Game 6
Where were you on that night?
As a New York playwright, Nicky Rogan made his name in boulevard comedy, and now has ventured closer to home and written something he really cares about. Though he won't admit it, he is desperate for another success. From the outset, things begin to go wrong. His daughter informs him that his wife wants a divorce. His mistress notifies him that his lead actor has a parasite in his brain and can't remember his lines, and an old acquaintance regales him with tales of Steven Schwimmer, a new and powerful critic who is so poisonous, so destructive, that the New York theatre community lives in terror.
Although Nicky has grown up in New York, he is a die-hard Red Sox fan and the film is set on October 25, 1986, the day of that most Shakespearean of sporting events, Game 6 of the World Series. The Red Sox are poised to win. At the last minute, Nicky decides to skip his opening night in order to watch his beloved team. This could be it. If his "cursed" Red Sox can finally win the World Series, maybe Nicky can break his own downward spiral. Written by acclaimed writer Don DeLillo, Game 6 is an intelligent, witty, unsettling tale of one man's encounter with his demons, his passions and his infatuation with failure.
Member Reviews
Not Good Enough, Despite Strong Acting - Hollywood
As a writer, DeLlilo can set the seemingly mundane and ordinary as the staging ground for a story with large thematic implications, yet with Game 6 (his first produced screenplay) DeLillo focuses so much of his time on the theme of loss of control and the fragility of outside events impacting everyday life, that the film feels overly-written, rendering it limp on the screen, and despite its relatively short running time, a real ordeal to get through.
Member Reviews
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Not Good Enough, Despite Strong Acting - Hollywood
As a writer, DeLlilo can set the seemingly mundane and ordinary as the staging ground for a story with large thematic implications, yet with Game 6 (his first produced screenplay) DeLillo focuses so much of his time on the theme of loss of control and the ...