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| New Orleans Times-PicayuneMike ScottThis is the kind of movie that makes you want to sit through the credits, and not for some “hidden” scene featuring superheroes eating shawarma. Rather, it’s because it’s so pleasant you won’t want It Ain’t Over to be over. |
| Austin ChronicleSteve DavisAbove everything else, this tribute is a valentine to a man you can’t help but love. |
| Original-CinLiam LaceyA warm-hearted look back at one of professional sport’s most colourful folk heroes, the late Yogi Berra, the documentary, It Ain’ Over, is also a film with a score to settle. |
| Chicago TribuneMichael PhillipsThe movie itself is more of a square than a circle — straightforward and honorific, peppered with old and newer archival footage. |
| San Francisco ChronicleG. Allen JohnsonSean Mullin’s documentary It Ain’t Over is literally inside baseball. The film is essentially a Berra family project, an attempt to rehabilitate the professional reputation of someone who often doesn’t get his due as a player. |
| Arizona RepublicBill GoodykoontzIt’s not a warts-and-all treatment because, at least in this telling, there are no warts. It’s more about securing Berra among a new generation of fans as one of the greatest players who ever lived. And on that front, it more than succeeds. |
| Movie NationRoger MooreIt’s a sweetly sentimental documentary, acknowledging Berra’s own role in leaning into the “cartoon” image that the sporting media built around him and the confusion that created. |
| Washington PostThomas FloydBerra’s advice, of course, tends to be dizzyingly contradictory but deceptively simple. The same could be said of It Ain’t Over, which zips through Berra’s life without ever feeling rushed. When it comes to Mullin’s well-paced depiction of a misunderstood legend, Berra’s words put it best: “You can observe a lot by watching.” |
| RogerEbert.comSheila O'MalleyThe Berra family tells the stories with familiarity and affection, often laughing or crying: this is well-trod ground, tall tales, the narrative of their family. |
| Wall Street JournalKyle SmithThe movie about his life and legend, written and directed by Sean Mullin, has two purposes and succeeds delightfully at both. |