches a Major League Baseball debut, humiliated talent scout Al Percolo gets banished to rural Mexico, where he finds a potential gold mine in the arm of young phenom Steve Nebraska. Soon, the New York Yankees put a $55 million contract on the table—provided a psychiatrist can affirm Nebraska's mental stability.

Widower Tripp Spence goes on the run from the IRS with his 12-year-old baseball-phenomenon son Derrick. They assume new identities and flee to Las Vegas, where Derrick, now known as Mickey, joins a team that makes it to the Little League World Series. But will fame give away his true identity?

The unusual talents of Johnny Price, a minor league baseball pitcher and trick artist, are showcased in this Pete Smith Specialty. Among other talents, Mr. Price can throw two (and, in certain situations three) baseballs simultaneously to different people. The catchers can be side by side, with one high and one low, or standing on the pitcher's mound and second base while Price throws the ball from the catcher's position. He can even perform these feats while suspended upside-down.















