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Everyone's Hero
In 1932, the dawn of the Great Depression, a young baseball fan Yankee Irving (Jake T. Austin) comes to a turning point in his life when he faces a critical decision: Should he take a chance and possibly become a hero, or should he play it safe?
22 November 1956, Trenton, New Jersey, USA
21 July 1951, Chicago, Illinois, USA
9 July 1938, Bridgeport, Connecticut, USA
10 December 1985, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
30 November 1952, Chicago, Illinois, USA
18 July 1940, Brooklyn, New York, USA
13 March 1950, Miami, Florida, USA
8 December 1966, Los Angeles, California, USA
September 15, 2006
... feels more like a 1950s cartoon.
September 15, 2006
... a modestly engaging mix of broad comedy and nostalgic fable, spiked with a few unwelcome sprinklings of gross-out gags.
September 27, 2006
The setup of this computer-animated feature is strained, the story is contrived, and the ending is downright silly.
September 30, 2006
misguided and poorly executed
October 27, 2006
Old-fashioned, sweet, but ultimately disposable family fare with echoes of better films from Toy Story to The Iron Giant.
September 18, 2006
A sweet but very forgettable animated adventure.
September 30, 2006
Young boys may be enchanted by the inspirational adventure, but for anyone over the age of nine, Yankee's journey is ultimately a dull one paved with good intentions.
September 15, 2006
The movie is a feast of miscalculations.
September 15, 2006
Everyone's Hero is a sweet, inspirational movie that doesn't offer any surprises, but entertains youthful audiences in a gentle, almost old-fashioned way.
September 23, 2006
It's a shallow, treacly movie for children too little to question its many pointless puerilities.
January 01, 2011
A bland feel-good flick with a positive message.

