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Una vez en la vida llega la oportunidad de hacer algo diferente.
En 1943, mientras los hombres estaban en la guerra, el béisbol estuvo a punto de desaparecer. Se formó entonces una liga femenina que intentaba captar la atención del público. Dottie y Mae formaban parte de uno de esos equipos femeninos que debían demostrar que eran capaces de competir y luchar como hombres. Lo peor era que tenían que soportar a Jimmy, un sarcástico y alcohólico entrenador.
Avis de la communauté (10)
This is _the_ best sports movie you will ever watch. Fantastic performance by everyone involved and the baseball scenes are thrilling even after the 5th time of watching the movie. Plus, it is a wonderful movie about women, friendship and sisterhood as well. And the soundtrack!
Are you crying? ARE YOU REALLY CRYING? THERE IS NO CRYING IN BASEBALL. Great movie.
Great seeing the original girls league members playing baseball as older women during the closing credits-- what must've been sixty-five year old women who were obviously still athletic! This movie was such a great homage to those players. Think I've seen this 15-to-20 times.
A League of their own is a great movie. It’s a heartwarming and fast paced sports movie. It has some good comedy and the games are pretty good. The plot is great it’s fast paced and when the movie starts it just keeps going my entertainment was never lost. The acting is good all the main girls have good performances and Tom Hanks gives a good supporting role. The cinematography is good and the score is very good. It’s became a somewhat classic and the story being told is good. Overall it’s a great sports movie with heart that’s a true 90s classic. (8 out of 10)
Geena Davis helms a plucky, extroverted squad of girls embroiled in the inaugural season of a ladies' baseball league. It's got heart and charm to spare, but often veers too close to super motivational, Lifetime Network feel-good material for my taste. The talent is there, with strong support from Tom Hanks, Jon Lovitz and Madonna, though their roles frequently edge near the cartoonish. Some are able to pull that off - Lovitz has been making bread with such exaggerated characters for years - but others, like Rosie O'Donnell's stereotypical feisty Jersey girl, aren't as adept. Puffy, padded, and egregiously predictable, its message about the irresistible force of gender equality in the midst of WWII is nice, but often feels secondary to the manufactured lite drama in the locker room.