Test 2

Please select your preferred language.

請選擇你慣用的語言。

请选择你惯用的语言。

English
中文简体
台灣繁體
香港繁體

Login

Remember Me

New to Fridae?

Fridae Mobile

Advertisement
Highlights

More About Us

15 Feb 2012

Moneyball

Moneyball is an entertaining, smart film about the team that changed America's sport forever.

Director: Bennett Miller

Screenplay: Steven Zaillian, Aaron Sorkin; based on the novel Moneyball by Stan Chervin

Cast: Brad Pitt, Jonah Hill, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Robin Wright

The American sports film tends to be so predictable that if you've seen one, you've probably seen them all. It's always about an underdog team which triumphs (or at least goes almost all the way) through sheer hard work, perseverance, and a little bit of talent and enterprising spirit – all values celebrated as part of the American spirit.

Yet in Moneyball, there is a gimmick and a twist that make this sports film come across as relatively new.

The gimmick here is the underdog team of misfits, underperformers, and over-the-hill rejects is deliberately chosen and cobbled together by Oakland Athletics general manager Billy Beane (Brad Pitt in his best impression of Robert Redford) and his nerdy, obese assistant Peter Brand (Jonah Hill) using advanced statistical analysis, in contravention of the sport's received wisdom and traditional gauges of what makes a valuable player.

The twist in Moneyball is that the dramatic spotlight is on Beane and Brand and their statistical method, rather than the players, the coach, or the game. Instead of focusing on the rise and rise of the underdog team, the film's central conflict is between Beane and Brand on one hand and their talent scouts and coach (played by Philip Seymour Hoffman) on the other hand. The battle in this film is not of an underdog and its opponents but between statistics and intuition, innovation and tradition in sports.

The script by Alan Sorkin and Steven Zaillian is snappy and clever. It also succeeds in making the boring field of statistics engaging and consequential. The weakest points of the film are when it seems to distrust itself, resorting to sentimental, humanising character arcs (complete with cute little children!) that arguably detract from the main story.

Reader's Comments

Be the first to leave a comment on this page!

Please log in to use this feature.

Social


Select News Edition

Featured Profiles

Now ALL members can view unlimited profiles!

Languages

View this page in a different language:

Like Us on Facebook

Partners

 ILGA Asia - Fridae partner for LGBT rights in Asia IGLHRC - Fridae Partner for LGBT rights in Asia

Advertisement