Jump to content
Awoo.

Search the Community

Showing results for tags 'baseball'.

  • Search By Tags

    Type tags separated by commas.
  • Search By Author

Content Type


Calendars

  • Official Release Dates
  • On This Day
  • Community Calendar
  • In-Game Events
  • Streaming Schedule
  • SSMB Community Game Night!'s Events

Categories

  • Sonic
    • Games
    • Comics
    • Media
    • Merch
    • Fandom
  • SEGA
  • Features
    • Reviews
    • Previews
    • Interviews
    • Opinion
  • Videos
    • Livestreams
    • Shows
  • Sonic Stadium
  • Sonic Deals

Categories

  • Games
    • Mainline Sonic Games
    • Sonic Spin-offs
    • Compilations & Minor Releases
    • Mobile Games
    • Amusement Machines
    • Cameos & Collaborations
    • Sonic Team Games
    • Prototypes and Betas
    • Bootleg Games
  • Game Universe
    • Game Characters
    • Game Bosses
    • Game Items & Objects
    • Game Locations
  • Comics
    • IDW Publishing Universe
    • Archie Comics Universe
    • Sonic the Comic Universe
  • Media
    • AoStH Universe
    • SatAM Universe
    • Sonic Underground Universe
    • Sonic X Universe
    • Sonic Boom Universe
    • Sonic Movie Universe
    • Sonic Prime Universe
  • Merchandise
    • Books
    • Music
    • Toys & Figures
    • Fashion
    • Food & Drink
    • Beauty Products
    • High Art & Prints
    • Experiences
  • Community
    • Sonic Stadium
    • Influential People
    • Websites
    • Fan Events
    • Fan Media
  • People
    • Companies
    • Performers
    • Game Industry
    • Comic Industry
    • TV / Film Industry
  • Site Help
    • Achievements

Categories

  • Games
    • Mainline Games
    • Sonic Spin-offs
    • Compilations & Spinoffs
    • Mobile Games
    • Sonic Team Games
  • Movies
    • Sonic the Hedgehog (Movie)
    • Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (Movie)
    • Sonic the Hedgehog 3 (Movie)
  • Comics
    • Archie Comics
    • Sonic the Comic
    • IDW Comics
  • Animation
    • Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog
    • Sonic the Hedgehog (SatAM)
    • Sonic Underground
    • Sonic X
    • Sonic Boom (TV Series)
    • Official Web Series
    • Sonic Prime
  • General Official Sonic Artwork
    • Character Artwork
    • Sonic Channel Artwork

Forums

  • Sonic Discussion
    • Sonic News
    • Sonic Chat
  • Non-Sonic Discussion
    • Video Games
    • General Discussion
  • Community Central
    • Site Updates & Announcements
    • Community Chat & Feedback
    • Fan Showcase
  • Merch Hunters Anonymous's Topics
  • Raisin' Chao's Topics
  • SSMB Community Game Night!'s Topics
  • Skylanders: Dimensions [Roleplay]'s Thieves' Den (Fan Gallery)
  • Skylanders: Dimensions [Roleplay]'s Club Penguin (Main Roleplay Forum)
  • Skylanders: Dimensions [Roleplay]'s Database (Supplemental Material)
  • Skylanders: Dimensions [Roleplay]'s Command Room (General Discussion)
  • Skylanders: Dimensions [Roleplay]'s Dojo (RP Mechanics and Guidelines)
  • Skylanders: Dimensions [Roleplay]'s The Spell Punk Library (Main Story/Episode Archive)
  • Dragon Ball Z: Dokkan Battle's Topics
  • Shadow the Hedgehog fans's Topics
  • The Eggman Empire's Topics
  • Sonic Racing Squad's Topics
  • The Sonic Animation Association's Topics
  • The Jackal Squad's Topics
  • Sonic Superstars: Battle Mode Lobby Invites's Superstars Battle Mode Lobby
  • Jacks pacific collectors club's Your jakks collection
  • Final Fantasy Fan Club's Topics

Blogs

  • Fan Reviews
  • Stadium Staff Blog
  • Sonic Soapbox
  • Jake's Blog O' Thoughts
  • Sonic's Beginning
  • Reviewing Everything Sonic the Hedgehog!
  • Fan Creations
  • NiGHTS and NiGHTS accessories
  • Maria's Blog of Thoughts
  • Dreadknux's Gaming Shack
  • Ryan's 52 Game Challenge - Expanded Thoughts on Everything I Play!
  • Don't Get Me Started: A Pokemon/Fandom Blog
  • Failin's Post Game: Reviews On My Games For The 52 Game Challenge... AFTER the 52 Game Challenge!
  • Road To 4: A Skylanders Dimensions Retrospective
  • Favorite Sonic Games
  • Azula's Wonder Blog
  • Unbe-MapleLeaf-able Scoops
  • Project Phoenix Productions
  • KingSonicFan134's Game Design and Writing Blog
  • Test's Blog
  • Sonic: Circuit Intensity's Dev Log

Find results in...

Find results that contain...


Date Created

  • Start

    End


Last Updated

  • Start

    End


Filter by number of...

Found 4 results

  1. I'm not sure how many of these we're getting
  2. SPOILER WARNING: THIS ARTICLE CONTAINS PLOT DETAILS AND SCREENSHOTS FROM THE END OF SONIC 2 When I went into the first Sonic movie more than two years ago, I wasn’t expecting much. I was incredibly cynical about the whole affair, in fact. “Sure,” I thought, “they made the design better. But plenty of terrible movies can still look nice.” Then, the Paramount and SEGA logos rolled, and the movie spent the next 13 minutes winning me over, before one moment finally sealed it. It demonstrated this movie was going to be more than pop culture references and Jim Carrey being Jim Carrey. This was a movie about a lonely kid that, shockingly, had a heart. Here, SEGA’s cool blue mascot was in a bad place, and desperately needed to find a way to move forward. By the end of it he did - and it all started at a baseball field. After giving the audience a tour of his adopted home, Green Hills, Sonic goes to a baseball game. A team wins, and they celebrate together, something Sonic is clearly envious of. Later, after nightfall, Sonic takes to the field and uses his speed to pretend to be an entire team. As a scene, there is a lot to like here: it features a creative use of Sonic’s speed, it shows what he’s capable of, and it also gives more screen time to establishing his character. The personalities Sonic gives his “teammates” are cute, and Ben Schwartz does a superb job bringing the whole thing to life. But then Sonic hits the ball, fails to catch it, “wins” the game by a hair, readies himself for the same sort of adulation he saw earlier only to experience…nothing. Because he’s alone. For a moment, his cheerful façade cracks, and Sonic does something he never does in the games: he loses his cool. Overwhelmed by his loneliness, he unleashes all his pent-up frustrations by running laps around the field. This leads to a power outage across the entire Pacific Northwest, which naturally gets the attention of the US government and leads to Sonic getting discovered. More importantly, it also starts Sonic on a two-movie-long journey to finally experience what he saw on that field. Two years later, Sonic was playing baseball again, but this time he wasn’t alone. He had an entire family to play with, celebrate with, and go off for ice cream with. As a scene, it acts as a very effective bookend to Sonic’s journey to end his loneliness and find his place in the world. Years after losing one family, he’s found another. The through line these scenes book end ultimately make up the emotional core of these otherwise fairly trivial popcorn flicks, which makes them probably the most important ones of the entire film series so far. As cool as any of the action sequences are, and as effective as the characterization is for Sonic, Knuckles, and Tails, it would all mean next-to-nothing without that emotional core. Enjoyable movies aren’t built on action, pop culture jokes, weird Jim Carrey antics and Olive Garden gift cards. They are built on character, more specifically making audiences care about those characters. Caring about Sonic and wanting to see him find that family he so desperately needs gives those action scenes weight. They make the bad jokes and Jim Carrey antics bearable. They make Sonic feel like a character and not a walking collection of dated references, and they give him a means to connect to characters like Tom, Tails, and Knuckles, creating the most effective and impactful scenes across both movies. Of course, plenty of movies do the “found family” thing better, with Pixar’s Luca and Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy executing it more effectively. The concept is also nothing new for Sonic as a franchise. Tails is Sonic’s little brother in the games, and the Freedom Fighters are basically Sonic’s surrogate family in both SatAM and Archie. Regardless, if someone had told me a few years ago that I’d get a little emotional at a scene in a Sonic movie where Sonic called a human “dad,” I’d call you a damn liar. These movies had everything going against them from the beginning. From out of touch executives, to the terrible track record of video game adaptations, to how regularly terrible movies with cartoon animal sidekicks usually are! And yet, somehow, Sonic was able to find box office, audience, and (modest) critical success. Twice. Some will put the credit on the redesign and “listening to fans,” but the actual reason is much more fundamental: the movie’s writers were smart enough to give the characters heart, rooted in a game of baseball, that sprang forth into the most successful video game film franchise of all time. As we move forward into a wider cinematic universe, I can only hope the Sonic Movie Universe’s creatives don’t lose sight of this. That heart is something that must be built upon and expanded, in order to keep audiences invested in these characters and their adventures.
  3. Californian baseball fans were given a super Sonic treat over the weekend, as the regional team Oakand Athletics paid a tribute to SEGA's mascot while celebrating their players on the Jumbotron during a recent game. 2023-baseball-sonic-game.mp4 The video above, shared on social media by 'Dizzydennis', features a number of present and past A's players as they raced around a Green Hill Zone style level collecting baseballs and knocking out evil robot villains. At the very end, former player Eric Chavez appears to 'win' the game, while the team's elephant mascot dances in victory. It's a really cool thing for sports fans to see, and just goes to show how mainstream Sonic the Hedgehog still is across all forms of media. Let us know what you think of this tribute in the comments below.
  4. SPOILER WARNING: THIS ARTICLE CONTAINS PLOT DETAILS AND SCREENSHOTS FROM THE END OF SONIC 2 When I went into the first Sonic movie more than two years ago, I wasn’t expecting much. I was incredibly cynical about the whole affair, in fact. “Sure,” I thought, “they made the design better. But plenty of terrible movies can still look nice.” Then, the Paramount and SEGA logos rolled, and the movie spent the next 13 minutes winning me over, before one moment finally sealed it. It demonstrated this movie was going to be more than pop culture references and Jim Carrey being Jim Carrey. This was a movie about a lonely kid that, shockingly, had a heart. Here, SEGA’s cool blue mascot was in a bad place, and desperately needed to find a way to move forward. By the end of it he did - and it all started at a baseball field. After giving the audience a tour of his adopted home, Green Hills, Sonic goes to a baseball game. A team wins, and they celebrate together, something Sonic is clearly envious of. Later, after nightfall, Sonic takes to the field and uses his speed to pretend to be an entire team. As a scene, there is a lot to like here: it features a creative use of Sonic’s speed, it shows what he’s capable of, and it also gives more screen time to establishing his character. The personalities Sonic gives his “teammates” are cute, and Ben Schwartz does a superb job bringing the whole thing to life. But then Sonic hits the ball, fails to catch it, “wins” the game by a hair, readies himself for the same sort of adulation he saw earlier only to experience…nothing. Because he’s alone. For a moment, his cheerful façade cracks, and Sonic does something he never does in the games: he loses his cool. Overwhelmed by his loneliness, he unleashes all his pent-up frustrations by running laps around the field. This leads to a power outage across the entire Pacific Northwest, which naturally gets the attention of the US government and leads to Sonic getting discovered. More importantly, it also starts Sonic on a two-movie-long journey to finally experience what he saw on that field. Two years later, Sonic was playing baseball again, but this time he wasn’t alone. He had an entire family to play with, celebrate with, and go off for ice cream with. As a scene, it acts as a very effective bookend to Sonic’s journey to end his loneliness and find his place in the world. Years after losing one family, he’s found another. The through line these scenes book end ultimately make up the emotional core of these otherwise fairly trivial popcorn flicks, which makes them probably the most important ones of the entire film series so far. As cool as any of the action sequences are, and as effective as the characterization is for Sonic, Knuckles, and Tails, it would all mean next-to-nothing without that emotional core. Enjoyable movies aren’t built on action, pop culture jokes, weird Jim Carrey antics and Olive Garden gift cards. They are built on character, more specifically making audiences care about those characters. Caring about Sonic and wanting to see him find that family he so desperately needs gives those action scenes weight. They make the bad jokes and Jim Carrey antics bearable. They make Sonic feel like a character and not a walking collection of dated references, and they give him a means to connect to characters like Tom, Tails, and Knuckles, creating the most effective and impactful scenes across both movies. Of course, plenty of movies do the “found family” thing better, with Pixar’s Luca and Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy executing it more effectively. The concept is also nothing new for Sonic as a franchise. Tails is Sonic’s little brother in the games, and the Freedom Fighters are basically Sonic’s surrogate family in both SatAM and Archie. Regardless, if someone had told me a few years ago that I’d get a little emotional at a scene in a Sonic movie where Sonic called a human “dad,” I’d call you a damn liar. These movies had everything going against them from the beginning. From out of touch executives, to the terrible track record of video game adaptations, to how regularly terrible movies with cartoon animal sidekicks usually are! And yet, somehow, Sonic was able to find box office, audience, and (modest) critical success. Twice. Some will put the credit on the redesign and “listening to fans,” but the actual reason is much more fundamental: the movie’s writers were smart enough to give the characters heart, rooted in a game of baseball, that sprang forth into the most successful video game film franchise of all time. As we move forward into a wider cinematic universe, I can only hope the Sonic Movie Universe’s creatives don’t lose sight of this. That heart is something that must be built upon and expanded, in order to keep audiences invested in these characters and their adventures. View full story
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

You must read and accept our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy to continue using this website. We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.