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Spaceman
The film follows baseball pitcher Bill Lee (Josh Duhamel) as he deals with his release from the Montreal Expos. Lee is a lefthanded pitcher for the Boston Red Sox and Montreal Expos during the 1970s and early '80s, known for his eccentric behavior both on and off the field.
















11 March 1965, Fort Worth, Texas, USA



24 December 1961, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA



9 July 1969, Fribourg, Switzerland

7 September 1963, Murray, Kentucky, USA


17 December 1945, Benton Harbor, Michigan, USA


14 November 1972, Minot, North Dakota, USA


August 18, 2016
Spaceman is a tonally confused, moderately entertaining glimpse into the life of one of baseball's most bizarre characters.
August 16, 2016
Whiffs on the sports, the action, the story, the dialogue, the acting, the cinematography, the production design, the costuming, the humor ... and somehow turns a potentially compelling character study into one big yawning seventh-inning stretch.
August 18, 2016
Spaceman never goes below the surface to who [Bill] Lee really is, despite copious interior monologues presumably taken from Lee's own book.
August 25, 2016
Unfortunately, Duhamel's bright performance ends up the highlight of the feature, which only provides a vague idea of Lee's life and love for belligerent behavior.
August 18, 2016
While a fictionalized account of Lee's career certainly held some sex, drugs & rock 'n' roll potential, the blandly pedestrian film "Spaceman" seldom delivers despite an engagingly game lead performance by Josh Duhamel.
August 18, 2016
Overall the results are amiable, if also slack and talky.
August 21, 2016
There seems like there could have been quite the stylish biopic in Rapkin's version of events, but the telling is underwhelming.
August 18, 2016
The effort is commendable, but the execution is rocky.