The Best of Times

    The Best of Times
    1986

    Synopsis

    A small-town loser determines to have one more shot at the big time by winning a football game.

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    Cast

    • Robin WilliamsJack Dundee
    • Kurt RussellReno Hightower
    • Pamela ReedGigi Hightower
    • Holly PalanceElly Dundee
    • Donald MoffatHerbert ("The Colonel")
    • Margaret WhittonDarla Robinson
    • M. Emmet WalshCharlie
    • Donovan ScottEddie
    • R. G. ArmstrongSchutte
    • Dub TaylorMac

    Recommendations

    • 90

      Los Angeles Times

      It’s a story idea that seems dubious at first, but manages to flesh out wondrously--mostly because scenarist Ron Shelton has such a wickedly tight grip on the absurdities and dynamics of small American cities.
    • 80

      Washington Post

      It's not always on target, but there's a spontaneity to the direction of Roger Spottiswoode of "Underfire," a loose, imaginative and screwy style. What holds it all together is the fine friendship between the two teammates, forged in the games men play, sapped by time, then rejuvenated in sweat and sport. [31 Jan 1986, p.23]
    • 75

      Entertainment Weekly

      It’s hardly a great Williams performance, nor would it make the short list of really good football movies, but there’s something very sweet and innocent about it—especially Williams’ hopeless dreamer.
    • 60

      Washington Post

      The two teams, older and mostly fatter, train and play, and I trust I won't be ruining anything for you if I say there are no surprises. Screenwriter Ron Shelton has constructed a stand-up-and-cheer machine, and while the machine works, it doesn't make you feel any better about being run through it.
    • 60

      Time Out

      Though it does have its moments, the result is never as funny as it should be. Williams and Russell, although fine individually, don't spark off each other as a comic duo should, and the ending is so predictable it's almost unexpected.
    • 58

      Christian Science Monitor

      Robin Williams plays the main character with his usual air of repressed hysteria, and Kurt Russell is a good foil for him. But between the very funny beginning and the good-hearted finale, the story grows scattered and the tone is often ragged. [31 Jan 1986, p.23]
    • 50

      The New York Times

      THE muddy football game that concludes The Best of Times is such a rouser that it almost makes up for the incomplete passes and stopped runs that precede it.
    • 50

      Miami Herald

      The Best of Times will make points with football fans, and it might even score with believers in the human comedy. But, oh, what a disappointing first half. [1 Feb 1986, p.C4]