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FOR PARENTS
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Special Edition / Wide Screen / Keep Case | $11.69 |
Deleted scenes with introductions by Phil Alden Robinson; From Father to Son: Passing Along the Pastime; Roundtable with Kevin Costner, Bret Saberhagen, George Brett and Johnny Bench; The Diamond in the Husks; Galena, IL Pinch Hits for Chisholm, MN; Field of Dreams: A Scrapbook; Bravo Special: From Page to Screen; Feature commentary with director Phil Alden Robinson and director of photography John Lindley
Full Product Details"If you build it, he will come." That's the ethereal message that inspires Iowa farmer Ray Kinsella (Kevin Costner) to construct a baseball diamond in the middle of his cornfield. At first, "he" seems to be the ghost of disgraced ballplayer Shoeless Joe Jackson (Ray Liotta), who materializes on the ballfield and plays a few games with the awestruck Ray. But as the weeks go by, Ray receives several other messages from a disembodied voice, one of which is "Ease his pain." He realizes that his ballfield has been divinely ordained to give a second chance to people who have sacrificed certain valuable aspects of their lives. One of these folks is Salingeresque writer Terence Mann (James Earl Jones), whom Ray kidnaps and takes to a ball game and then to his farm. Another is Doc Graham (Burt Lancaster), a beloved general practitioner who gave up a burgeoning baseball career in favor of medicine. The final "second-chancer" turns out to be much closer to Ray. That "magical" field in Dyersville, Iowa still draws thousands of baseball-happy tourists each year. Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

References to drug use, including pot and LSD
Some epithets
None.
Costner threatens Jones to get him to go to the baseball game, but both know he does not really have a gun.
Not an issue.
About Field of Dreams
Parents need to know that this is a very family- and kid-friendly movie. There are a few swear words and references to drugs.
Families can talk about why Annie's brother Mark doesn't see the baseball players at first. Why is he able to see them later? What did Ray mean when he talked about how he needed to insult his father's hero when he was a teenager? How do you know when to follow a dream that seems crazy or foolish?