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Cobb
Description
The movie follows sportswriter Al Stump when he is assigned to set Ty Cobb's story down. Stump must either candycoat his subject's life or present an accurate picture of a disgusting man who happened to become an American sports hero.
The movie follows sportswriter Al Stump when he is assigned to set Ty Cobb's story down. Stump must either candycoat his subject's life or present an accurate picture of a disgusting man who happened to become an American sports hero.
Actors:
Lawrence Crash Davis,
Don Hood,
Gary Morris,
Roger Clemens,
Harry Herthum,
Tony L. McCollum,
Gary D. Talbert

Lawrence Crash Davis
14 July 1919, Canon, Georgia, USA

Don Hood
25 November 1940, Marks, Mississippi, USA

Gary Morris

Roger Clemens
4 August 1962, Dayton, Ohio, USA

Harry Herthum

Tony L. McCollum

Gary D. Talbert
Country:
United States
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March 19, 2013
Cobb's accomplishments on the ball field would make for an absorbing documentary, but it's the passions and pitfalls of his private life that dominate Ron Shelton's melodramatic film.
May 06, 2014
To watch Tommy Lee Jones re-create the persona of the Hall of Famer in Cobb is to encounter the greatest SOB ever to come down the pike -- in or out of the domain of sports. The trek is hardly entertaining.
New Yorker
March 19, 2013
Cobb cuts right through the winner-take-all ethos of American athletics. It's a raw, inspired, audaciously funny, and unexpectedly moving collaboration between the writer-director Ron Shelton and Tommy Lee Jones.
March 19, 2013
Ty Cobb is such a towering figure in this motion picture that it's easy to overlook Al Stump -- and Robert Wuhl's feisty, witty performance in the thankless role.
People Magazine
May 06, 2014
A curiously gripping amalgam of Patton, Citizen Kane and Melvin and Howard.
May 06, 2014
Most biopics mistakenly try to take us from cradle to grave and end up skimming the surface. The wisdom of Cobb is that writer-director Ron Shelton knows that the close study of a single day can decode a human life.
May 06, 2014
While the story of Cobb himself is a worthy one (Shelton's treatment, believe it or not, even has its similarities to Orson Welles' Citizen Kane), Shelton shortchanges the very game that made the man famous.
March 19, 2013
[Jones] lets it all loose here. It's the performance of a lifetime: full of menace and venom, eloquence and fire, rot and pathos, crackling rawness and realism.
March 20, 2013
Stump is well-played by affable Robert Wuhl, who has the unenviable responsibility of representing the one sane man in Ty's crazy universe.
May 06, 2014
Unfortunately, the movie just makes Stump look like a self-important jerk, possibly a bigger jerk than Cobb, and Wuhl's affable, weightless performance doesn't help.
March 19, 2013
The result, whether Cobb is wailing about greatness or ruminating about the dark circumstances around his father's death, is a performance too operatic and out of control.