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Tin Cup
Roy McAvoy (Kevin Costner) was a golf pro with a bright future, but his rebellious nature and bad attitude cost him everything. He then tries to qualify for the US Open in order to win the heart of his succesful rival's girlfriend.
17 October 1958, Fort Stockton, Texas, USA
16 November 1959, Oxnard, California, USA
19 December 1957, Saint Petersburg, Florida, USA
8 October 1959, Denver, Colorado, USA
2 October 1957, Toledo, Ohio, USA
25 May 1953, Quincy, Illinois, USA
10 September 1945, Van Nuys, Los Angeles, California, USA
18 July 1951, Kansas City, Missouri, USA
20 February 1964, Columbia, Missouri, USA
December 10, 2004
All the golf action and happy "feel-good" emotions that audiences expect (and want) but... without following the traditional sports movie conventions.June 18, 2002
Tin Cup, starring Kevin Costner as a likable loser, accomplishes the impossible, maybe the unimaginable -- it makes golf entertaining.August 05, 2008
Amiable and constantly amusing rather than uproarious, this mangy tale of a ne'er-do-well's fitful assault on personal and professional respectability benefits greatly from Kevin Costner's ingratiatingly comic star turn.April 09, 2005
Lose about 30 minutes and there may be a stronger film in there.October 08, 2005
What makes Tin Cup such an unabashed pleasure is Shelton's care in writing and developing interesting characters.August 05, 2008
You can almost feel writer-director Ron Shelton praying for lightning to strike twice, but to no avail.August 05, 2008
Tin Cup works for viewers of any handicap.September 29, 2005
Shelton resurrects the likable Costner of "Bull Durham" in this genial golf comedy.August 05, 2008
The climactic game, in which Roy, in a way that defies prediction, attempts to sink the shot of his life, is the most rousing sequence of the year, a celebration of what it really means to win.June 24, 2006
Costner hasn't been this charming and spontaneous for years.August 05, 2008
As he always does in comedy, Costner grants an irresistible gleam of gallantry to male mulishness.August 05, 2008
The dialogue and characters are convincing and intelligently developed. Russo wears vulnerability and neediness like a second skin, while Costner plays the tragic hero with considerable charm.