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| MONEYBALL
(director: Bennett Miller; screenwriters: Steven Zaillian/Aaron
Sorkin/based on a story by Stan Chervin and the book Moneyball: The Art of Winning
an Unfair Game by
Michael Lewis; cinematographer: Wally Pfister;
editor: Christopher
Tellefsen; music: Mychael Danna;
cast: Brad Pitt (), (Peter Brand), Philip
Seymour Hoffman (Art Howe), Robin Wright (Sharon), Chris
Pratt (Scott Hatteberg), Stephen Bishop (David Justice),
Reed Thompson (young Billy), Ken Medlock (Grady
Fusion, head scout); Runtime: 133; MPAA Rating: PG-13;
producer: Brad Pitt/Michael
De Luca/Rachael Horovitz; Columbia Pictures;
2011) "A decent baseball pic, which is rare." Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz A
decent baseball pic, which is rare. Most baseball
films whiff, as they get caught up in cliched stories
and can't overcome how unimaginative they are played
out. This crowd-pleasing film is a baseball flick made
for those who are not necessarily fans. Instead of
focusing on the players it tells how an energetic
general manager plays the game of baseball behind the
scenes in a hard-nosed way like he does his life, and
the pic wisely uses the baseball story as merely
colorful background material and promotes instead the
more lively bottom-line business approach the GM of
the Oakland A's, Billy Beane (Brad Pitt), has to
change how his small market team is challenging the
big market teams who play moneyball. The gutsy GM
applies a different set of stats than previously used
by scouts to pick a team. Since Billy's team responds
by winning with this new approach, the copy cat league
temporarily changes how some of the other teams
operate. Director
Bennett Miller ("Capote"/"The Cruise") tells how
in 2002 the small payroll Oakland A's ($39,722,689) were
competitive on the field with the big payroll NY
Yankees ($114,457,768).
They made a name for themselves by winning a baseball
record 20 games in a row and were a success even if
they failed to win it all. It's based on Michael Lewis' 2003
bestseller Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair
Game, which tells about how the Oakland Athletics
changed the model on how to put together a major
league team and did it by following not only the usual
scouting reports but the guidelines the geeky
non-player Bill James used in his 1977 controversial
baseball book on stats that showed which players could
be obtained on the cheap and would be valuable
additions because they possessed underappreciated
stats no one else evaluated and that these players
would be a good fit for struggling teams who couldn't
afford inflated high paid stars. The story of , a
former top high school baseball prospect who turned
down a scholarship to Stanford and signed with the NY
Mets, picks up in 2001 with him a top-level baseball executive. Unfortunately he was a
bust as a ballplayer and after a career in scouting
the 44-year-old divorced father of an adolescent
daughter worked his way up the ladder to be the
general manager of the lowly Oakland Athletics. Billy
is faced with losing three star players from his
playoff team that just lost to the Yanks and is told
by his owner not to compete for star players they
cannot afford. Billy connects with the recent Yale graduate in economics
Peter Brand
(Jonah Hill), a computer savvy follower of Bill James,
working his first job as a lowly front office
executive for the Cleveland Indians, and steals him
away from the Tribe by making him his assistant. Using
Peter's stats to pickup a bunch of undervalued players
via trades causes Billy to clash with his old-time
head scout Grady
Fuson (Ken Medlock), who thinks his moves do not make
baseball sense and are reckless, and with his veteran
manager Art
Howe (Philip Seymour Hoffman), who's upset he's
working on a one-year contract without an extension
and to save his reputation for job interviews next
year backs the way the scouts see things of giving
their farm team prospects a shot. When the scout is
fired and the winning vision Billy had for the team
passes the test on the field, the wily manager comes
on board to accept the praises from the media and
applause of the home team fans.
REVIEWED ON 9/25/2011 GRADE: B Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |