Mystery, Alaska
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

''Mystery, Alaska'' is a 1999 American
sports Sport is a physical activity or game, often competitive and organized, that maintains or improves physical ability and skills. Sport may provide enjoyment to participants and entertainment to spectators. The number of participants in ...
comedy-drama film, directed by Jay Roach, about an amateur
ice hockey Ice hockey (or simply hockey in North America) is a team sport played on ice skates, usually on an Ice rink, ice skating rink with Ice hockey rink, lines and markings specific to the sport. It belongs to a family of sports called hockey. Tw ...
team from the fictional small town of Mystery that plays an exhibition game against the National Hockey League (NHL)'s New York Rangers. It stars Russell Crowe, Hank Azaria and Burt Reynolds, with Mary McCormack, Lolita Davidovich, Ron Eldard, Colm Meaney, Maury Chaykin, Scott Grimes and Kevin Durand in supporting roles. It was shot in Canmore,
Alberta Alberta is a Provinces and territories of Canada, province in Canada. It is a part of Western Canada and is one of the three Canadian Prairies, prairie provinces. Alberta is bordered by British Columbia to its west, Saskatchewan to its east, t ...
, mostly in what is today known as Quarry Lake Park.


Plot

In Mystery, Alaska, "the Saturday Game", a weekly hockey game, is played on an open pond. The entire town turns out every week to watch. The latest edition of ''Sports Illustrated'' features an article which says that in the ability to skate, the Mystery team rivals any team in the National Hockey League (NHL). The mayor tells one of the players, Sheriff John Biebe, that he is being dropped from the Game, in favor of teenager Stevie Weeks. Meanwhile, Connor Banks, the team's best player, gets into an argument with a representative checking out the town for Price World (a business chain embodying a threat to local business). Connor fires a shot to frighten him, but the bullet ricochets and hits the rep in the foot. Because of the article, the NHL suggested that the New York Rangers be brought up to Mystery to play the town's team in a televised exhibition game. The mayor wants John to coach: Judge Burns, Birdie's father, has refused to do so. John says that he does not know how to coach. Connor Banks' arraignment is brought before Burns, and his attorney Bailey Pruit accepts a trial date for the following week. Connor does not want a trial so soon because, if he loses, he will miss the upcoming game. Bailey tells him not to worry, because no jury will lock up the town's star player. At Connor's trial, Bailey asks the victim, Mr. Walsh, what he thinks of Mystery and asks him to confirm verbatim transcripts of his disparaging the town. The jury delivers a "not guilty" verdict. Amid much jubilation, Burns angrily addresses those assembled, saying that they have exalted the hockey game above what is right, disgracing themselves and his courtroom. Birdie confronts him in his chambers, feeling that Burns has always been ashamed of him for staying in town to play hockey, instead of going to college. It emerges that the Rangers players are not keen to play the match, which they disparage as a joke. Crew from the TV network want to call the team the Mystery Eskimos, to which John and the mayor take offense. John asks Burns to coach, to no avail. The Rangers players file a grievance with their players' union, so they are no longer coming. Burns tells Bailey that there is a hearing in New York over the legal dispute. He says that it might be useful for Mystery to have a presence, and suggests legal arguments Bailey could use. At the hearing, Bailey makes an impassioned plea for the game to continue. However, he suffers a fatal heart attack while arguing the case. Before dying, he wins the case, and the game is back on. John confronts Burns, saying that since he sent Bailey to New York, he now has to take over coaching. Burns agrees only if John comes back on the team as captain. The Rangers players arrive and are greeted by the mayor and townsfolk. John must deal with Charles "Charlie" Danner, the article's author and a native of Mystery, driving drunkenly on a Zamboni. They talk, and Charlie reveals his bitterness towards Mystery, which he believes has rejected him. During the match, the Mystery team take time to settle, but eventually go ahead two goals to nothing in the first period. One of the goals is scored by Stevie. In the second period, the Rangers score five unanswered goals. Birdie costs the team a goal through his desire to "go it alone" when he should have passed. Unwilling to accept defeat, Mystery scores two goals in the third period, including one from a pass that Birdie makes instead of shooting for goal himself. As the clock ticks down, Connor has a chance to level the scores, but his shot hits the crossbar. The game is over, with the score 5 – 4 for the Rangers. Both the Mystery team and spectators appear deflated until Burns claps, after which even the Rangers players applaud them. The following day the Rangers leave. Stevie Weeks and Connor Banks fly out with them, having been given minor league contracts. Afterwards, John places the game puck on Bailey's grave.


Cast


Production

In May 1997, it was reported Walt Disney Pictures had acquired David E. Kelley penned spec script ''The Game'' about a small Alaskan town whose ice hockey team that comes to unexpected attention when they suddenly find themselves playing a match against the New York Rangers and described as a mixture of '' Picket Fences'' and '' The Mighty Ducks''. In August of that year, Jay Roach was announced as director for the film which was in the process of undergoing a name change to avoid confusion with '' The Game'' at PolyGram Films. In October, it was announced Russell Crowe was in talks to star in the film.


Reception

''Mystery, Alaska'' received mixed reviews. It had very poor take-ins as well, grossing only $8,891,623, against an estimated budget of $28 million.


See also

* List of films about ice hockey


References


External links

* * * {{New York Rangers 1999 films 1999 comedy-drama films 1990s American films 1990s English-language films 1990s sports comedy-drama films American ice hockey films American sports comedy-drama films English-language sports comedy-drama films Films directed by Jay Roach Films scored by Carter Burwell Films set in Alaska Films shot in Alberta Films with screenplays by David E. Kelley Hollywood Pictures films New York Rangers Northern (genre) films