SummaryGrown men's recreational baseball game stretches to extra innings on their beloved field's final day before demolition. Humor and nostalgia intertwine as daylight fades, signaling an era's end.
Directed By:Carson Lund
Written By:Michael Basta, Nate Fisher, Carson Lund
Eephus
Metascore
Universal Acclaim
84
User score
Generally Favorable
7.5
My Score
Drag or tap to give a rating
Hover and click to give a rating
Not available in your country?
ExpressVPN
Get 3 Extra months free
$6.67/mth
Top Cast
Metascore
Universal Acclaim
100% Positive
22 Reviews
22 Reviews
0% Mixed
0 Reviews
0 Reviews
0% Negative
0 Reviews
0 Reviews
Mar 13, 2025
100
Eephus belongs with the great baseball movies not because of any major league ambitions but because it understands what the game has meant and still means in small towns, among average people and weekend players.
Mar 9, 2025
90
Slowly but surely, you settle into its gentle rhythms, and before you know it, it feels like an entire lifetime has passed by.
May 21, 2024
90
Its pearls of practical wisdom and jewels of melancholic wit make Eephus a gem, which is fitting, for a movie about a game played on a diamond.
Mar 7, 2025
80
It’s all so pleasantly familiar I might as well have been hanging out with these guys for years.
May 21, 2024
80
Baseball is just a game, but Lund recognises why some need it so badly. On the diamond, these ageing men feel young again – if only for a few hours.
Mar 6, 2025
75
To call this a field of dreams would be pushing it. But it’s a lovely way to pass some time.
Mar 7, 2025
63
The pacing works referentially to its namesake and real-time ambition, but the characters aren’t quite interesting or engaging enough to sustain attention for the whole runtime, and the film’s crawl eventually wears on weary knees.
User score
Generally Favorable
63% Positive
10 Ratings
10 Ratings
31% Mixed
5 Ratings
5 Ratings
6% Negative
1 Rating
1 Rating
May 27, 2025
2
This is bound to be an unpopular opinion, but, to me, fewer things in life are more boring than baseball – except perhaps for movies about baseball (with a few exceptions like “The Natural” (1984), “A League of Their Own” (1992) and “42” (2013)). And that foregoing assessment, in my view, is more than applicable to this positively dreadful debut feature from writer-director Carson Lund. This alleged comedy tells the story of two men’s recreational baseball teams in a small Massachusetts town who embark on playing the last-ever game to be held at a local ballpark that’s about to be torn down to make room for construction of a new school. The implausibly overlong matchup, brought about by a series of completely unfunny incidents that stretch out the length of the game, goes on from midday through the afternoon and into the crisp, chilly fall evening wherein the players try to continue competing in the dark (gee, now there’s a load of laughs for you). There are also numerous talky, uninteresting conversations among the players in the dugout, along with views from the sidelines, where a handful of passing spectators offer their observations about what’s transpiring on the field. These sequences do little to add to the film and serve only to pad an already-tedious narrative. The sad part in all this is that the premise truly had the potential to make for a fun and heartwarming picture. Unfortunately, though, the absolutely flat dialogue, lame plot elements and undercooked character development prevent that from materializing. While this offering admittedly features some impressive cinematography and a well-conceived production design, there’s not much else to commend here. That is, of course, unless one compliments the creators on their fitting choice of title for the film: An “eephus,” for those who aren’t aware of what it is, is the name for an obscure form of curveball, one that’s thrown deceptively slowly, almost to the point where it lulls the batter into a sense of mesmerized complacency, as if to put the hitter to sleep. And, on that score, the filmmaker has truly succeeded in crafting a picture that lives up to its namesake where audiences are concerned. All I can say is that I’m truly glad that I didn’t pay box office ticket prices to see this one.
Production Company:
- A Major Production
- ColdFeet Films
- Through the Lens Entertainment
- Nord-Ouest Films
- Omnes Films
Release Date:Mar 7, 2025
Duration:1 h 39 m
Website:
Awards
Silk Road International Film Festival China
• 1 Win & 2 Nominations
Cannes Film Festival
• 2 Nominations
Film Independent Spirit Awards
• 2 Nominations




























