“The story has been done and done, and even half-way well-done, it never fails, but this time it has been so well done that it starts life all over again, as something new, vigorous and real.” New York Times, May 1919
Baseball, as obscurely-fascinating as cricket: thousands of people in a frenzy of support whilst arcane running, hitting and catching takes place on the grass. Films about sport; close-ups and game-changing moments… cricket’s a slow-burn and not very cinematic but baseball… a home run can change everything: a flash of the bat, the ball in the sky and the hero running safely home as his opponents throw wildly to base.
OK, no spoilers… but this is a film about a baseball. It features
impossibly-young people who resemble Colleen Moore and Johnny-Jack Gilbert but its
star is Charles Ray a boyish 27-year old who, since his debut in 1913, had
often played country boys made good…
And, lo, it did come to pass that here he plays a fresh-faced
young man who can swing and throw like no other in the little town of Brownsville...
Charles Ray |
As The Times went on: “Seldom, if ever, has Ray had a part more suited to him. Ben Harding,
hired-man, pitcher, lovable and laughable human being, lives on the screen in
him.”
A "Busher" is someone from the minor baseball “Bush Leagues” someone
who may have the potential to make the majors but not necessarily the character…
it’s one thing to have the skill, Raheem Sterling (insert other disappointment
here…), but another to deliver when
it matters… The Busher may or may not
have provided emphatic new momentum to this tale but it’s hard to tell given
the odd jump and skip suggestive of missing frames if not reels.
That said, we can fill in those gaps and the narrative arc holds in
place for a story of rise and fall and the girl won then lost then…
Whether deliberately of through force of vanishing celluloid,
there are moments that are underplayed… and that means that the film now
presents as “subtle” and strangely “modern” in not ramming its key moments
home.
Jim tries to impress Mazie with his car and all... |
Ray himself is a decent performer – anyone who has seen The Coward (1915) will know how well he
can act – and here he is as convincing as the contemporary press describes: his Ben Harding a
mix of insecurity and sporting brilliance that needs to find a balance. In love
with local girl Mazie (Colleen) but out-gunned by the confidence and wealth of
her other suitor Jim Blair (Jack – later John – Gilbert).
Ray just falls back in jealous resignation whenever he sees them
and even when he gets a chance to bid on a date with Mazie at a bizarre ritual
at the local theatre in which men get to bid on the silhouette of their favourite
girl… he guesses wrong and ends up out of pocket and out of luck.
But things are about to change… Earlier that day the players and
coaching staff of the major league Pink Sox (no relation to the team that plays
at Fenway Park…) – are marooned in Brownsville and decide on a knock-up to pass
the time. Ray gets involved and they can’t fail to be impressed as he throws
un-playable curveballs past what he thinks are just amateur players. The guys
look around with eyebrows raised but they ain’t telling, at least not yet.
Colleen |
Off to the big city, and his big opportunity… but surely it’s too
early? Yes, it is… Ray goes from that insecure ingénue to a cocky first-teamer who
all-too-quickly forgets the folks back home as the potential WAGS of the time
gather. By the time he returns home to show what his new team can do, he has
taken his eye off the ball and gets hooked after trying an illegal spit ball…
the equivalent of seam-tampering in cricket and the lowest of the low…
He is shamed and what’s more seems to have lost the trust of his
town and even loyal Maize… can there be any way back: will we see redemption?
Ben watches the ball... |
The Busher is a fun
film in spite of those missing pieces. Charles Ray gives a super performance of
realistic expression and is more than ably supported by those around him.
Colleen Moore radiates as usual, her style already in place at just 19 years
old whilst Gilbert, also 19, looks skinny and not yet the romantic superpower
he would become.
Jerome Storm directs with efficiency and the cinematography of Chester
A. Lyons capture the detailed and large-scale action equally well.
I watched the Grapevine version which is not great quality but
which retains some of the original title cards and some well-chosen stock
backing music. The film is also available on the Kino’s Reel Baseball DVD in much better
quality: if you need more silent baseball – that’s the one to go for!Your home media options |
This is a lovely still but it's Colleen and Ben Lyon in Painted People from 1924 |
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