Showing posts with label review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label review. Show all posts

Monday, March 22, 2010

2010 Topps Heritage review

2010 Topps Heritage Jhoulys Chacin #292

I've only really picked up four retail rack packs of Topps Heritage and this featured card, though looking through the cards I pulled - I'm ambivalent over this year's base cards. 

The images on the base cards seems washed out to the point of being ideal for a blue Sharpie autograph - but simply being too boring and gloomy [unlike 2009 Topps Heritage, where I thought the images were brighter and the card graphics popped out].

For some reason, I like the card backs featuring a greyback card stock with a dark two-tone green/black colors - it makes me wonder if this was how the original cards were, when they first came out of packs back in 1961.

Perhaps not, but there is still a novelty I associate with perusing the backs because there seems to be a lot of things to digest - the text / statistics are simply hard to read, but it fascinates me how Topps manages to lay out the back with so many different things including the card number, the player's name, team, position, bio, a blurb, stats and a cartoon as well.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Sugar - a baseball movie review

With Torii Hunter's comments igniting a firestorm with baseball fans, it maybe good timing to watch a baseball movie like Sugar - it sheds some insight to the systematic development of potential talent from the Dominican Republic and humanizes those brought over to play baseball professionally.

Miguel 'Sugar' Santos [played by Algenis Perez Soto] is a diamond in the rough, a talented baseball player who is cocky and has some rough edges to polish - as he plays in a baseball academy [ran by the fictional Kansas City Knights] in the Dominican Republic. 

Most importantly, Santos possesses an electric arm with promise to do some things as a pitcher - particularly after Santos learns to throw a 'spiked curve,' from an visiting official from the parent organization.

Santos is eventually shipped off to America with a fellow player and friend from the academy, takes part in spring training - Santos shows enough promise to skip rookie ball and is assigned to the Knights' Single-A minor league team in Iowa. 

However, Sugar treats professional baseball as the key to Santos' future success - but at the same time, as the Santos' minor league season wears on, the game begins to unravel for him when he gets hurt and struggles to come back. He then loses his two best friends on the team through a release and through a promotion. 

Sugar paints Santos as complicated, brooding, angry, disillusioned and desperate - the contrast between Santos' early promise and his frustrations seems a little unnerving for those expecting a straight shot to the top for Santos.

The movie lingers towards the alienation Santos feels - especially when things don't go his way, when he can't be part of the action and when he has to adjust to a different culture. Santos may is barely hanging on.

He isn't merely stereotypical of the jock, longing to play again however and aloof to those around he - at his host family's home, he helps fix a broken drawer and helps wash dishes.

Santos experiences success and failure as a baseball player, but there is realization as far as Santos goes, his time in the game is fleeting - he suddenly finds himself barely hanging on and maybe so are his aspirations.

Fed up, Santos takes a drastic step that seems entirely foreign to the popular baseball/sports movie - still anticipating something as dramatic as getting Santos back on the mound, a glimpse of Yankee Stadium is as close we get, as close as Santos gets.

Still, the audience comes away with the idea, Santos is a better man as he comes of age - he seems happier, he has adjusted, even though his promise as a professional baseball player is up in the air.

This one of those movies that maybe a one-shot deal, this isn't going to be a franchise, the actors may never appear in a mainstream film again - but Sugar is a baseball movie that becomes something else, maybe a coming of age movie serving notice for anyone aspiring to chase their American dream.

Monday, February 09, 2009

My take on 2009 Topps

I'm wasn't not going to buy any 2009 Topps or Upper Deck until the hype dies down - with many bloggers busting random packs left and right to give their take, I don't want to succumb to the 'peer pressure' until the excitement over new stuff dies down a little.

Despite finding nothing marked '2009' in two visits to Target - I was able go to a place where I sometimes get my cardboard fix from and cherry pick cards out of some commons bin to get my fill [instead of buying loose packs].

The prices ranged from 25 for $1, a quarter and a dime each - too bad,I was only able to find loose 2009 Topps cards and not Upper Deck.

I don't see how this year's Topps is different from past years - there is a certain feeling about base Topps cards that I'm indifferent to. Maybe it is the fact after a month, every retail outlet, hobby shop, Major League Baseball team store [ones they have inside a MLB stadium or one in an MLB city] and some card show booths will be carrying these cards. For collectors, I suppose having a look at base brand Topps each year is a rite of passage.

The silver on black 'name plates' makes players' names hard to read infront of the card - with 2008 Upper Deck, you can get away with it, because the full-bleed images were sharp enough to stand alone. With Topps, any little design flaw is exposed as an excuse [for me] not to pick up anymore cards.

However, there are some things I liked as I glanced at random cards - it seems there was a more conscious effort by Topps to include action shots [though getting some from 'different' angles like the Kevin Youkilis card is kind of distracting] as opposed to merely 'pitching, hitting and fielding' shots. There are guys making awesome catches in the outfield [Juan Pierre, Alex Rios, Brandon Moss], flying in the air [Youkilis, Jack Wilson], directing traffic [Jose Guillen], et al.

I saw the Turkey Red inserts and it mimicked the 2005/2006 Topps Turkey Red backs - as opposed to some kind of 'vanilla' Trading Card History insert style back. These cards will be a nice to find in random Topps packs.