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The Short Game

Play trailer Poster for The Short Game PG 2013 1h 35m Documentary Play Trailer Watchlist
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84% Tomatometer 19 Reviews 84% Popcornmeter 250+ Ratings
The world's best 7-year-old golfers travel to Pinehurst, N.C., to compete in the World Championships of Junior Golf.
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The Short Game

Critics Reviews

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Michael O'Sullivan Washington Post 02/07/2014
You don't need to like golf to like -- perhaps even to love -- The Short Game. Go to Full Review
Joe O'Connell Austin Chronicle 09/25/2013
While a cast of characters this large could easily hinder a doc's focus, it works perfectly in The Short Game to give both a global view and to show how sports can be a Zen-like calling at any age. Go to Full Review
Peter Debruge Variety 09/25/2013
[The Short Game] finds the most entertaining angle on one of the world's dullest sports. Go to Full Review
Stephen Saito Moveable Fest 12/04/2018
There's no need to highlight the maturity level of the kids involved when they do it for themselves through the interviews Greenbaum collects and the array of wonderful, small moments that he captures. Go to Full Review
Eleni Armenakis The Loop 12/12/2013
One thing the documentary reveals is how much work goes into being at the top. Go to Full Review
Jonathan W. Hickman Daily Film Fix 10/04/2013
6.5/10
There is little heavy lifting here but a whole lot of fun to be had. Go to Full Review
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Audience Reviews

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08/09/2017 it was interesting to see there passion for the game See more 10/19/2016 Kind of an interesting look at what "world champion" children golfers go through. To me, it's kind of sad how much the parents force these kids to do this. It also requires a ton of money. Some kids were more likeable than others. See more 10/14/2015 An entertaining documentary that covered an event that I didn't know existed. It really just made me want to go golf. See more 07/30/2015 pleasantly surprisingly educational and inspirational for ALL AGES! watching at these prodigies and their caddy/parents made me feel as though i dodged my bullet with my mom when i was 13! (plus i was not at their level of talent) a must see if you love golf and/or need a little uplifting that life isn't all about winning ð??? See more 09/29/2014 Cute, love the kids, all the right messages and lessons. Feel-good staple. See more 09/20/2014 A part of the recent influx of Netflix backed features - which most notably includes Oscar-nominated The Square (2014) - The Short Game is exactly the sort of frothy, populist documentary you'd expect to stumble across while scrolling through pages of streaming recommendations. Following a host of the world's most spoilt brats as they compete at the World Championships of Junior Golf in North Carolina, the documentary is able to attain a certain cutesy appeal, but never much more than that, as it skims over the surface of the weird world of mini golf pros. For starters, the 7-year-olds are drawn with a dismissive reductiveness. Young French golfer, Augustin, is introduced in a crested blazer in front of the Eiffel Tower declaring his love for art. Zamokhule from South Africa enters dancing around in front of some giraffes. Allan Kournikova (brother of Anna) is presented as hideously pampered cash-, fame- and success-hungry brat. And this is about the extent of director Josh Greenbaum's ambition, introducing some stereotyped entrants and then covering their progress in the championship for half the running time. The real meat of the story would be in their relationships with their parents, which The Short Game does touch on, but with nothing like the depth or enthusiasm it should. There are a few touching moments of tears, missed shots and angry words - but on the whole the overbearing parents are given a very easy ride. "I don't feel like I'm giving up my childhood, I feel like golf is my childhood," says Allan when questioned about the sport. Surely the saddest statement ever heard from a 7-year-old, and one that should be interrogated more deeply. Part of the problem is that all the kids have been brainwashed into the generic language of sport and reinforced pep talks, so for the most part the fact they are so young is just a novelty - the same words could be coming out of the mouths of any pro. When this glassy eyed mask does occasionally slip and they play and babble like real children, The Short Game is able to find its highlight - the adorable kids, who may inhabit this dry, adult world of putting greens and branded caps, but underneath it all just want to have fun. For a good third of the film we are basically watching a golf tournament play out, with the chopping and changing leaderboard, ESPN commentary and overly engineered drama. How you take to this depends entirely on your love of the sport, but after the initial novelty of seeing pocket-size Tiger Woods ripping drives and sinking putts I became weary of it. The Short Game is a honkingly simplistic film that never finds anything worth saying, but as a diverting, entertaining glance at the micro-sport it provides some good-natured fun. See more Read all reviews
The Short Game

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Movie Info

Synopsis The world's best 7-year-old golfers travel to Pinehurst, N.C., to compete in the World Championships of Junior Golf.
Director
Josh Greenbaum
Producer
Josh Greenbaum, Chris Leggett, Rafael Marmor
Distributor
Samuel Goldwyn Company
Production Co
Samuel Goldwyn Films
Rating
PG (Some Language)
Genre
Documentary
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Sep 20, 2013, Limited
Release Date (Streaming)
Sep 9, 2014
Box Office (Gross USA)
$38.9K
Runtime
1h 35m
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