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KNUCKLEBALL – Short Film Review – We Are Movie Geeks

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KNUCKLEBALL – Short Film Review

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The knuckleball is a rare and complicated skill in baseball. Often associated with being the specialty pitch mastered by those determined pitchers without the gift of “heat,” the knuckleball is a tricky beast, but when a pitcher takes control of its reigns, he can be nearly unstoppable. Phil “Knucksie” Niekro proved that by earning himself a place in Cooperstown, the National Baseball Hall of Fame, almost entirely for his unmistakable oneness with the knuckleball.

KUCKLEBALL is a short film that captures the essence of the rare and awkwardly effective pitch as a metaphor, telling a story of a boy and his disjointed relationship with his father. Milo (Alexander Wruck) is a boy about the age of ten. His father (Timothy McKinney), emotionally distant as a result of his wife having recently walked out, is focused on moving what’s left of his family to a new home. Milo’s youthful sights are set upon playing baseball, perhaps in part as a distraction from the pain of his mother leaving, but he fails to receive the support he longs for from his father.

Written and directed by Jordan Kerfeld, KNUCKLEBALL was shot on Super 16 film in Austin, Texas. The result is a richly warm and homey feel, like watching a nostalgic home video that was shot by a professional cameraman. Kerfeld’s eye for descriptive and interesting composition matches his ability to convey his vision within the frame without bluntly beating his audience with excess style. The most consciously visible shot in the film is the final one, which serves as a powerfully visual closing that needs no dialogue.

KNUCKLEBALL gave me the same pleasant feeling I often associate with having religiously watched every episode of Wonder Years as a child Milo’s age. I was able to connect, not just because of my own love of baseball, but because this is a film about a boy with an undying dream and his father who discovers new hope through his son’s unshakeable resilience.

The strongest element of KUCKLEBALL is Milo’s ingenuity and determination. Milo sneaks off with his father’s camcorder after failing to garner his attention, constructing his own tryout video to play in the Major Leagues. For Milo, the problem of his age never crosses his mind as an obstacle, only that he believes he has talent and that playing in the “big show” would produce the money he and his father now need as they enter into a difficult new chapter of life. What Milo’s father does when he discovers the tape is a wonderful moment, having the greatest influence on KNUCKLEBALL being an accomplished and respectable family drama.

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Hopeless film enthusiast; reborn comic book geek; artist; collector; cookie connoisseur; curious to no end