Here Come the Tigers
Catalog Number
30330
-
Primary Distributor (If not listed, select "OTHER")
Catalog Number
30330
Primary Distributor (If not listed, select "OTHER")
Release Year
Country
87 mins (NTSC)
N/A | N/A | N/A
N/A | N/A
Second Distributor
Third Distributor
Here Come the Tigers (1978)
Additional Information
Additional Information
It's a whole new ball game!
They're Down by 39 Runs in the Last Inning. But They've Not Yet Begun to Fight!
Get Ready for Major League Fun!
Here Come the Tigers is a 1978 American sports comedy film directed by Sean S. Cunningham. Cunningham said in Crystal Lake Memories: The Complete History of Friday the 13th (2005) he believed that the film cost $250,000 to make, "if that. It could be much lower. It was guerrilla filmmaking. It was all kids from the little leagues; it was like being on a three-week field trip with a bunch of sixth-graders. It was good and bad, frustrating and exciting. I loved it."[1]
Victor Miller, who wrote the film under the pseudonym Arch McCoy, said: "Those were the days when everybody said, 'What America needs is a good G-rated movie.' I guess Here Come the Tigers made its money back, but they lied about America wanting G-rated films
They're Down by 39 Runs in the Last Inning. But They've Not Yet Begun to Fight!
Get Ready for Major League Fun!
Here Come the Tigers is a 1978 American sports comedy film directed by Sean S. Cunningham. Cunningham said in Crystal Lake Memories: The Complete History of Friday the 13th (2005) he believed that the film cost $250,000 to make, "if that. It could be much lower. It was guerrilla filmmaking. It was all kids from the little leagues; it was like being on a three-week field trip with a bunch of sixth-graders. It was good and bad, frustrating and exciting. I loved it."[1]
Victor Miller, who wrote the film under the pseudonym Arch McCoy, said: "Those were the days when everybody said, 'What America needs is a good G-rated movie.' I guess Here Come the Tigers made its money back, but they lied about America wanting G-rated films
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