On chilly winter evenings, this Bad News Bears Movie Quilt Blanket is the ideal item for snuggling up with a loved one. When you wrap yourself in this blanket and cuddle up, the soft fabric will make you feel cozy and comfortable, while the beautiful appliqué of bears in rainfall will bring you feelings of comfort, joy, and yesteryear. The margins of this quilt are elastic, which allows it to maintain its position. This adorable throw would make a wonderful present for anybody who is a fan of the movie “Bad News Bears,” as well as for those who aren’t familiar with the film but still have a soft spot for cuddly animals.
Bad News Bears Movie Quilt Blanket Description
Bad News Bears Movie Quilt Blanket Information
Brand | Drama Shirt |
Style | Quilt and Fleece Blanket |
Made of | Fabrics like velboa and sherpa |
Sizes | Various sizes are available to accommodate a wide range of bed sizes and applications. |
Care Guidelines |
To keep its color and keep it from shedding, follow the instructions. |
Bad News Bears Movie
Bad News Bears Movie 1976 film directed by Michael Ritchie and written by Bill Lancaster. It stars Walter Matthau as an alcoholic ex-baseball player who becomes a young baseball coach. Alongside Matthau, the picture stars Tatum O’Neal, Vic Morrow, Joyce Van Patten, Ben Piazza, Jackie Earle Haley, and Alfred W. Lutter. Its composition by Jerry Fielding adapts Bizet’s opera, Carmen. The Bad News Bears garnered mostly good reviews from critics. Two sequels, The Bad News Bears in Breaking Training and The Bad News Bears Go to Japan, a 1979–80 CBS series, and a 2005 remake followed.
Morris Buttermaker, an alcoholic pool cleaner, and a former minor-league pitcher is hired to coach “the Bears,” a youth baseball league expansion club of misfit athletes in Southern California. Shunned by more competitive teams (and parents and coaches), the Bears are the league’s least gifted. Buttermaker forfeits its first game after allowing 26 runs with no outs.
With the team wanting to quit after their first loss, Buttermaker recruits two unlikely prospects: sharp-tongued Amanda Wurlitzer, a skilled pitcher (trained by Buttermaker when she was younger), and cigarette-smoking, loan-sharking, Harley-Davidson-riding troublemaker Kelly Leak, the best athlete in the area, but have been excluded from playing. With Amanda and Kelly, the Bears gain confidence and start winning. Buttermaker and Amanda’s bond strains as the team progresses.
Eventually, the Bears reach the championship game against the Yankees, led by Roy Turner. As the game goes on, tensions escalate between the teams and coaches as Buttermaker and Turner engage in merciless actions to win the game. When Turner hits his kid, the pitcher, for disregarding instructions and pitching at another child’s head (which is against the rules, frowned upon, and exceedingly hazardous), Buttermaker realizes he has placed too much importance on winning and puts in his benchwarmers to enable everyone to play. Despite Buttermaker, the Bears almost win. Buttermaker provides the squad beer, which they spray as a victory celebration.