It Ain't Over
mild bad language, drug references, discrimination, brief real war violence
Director(s)Sean Mullin
Production year2022
Genre(s)Documentary
Approx. running minutes95m
CastAndy Andres, Roger Angell, Marty Appel
It Ain't Over
mild bad language, drug references, discrimination, brief real war violence
IT AIN'T OVER is a US documentary about the life of former US professional baseball player, manager and coach Lawrence P ...
IT AIN'T OVER is a US documentary about the life of former US professional baseball player, manager and coach Lawrence Peter "Yogi" Berra.
violence
Brief black and white archival footage of World War II Normandy landings includes brief undetailed long-shot sight of soldiers shot and falling, and subsequent sight of soldiers carrying injured colleagues. The images lack bloody detail.
language
The film contains mild bad language ('bullshit'), as well as milder terms ('God', 'hell').
discrimination
There are historical references to a neighborhood being formerly known as "Dago Hill" due to the preponderance of Italian-Americans in the community. Yogi Berra's grand-daughter also states that her grandfather "... was very accustomed to hearing dago, wop, all the derogatory terms for Italians". Racism and racist language within this historical and often reported speech context is not condoned by the work as a whole.
drugs
Yogi Berra's son Dale talks about his cocaine addiction in the 1980s, and news reports from the time refer to drug misuse in baseball within the context of an ongoing trial. However, following a family intervention, Dale states that he became clean and sober. Accordingly, drug misuse is negatively presented, and is also clearly not condoned by the work as a whole.
additional issues
Scenes of emotional upset include those in which adult family members recall the death of parents, and the effect this had on them.
There is brief archival footage showing a man with blood on his face after he was struck by a flying baseball.
There are also archival scenes in which adults smoke cigarettes, and which reflect the time period in which the scenes were filmed.
mild bad language, drug references, discrimination, brief real war violence
Classified Date:
12/06/2023
Version:
2D
Use:
VOD/Streaming
Distributor:
SPHE VOD
violence
Brief black and white archival footage of World War II Normandy landings includes brief undetailed long-shot sight of soldiers shot and falling, and subsequent sight of soldiers carrying injured colleagues. The images lack bloody detail.
language
The film contains mild bad language ('bullshit'), as well as milder terms ('God', 'hell').
discrimination
There are historical references to a neighborhood being formerly known as "Dago Hill" due to the preponderance of Italian-Americans in the community. Yogi Berra's grand-daughter also states that her grandfather "... was very accustomed to hearing dago, wop, all the derogatory terms for Italians". Racism and racist language within this historical and often reported speech context is not condoned by the work as a whole.
drugs
Yogi Berra's son Dale talks about his cocaine addiction in the 1980s, and news reports from the time refer to drug misuse in baseball within the context of an ongoing trial. However, following a family intervention, Dale states that he became clean and sober. Accordingly, drug misuse is negatively presented, and is also clearly not condoned by the work as a whole.
Classified date12/06/2023
LanguageEnglish
violence
Brief black and white archival footage of World War II Normandy landings includes brief undetailed long-shot sight of soldiers shot and falling, and subsequent sight of soldiers carrying injured colleagues. The images lack bloody detail.
language
The film contains mild bad language ('bullshit'), as well as milder terms ('God', 'hell').
discrimination
There are historical references to a neighborhood being formerly known as "Dago Hill" due to the preponderance of Italian-Americans in the community. Yogi Berra's grand-daughter also states that her grandfather "... was very accustomed to hearing dago, wop, all the derogatory terms for Italians". Racism and racist language within this historical and often reported speech context is not condoned by the work as a whole.
drugs
Yogi Berra's son Dale talks about his cocaine addiction in the 1980s, and news reports from the time refer to drug misuse in baseball within the context of an ongoing trial. However, following a family intervention, Dale states that he became clean and sober. Accordingly, drug misuse is negatively presented, and is also clearly not condoned by the work as a whole.
additional issues
Scenes of emotional upset include those in which adult family members recall the death of parents, and the effect this had on them.
There is brief archival footage showing a man with blood on his face after he was struck by a flying baseball.
There are also archival scenes in which adults smoke cigarettes, and which reflect the time period in which the scenes were filmed.
Director(s)Sean Mullin
Production year2022
Genre(s)Documentary
Approx. running minutes95m
CastAndy Andres, Roger Angell, Marty Appel
mild bad language, drug references, discrimination, brief real war violence
Classified Date:
12/06/2023
Version:
2D
Use:
VOD/Streaming
Distributor:
SPHE VOD
violence
Brief black and white archival footage of World War II Normandy landings includes brief undetailed long-shot sight of soldiers shot and falling, and subsequent sight of soldiers carrying injured colleagues. The images lack bloody detail.
language
The film contains mild bad language ('bullshit'), as well as milder terms ('God', 'hell').
discrimination
There are historical references to a neighborhood being formerly known as "Dago Hill" due to the preponderance of Italian-Americans in the community. Yogi Berra's grand-daughter also states that her grandfather "... was very accustomed to hearing dago, wop, all the derogatory terms for Italians". Racism and racist language within this historical and often reported speech context is not condoned by the work as a whole.
drugs
Yogi Berra's son Dale talks about his cocaine addiction in the 1980s, and news reports from the time refer to drug misuse in baseball within the context of an ongoing trial. However, following a family intervention, Dale states that he became clean and sober. Accordingly, drug misuse is negatively presented, and is also clearly not condoned by the work as a whole.
Classified date12/06/2023
LanguageEnglish