No No: A Dockumentary
No No: A Dockumentary

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- 72/100 based on 1,708 votes

In the 1970s Dock Ellis pitched a no-hitter on LSD and his outspoken style courted conflict and controversy, but his latter years were spent helping others recover from addiction. No No: A Dockumentary weaves a surprising and moving story of a life in and out of the spotlight.... (Full plot summary below)

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Full Plot Details

In the 1970s Dock Ellis pitched a no-hitter on LSD and his outspoken style courted conflict and controversy, but his latter years were spent helping others recover from addiction. No No: A Dockumentary weaves a surprising and moving story of a life in and out of the spotlight.

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Movie Reviews

Entertainment Weekly - 9/10 by Chris NashawatyThe fact is, Dock Ellis was...complicated. Probably a lot more so than No No makes him out to be.
The Playlist - 9/10 by Drew Taylor“No No” is a jazzy, joyful exploration of a man that, if he wasn’t able to actually change the system, was at least happy with giving it the middle finger.
Tribune News Service - 8/10 by Roger MooreRadice has delivered an engaging portrait of a loose cannon back when professional sports still produced such unfiltered creatures, a man who lived by his own rules, said what he thought and wore curlers to practice when he felt like it.
Austin Chronicle - 8/10 by Kimberley JonesThe film provides invaluable context in its detailing of institutional racism in the Sixties and Seventies and in its emphasis on Ellis as an advocate for equality and as a righteous shit-stirrer.
Orlando Weekly - 8/10 by Jessica Bryce YoungDirector Jeff Radice's skillful interviews are ably underpinned with original music by Beastie Boy Adam Horovitz and killer music supervision by Randall Poster.
San Francisco Chronicle - 8/10 by Leba HertzThe film is fine in depicting Ellis' times, but it's mostly how he came to realize that he had a serious problem and turned his life around to become a drug-abuse counselor. He died in 2008 at age 63.
New York Times - 8/10 by Daniel M. GoldAs this smart and sympathetic profile shows, Dock Ellis didn’t need a no-hitter, stoned or otherwise, to define himself; he was his own best work.
Film Threat - 8/10 by Don R. LewisNo No: A Dockumentary really covers a lot of ground, and I felt there were at least 3-4 different documentaries contained in the film that were as interesting, if not more so, than the story of Dock Ellis.
Chicago Reader - 7/10 by J. R. JonesWhat really distinguishes this... is its candid-and surprisingly flippant-treatment of widespread drug use in major league baseball.
Village Voice - 7/10 by Katherine VuThere's enough diamond lore here to please baseball diehards, but Ellis's outsize life will grip even casual fans.

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No No: A Dockumentary