Mr. Baseball is a 1992 American sports comedy film directed by Fred Schepisi, starring Tom Selleck, Ken Takakura, Dennis Haysbert, and Aya Takanashi. Selleck plays a veteran New York Yankees first baseman, Jack Elliot, who is traded to the Chunichi Dragons in Japan and must contend with cultural differences.

Although the film was a limited success, it remains accurate, as of the 2020s, in portraying the peculiarities of Japanese baseball. It is used as a training resource by foreign professional baseball players who join a Japanese team.

Plot

Jack Elliot is an aging American baseball player for the New York Yankees. During 1992 spring training, he is traded to the Nagoya Chunichi Dragons of Japan's Nippon Professional Baseball.

Jack clashes with Japanese culture and the team manager and alienates his new teammates. He believes the rules and management style of his new skipper, Uchiyama, are ludicrous, and continues to do things his way, which leads his already dwindling performance to suffer even more. His only ally is another American ballplayer, Max "the Hammer" Dubois, with whom he commiserates about his frustrations. However, Max is a team player on the Dragons, and warns Jack to be one too. Jack develops a relationship with Hiroko, who he discovers is Uchiyama's daughter.

After one too many outbursts, including knocking out his interpreter during a brawl, Jack is suspended from play. After meeting Hiroko's family, including Uchiyama, Uchiyama admits to Jack (in well spoken english) that he hired him over the objections of management and now his own career, not just Jack's, is in jeopardy. Dragons management wanted Pete Clifton from Boston, but Uchiyama picked Jack because he was the right choice to turn the team around. After hearing this, Jack swallows his pride and admits his deficiencies. Uchiyama becomes his mentor.

Jack apologizes to the team in Japanese. They rally around him and teaches him the value of sportsmanship and respect for hard work. Uchiyama lifts his suspension and begins to work with Jack on improving his play. Jack's enthusiasm inspires the mediocre Dragons to become contenders for the Central League pennant. Jack also uses a Japanese tradition of haranguing a superior while intoxicated to convince Uchiyama to encourage his players to be more aggressive and have fun.

Jack gets the opportunity to break Uchiyama's record of seven consecutive games with a home run, but his positive response to a call from his American agent complicates his relationship with Hiroko. His newfound respect for team play becomes apparent in a crucial game against the Yomiuri Giants. With the bases loaded, two outs and his team down 6–5, the team brass expects Uchiyama to signal for a bunt to try to tie the game, even though it would deny Jack the chance to break the home run record.

Jack goes to Uchiyama and asks if he read the sign correctly. Uchiyama nods and tells him to swing away, knowing that a home run would break his record. Jack takes a called strike one with a questionable call on the first pitch. Jack fouls the second pitch back. Faced with a no-ball, two-strike count, Jack sees the Giants' infield is playing deep and bunts. The Giants are caught off-guard and the bunt is successful in allowing the tying run to cross home plate. As the Giants struggle to field the ball, Jack, approaching first base, veers slightly inside the baseline and knocks over the Giants' pitcher covering first on the play, which allows the winning run to score from second base.

With the Dragons winning the pennant, Uchiyama can keep his job and Max ends his five-year career in NPB by signing with the Los Angeles Dodgers. Jack marries Hiroko and becomes a coach and mentor with the Detroit Tigers. One of the players calls him Chief, which he called Uchiyama in Japan.

Cast

  • Tom Selleck as Jack Elliot
  • Ken Takakura as Uchiyama
  • Aya Takanashi as Hiroko Uchiyama
  • Dennis Haysbert as Max "Hammer" Dubois
  • Toshi Shioya as Yoji Nishimura
  • Mak Takano as Shinji Igarashi
  • Nicholas Cascone as "Doc"
  • Kosuke Toyohara as Toshi Yamashita
  • Toshizo Fujiwara as Ryo Mukai
  • Charles Fick as Billy Stevens
  • Leon Lee as Lyle Massey
  • Bradley "Animal" Lesley as Alan Niven
  • Frank Thomas as Ricky Davis
  • Jun Hamamura as Hiroko's Grandfather
  • Sean McDonough as Sean McDonough
  • Larry Pennell as Howie Gold
  • Norihide Goto as Issei Itoi

Production

Screenplay

According to Schepisi, the premise for Mr. Baseball — a baseball comedy that explored cultural differences between Japan and the United States—was conceived after the commercial success of the 1989 film Major League. The first story treatment was drafted by Theo Pelletier, a writer with no previous film credits to his name, and developed into a screenplay by Monte Merrick and Gary Ross. When Schepisi came onto the project, Tom Selleck had already been cast as the lead, and because of an unusual clause in his contract, had final say over the approval of the script. This resulted in the involvement of another screenwriter, Kevin Wade.

Complicating matters was the takeover of Universal Studios by the Japanese conglomerate Matsushita. Universal was concerned about issues of cultural sensitivity in the depiction of Japanese characters, so they recruited John Junkerman, an experienced writer and director of films about Japan, to rework the story. Schepisi and a fourth screenwriter, Ed Solomon, traveled to Japan to do research.

After returning from Japan, Schepisi and Solomon rewrote the entire script, highlighting cultural clashes between the characters for comic effect, but this version in turn was rewritten by Kevin Wade to accommodate Tom Selleck. Since Wade's contract expired mid-way through production, however, he only worked on it for about three weeks, leaving many loose ends that eventually had to be sorted out by Schepisi. In the end, the participation of many people in the process resulted in a screenplay that was much more conventional than Schepisi originally intended.

In a later interview, he said he felt as though the film was not as good as it could have been: