
Golf comedy ‘Stick' can't get out of the rough
Then, one day at the driving range, he hears a magical sound. It's the ball flying off the club of Santi (Peter Dager), a teen prodigy with a bit of an attitude. Pryce sees Santi as his way back to golf nirvana. But the kid was coached by his hard-ass dad, who then up and left him and his mother, Elena (promising Mexican actress Mariana Treviño, who shows sharp timing here and opposite Tom Hanks in 2022's 'A Man Called Otto'). He wants no part of competitive golf. Undeterred, Pryce cuts a check for Elena, convinces Santi that together they can make the big time, and embarks on a wild, wacky, life-affirming tour of major amateur events, with Elena, Mitts, and his RV along for the ride.
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Peter Dager, Mariana Treviño, Kirstin Eggers, Marc Maron and Owen Wilson in "Stick."
Apple TV+
Golf is rife with metaphors applicable to the game of life, particularly where it comes to deciding between playing it safe or letting it all hang out. A past big-screen golf comedy, which we'll get to in a moment, worked these ideas to smooth and even raunchy effect. 'Stick,' on the other hand, likes to whack you over the head with a 9-iron. The comedy feels forced, more in the vein of a middling network sitcom than a premium streaming series. The drama can be downright maudlin, especially when it tries to visualize Pryce's ruminations on his past and his might-have-beens. As Pryce tries to get his pupil to slow down and let the game come to him, it's hard not to wish 'Stick' had followed similar advice.
'Stick' also shanks its attempts at edgy nowness. Along the way the crew picks up a wild card, a young woman named Zero (Lili Kay). She describes herself as a 'genderqueer, anti-capitalist, postcolonial feminist.' Kids. They're really something, am I right? She becomes Santi's girlfriend and touchstone, which would be fine if the two actors had better chemistry and better material to work with. The series also tries to have some fun at the expense of a hyper-competitive pickleball couple, because pickleball is, you know, hot. You can sense someone standing behind the scenes of 'Stick,' constantly trying to gauge its Q Score.
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There are some highlights. The brightest is
Clark is actually a lot like David Simms, Kevin Costner's slick, slimy adversary, who was played by Don Johnson in the 1996 romantic golf comedy 'Tin Cup.' Come to think of it, 'Stick' has an awful lot in common with 'Tin Cup,' another story of a washed-up, impetuous golfer looking for a shot at redemption. The biggest difference is that 'Tin Cup' never sweated on the course as it mixed homespun wisdom with sex appeal. 'Stick' can't keep its cool the same way. You feel it straining to be meaningful and charming, and to fill out ten episodes. Playing golf can be frustrating. Watching a comedy about it shouldn't be.
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STICK
Starring Owen Wilson, Peter Dager, Lili Kay, Marc Maron, Mariana Treviño, Timothy Olyphant, and Judy Greer. On Apple TV+.
Chris Vognar, a freelance culture writer, was the 2009 Nieman Arts and Culture Fellow at Harvard University.

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