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Screen Reader Users: To optimize your experience with your screen reading software, please use our Flixster.com website, which has the same tickets as our Fandango.com and MovieTickets.com websites. The biggest mistakes you never noticed in Mystery, Alaska (1999). Add more and vote on your favourites!
Plot – Mystery, a small town in Alaska with 633 inhabitants, ends up in the newspaper for the success of its hockey team. During a town meeting, a proposal is made to take advantage of the moment of fame and challenge the world famous New York Rangers. Some are against it, but in the end the desire to take a risk prevails and the challenge is made and accepted. The Mystery team is made up of, among others, Sheriff John Biebe, the grocer, a bellhop and a high school senior student. Amongst general enthusiasm, Judge Walter Burns, team coach, is the only one that tries to reflect on the consequences of a possible defeat. However, now the mechanism has been set in motion and it is impossible to stop it.
'Mystery, Alaska' is sweet, pleasant, low-key, inoffensive and unnecessary. It sticks up for underdogs, nice people and small towns, and doesn't like big corporations, adulterers, TV producers and New Yorkers in general. It contains not only a big game with a thrilling finish but also a courtroom scene, a funeral scene, an innocent teenage sex scene, a change-of-heart scene and a lot of scenery. No one falls through the ice and almost drowns, but we can't hope for everything.The movie assembles a large cast in Mystery, Alaska, a fictional town where since time immemorial life has revolved around the Saturday Game, a hockey match played on black pond ice by local boys and men, who take it very seriously indeed. A former town resident writes an article for Sports Illustrated about what fierce and brilliant hockey players they all are, and soon a sports network is promoting an exhibition game between the local team and the New York Rangers.Advertisement. But this is not merely a hockey movie, leading up to the big game. It has many things on its mind.
A foul-mouthed representative for a big retail chain comes to town and gets shot in the foot by a general store owner. The mayor's wife fools around with one of the hockey players. A veteran team member gets kicked upstairs to the coaching job to make room for a teenage phenom. There are scenes of young and middle-age love, visits from high-powered media stars and a drunken-driving scene involving a Zamboni.So cluttered is the plot that, sporting a Mephistophelian beard and a black overcoat he didn't get from Eddie Bauer, plays not only the local judge but also a strict and troubled husband and father, a former hockey coach who returns to the job and a spoilsport who turns into a good guy. Since he gets only one big scene for some of these manifestations, the screenplay is like a test of versatility.The film was written by, one of the most successful writer-producers in TV today ('The Practice,' 'Ally McBeal'),. They like lots of characters.
Is the town sheriff and aging hockey star; is his sweet wife; is the local attorney; is married to the mayor ; is 'Skank,' the local ladies' man; is the judge's wife and Rachel Wilson is his daughter; Ryan Northcutt is Stevie, her boyfriend, the speed demon on ice. Has fun with a Canadian accent and word choices as a TV color commentator; no doubt he was recruited by the director, who made the 'Austin Powers' movies. Retired hockey players Doug McLeod, Phil Esposito and Jim Fox are also TV announcers.
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I will not reveal what celebrity they recruit to sing the 'Star Spangled Banner,' or what he does for an encore, because that sequence is just about perfect.All of these people are awfully nice. I don't know how they got an R rating for their movie, which seems pretty PG-13 to me. They have a fine little village there, and darned if I wasn't rooting for the home team in the big game. This is not a bad movie so much as a meandering one, lacking in dramatic tension because no one really turns out to be a villain.I don't require that a sports movie end when the outcome of the big game is decided, but neither do I recommend that it linger while the locals and visitors say goodbye to one another, tidy up every plot strand and demonstrate that their hearts are in the right place. I do, however, think this same cast, in this same town, could metamorphose into an entertaining sitcom. It almost feels like they metamorphosed out of one.Advertisement.
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