The Movie Waffler Belfast Film Festival 2024 Review - EEPHUS | The Movie Waffler

Belfast Film Festival 2024 Review - EEPHUS

Eephus review
Two local baseball teams play one final game on a field set to be demolished.

Review by Eric Hillis

Directed by: Carson Lund

Starring: Keith William Richards, Cliff Blake, Ray Hryb, Bill "Spaceman" Lee, Stephen Radochia, David Pridemore, Keith Poulson

Eephus poster

No sport is better suited to film than baseball. Where other sports simply move in straight horizontal lines that can be covered with nothing more than a single pan, baseball requires multiple cameras to capture its action, to convey the nuances of the individual decisions of its players. The standoff between pitcher and batter gives a filmmaker the opportunity to do their best Sergio Leone imitation, the camera focussing on close-ups of both men's eyes as they suss out their opponent's intentions and hope their reactions don't fail them. It's fitting that when an Italian filmmaker decided to dabble in America's great movie genre, the western, he inadvertently channelled America's greatest past-time (the arrangement of the three protagonists in the Mexican standoff that climaxes The Good, the Bad and the Ugly looks for all the world like they're preparing to dash to the next plate).

Baseball also has much in common with America's great musical genre. Like jazz, it requires its players to improvise, and to be in tune with the improvisation of their teammates. It's easy to see why it's considered more American than other American sports. In baseball the otherwise largely mythical values of America continue to thrive. You can have a hundred flaws but one strength can earn you a place on the mound. Can't pitch? Maybe you can bat? Can't bat? Maybe you can run? Baseball will find a place for ya. A game lasts long enough that an early mistake can be forgotten by the ninth inning. America likes to think of itself as a place that allows for reinvention, and at third base you can find a second chance. Perhaps the most romantic aspect of baseball is how it lacks the Darwinian ruthlessness of other sports. You don't have to be in great shape to play baseball, which means it opens its arms to those usually excluded from field sports. In the world of sports, baseball is the great melting pot.

Eephus review

In Carson Lund's directorial debut Eephus, huddled masses converge on a New England baseball field for one final "beer league" game before the field is demolished to make way for a school. The teams - Adler's Paint and the Riverdogs - are clad in red and blue, but those colours don't signify any political rivalry, simply a sporting one. The players are a mix of the young and the aging, the fit and the wheezing. Some take it deadly seriously while others sip from cans of cheap beer. Small talk is made between teammates and rivals alike. Jokes are cracked in an attempt to disrupt opponents. An elderly man keeps track of the game's progress in a scorebook, one of many you suspect fill his home.


Like an Altman ensemble drama, the amount of characters on screen seems initially overwhelming but we gradually get to know enough about each of the men to tell them apart. We aren't made privy to anyone's backstory. We know nothing of their lives beyond this game, only what they bring to the mound, no more than any of their teammates or rivals. Unlike traditional sports movies, we're not motivated to root for either team. One team is no more likeable or unlikable than the other. They both consist of sound heads and jackasses. It's no surprise then when the game is tied and the men decide to keep playing, the film taking a turn towards absurdity as the light fades and the men keep competing despite being barely able to see their noses in front of their faces.

Eephus review

Tyler Taormina is one of Eephus's producers, and the film plays like a cousin of his great offbeat coming-of-age movie Ham on Rye. If that film was about the official end of childhood, Eephus is about its unofficial end, when you hear your mother's voice calling you in for your dinner and you realise you're 50 and you buried her a decade ago. These men spend their Saturdays playing the same game they did as kids, and with a lot of the same players. They don't want it to end. Using their car headlights to illuminate the field when darkness fully descends, they literally rage against the dying of the light. When someone dares to ask why it's so important to finish the game, the reply is "so we can say we did," but we sense some of the men are hoping they can stretch the game out indefinitely.


While we're caught up in the romanticism of this last bout, we can't help but wonder if maybe baseball has proven a distraction for some of these men who may now benefit from focussing on the adulthood they've avoided. It's telling that the field is being dismantled not to make way for some villainous capitalist venture, but for a school. The game is played in late October, the last time of the year when there's enough light to allow you to fool yourself into thinking it's still summer, but when the sun goes down and the autumnal chill descends, you know it's time to pack away the barbecue.

Eephus review

Eephus takes its title from a particular curveball pitch that moves so slowly it unsettles the batter, who watches it glide through the air for so long that he's surprised when it whizzes past his ear. It's the perfect metaphor for Eephus, a film whose laidback rhythm means its ostensibly low key drama hangs in the air for so long that you're taken aback when it eventually hits you in the gut. You don't have to understand or even like baseball to relate to these men shuffling around the mound one last time. We all have something in our lives that we fear may disappear some day, but maybe we'll grow up when it does.

Eephus plays at the 2024 Belfast Film Festival on November 3rd.



2024 movie reviews