The 10 Best Movies To Watch if You Like The Natural, Ranked

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The Natural (1984), starring Robert Redford, is one of those iconic films you can't help but fall in love with, right?

10. For Love of the Game (1999)
There's a pitcher. Name's Billy Chapel. Played by Kevin Costner (I mean, who else?), and get this—he's on the brink of throwing a perfect game. But life, she's a curveball. As Billy stands on that mound, his entire life (and love) flashes before him.

All the while, each inning, each throw, every sweat drop becomes a countdown. Play ball or let love play you? That's the million-dollar question, folks.


9. Eight Men Out (1988)
Black Sox Scandal? Ring any bells? 1919's darkest moment in baseball gets the silver screen treatment. Players were bribed to lose, my friend, and oh, did it leave a stain on the game. John Cusack plays Buck Weaver, who gets caught in the mire.

Will they play to win or sell their souls for a few green notes? The drama's off the charts in this one.


8. A League of Their Own (1992)
War's roaring, men are off fighting, and guess who's up to bat? Ladies! A whole league of them, managed by... wait for it... Tom Hanks.

It's the story of two sisters who make it big but, as fate would have it, become rivals. Dottie and Kit, played by Geena Davis and Lori Petty, light up the screen. But remember: "There's no crying in baseball!"


7. The Rookie (2002)
Alright, grab a notepad. This one's for the dreamers. A high school baseball coach, Jim Morris (played by Dennis Quaid), once had dreams of the Major Leagues. But life's a pitcher with a mean fast ball. Injury sidelines him. Decades pass. But a promise to his team leads him to try out, one last time. Does he have what it takes?


6. Bull Durham (1988)
The Minor Leagues have never been this fun! We've got Kevin Costner again (man loves his baseball, doesn't he?), this time as "Crash" Davis. He's tasked with molding hot-shot pitcher Nuke LaLoosh. Think it's all about the game? Nah.

There's a love triangle brewing, with Susan Sarandon's Annie Savoy pitching some serious curves. Who will she choose? The rookie or the seasoned player? Bets are on!


5. Moneyball (2011)
Underdog alert! Enter Billy Beane, the Oakland A's general manager. They're cash-strapped, lost their star players, and things look grim. Played by the impeccable Brad Pitt, Beane stumbles upon Peter Brand (Jonah Hill), a Yale economics grad with zilch baseball experience but a treasure trove of statistics.

The idea? Using data analytics, they build a competitive team on a shoestring budget. It's David vs. Goliath as the A's, powered by sabermetrics, challenge the traditional baseball bigwigs.


4. 42 (2013)
The life and challenges of Jackie Robinson, Major League Baseball's first Black player, is no light tale. Signed by the Brooklyn Dodgers, Robinson, adorned with jersey number 42 and portrayed by the talented Chadwick Boseman, faces prejudice head-on.

With support from executive Branch Rickey (Harrison Ford), the duo seeks to shatter baseball's color barrier. It's more than balls and bats; it's about changing mindsets in a racially tense America.


3. Field of Dreams (1989)
Whispers amidst cornfields? Totally normal, right? Kevin Costner's back in the game, but this time as Ray Kinsella, an Iowa farmer. Hearing mysterious voices, he does the unthinkable—transforms a chunk of his cornfield into a baseball diamond. "If you build it, he will come."

It's not just about the ghostly apparitions of legendary players like Shoeless Joe Jackson; it's a journey into regrets, second chances, and reconciling with the past.


2. The Pride of the Yankees (1942)
It's black-and-white, but this classic brings color to the tale of Lou Gehrig, the famed Yankees first baseman. Gary Cooper steps into Gehrig's shoes, charting his rise from young hopeful to baseball superstar. But the plot throws a curve—Gehrig is diagnosed with a fatal neurodegenerative disease, later named after him.

From the iconic "Luckiest man on the face of the Earth" speech to his budding romance with Eleanor, it's a tearjerker, a biopic that transcends time.


1. Major League (1989)
Comedy meets sport in this film. The new owner of the Cleveland Indians wants the team to tank, ensuring she can move them to a warmer Miami. What's her strategy? Assemble the worst team imaginable, filled with has-beens and never-weres. Sounds like a disaster in the making, right?

But wait, there's a twist! This ragtag team, including renegades like Ricky "Wild Thing" Vaughn, starts winning. Against all odds, they might just foil their owner's dastardly plans.