Moneyball Review

At the time of this writing, the Oakland Athletics sit at a distant third in the American League West, 18 games behind the Texas Rangers managed by Ron Washington, once the first-base coach under A's wonderboy Billy Beane. The A's have not had a winning season since making the playoffs in '06, which is to say they are long removed from the summer of 2002 when they were revolutionaries who reinvented baseball by embracing the radical teachings of a pork-and-beans plant security guard who shed the sport of its myths, romanticism and pageantry and turned it into a math equation.

Michael Lewis' book Moneyball was published in 2003, in the immediate wake of The Season That Shook Baseball. The story didn't look like much on the surface: Beane, a former ballplayer-turned-scout-turned-GM, and Paul DePodesta, an Ivy League wonk, took a measly $39 million salary budget, crunched the numbers and turned overlooked, undervalued statistics into overachieving, undervalued ballplayers, and ended up ... losing the American League Division Series to the Minnesota Twins, the second of four straight one-and-dones for the A's. Yet the book would serve as a bible for every baseball executive and stat-obsessed fan. The A's stink now only because all the other teams beat them at their own game.

Lewis' account serves solely as inspiration for its engaging big-screen counterpart; director Bennett Miller (Capote) and writers Aaron Sorkin and Steve Zaillian barely touch upon sabermetrics and the influential work of statistician Bill James. The filmmakers wisely boil down Beane and DePodesta's complex formulas to a single, simple thesis: Sign ballplayers who get on base more than anyone else. Then they hand over the movie to Brad Pitt as Beane, a former first-round draft pick by the New York Mets who exorcises his dashed-dream demons one trade, thrown chair and turned-over watercooler at a time. Play ball.

Turns out that translating the numbers-heavy Moneyball for the multiplex was fairly straightforward after all: Like every other sports movie ever, it's the story of The Little Team That Could. The film begins at an ending: October 15, 2001, when the Yankees, with a payroll of $114 million, knock the low-budget A's out of the ALDS. Beane loses more than that game: Three of his best players are leaving, their price tags too high for Oakland. He can't afford to replace the brand names, only their on-base and slugging percentages, so he and Peter Brand (the DePodesta character played by Jonah Hill, terrific in his transition out of stoner comedy) stock their dugout with rejects and has-beens whose potential only they can see. Everyone else, including manager Art Howe (Philip Seymour Hoffman, looking hangdog and emasculated) and scout Grady Fuson (Ken Medlock, a fastball of fury), believes they will destroy their team, their sport.

Fuson especially thinks Beane's a fool who has taken baseball's betrayal personally. In flashbacks, we see a young Billy (played by Reed Thompson) wooed by scouts impressed with his five-tool ability. He could have been great, but for whatever reason — too much head, not enough heart, who really knows — flamed out. Fuson tells Beane he has declared war on baseball just to get even. And he might have a point: Pitt stalks the clubhouse, spits out his orders and gnaws on whatever tobacco plug or junk food is set before him, like he's trying to devour the world. Only when he's with his 12-year-old daughter does he seem at all at peace and at all sympathetic, which might be why the filmmakers wedged her into the plot. And that's another difference between Moneyball the movie and Moneyball the book — there's extra warmth radiating on-screen from beneath the cold, hard statistics.

I keep Lewis' book on a shelf next to North Dallas Forty, Peter Gent's tome about his playing days under Cowboys coach Tom Landry. The insider Gent and outsider Lewis tell essentially the same story: Computers do not lie, they do not romanticize, they do not judge. "None of you is as good as that computer" — that's what the coach tells his team in the film adaptation of North Dallas Forty, a line that just as easily could have come from Sorkin or Zaillian.

But North Dallas Forty on the big screen was mean, cold, brutal — a tale of betrayal and violence told from the perspective of the abused player left for dead meat. Moneyball's not like that at all. Perhaps that's because it's a baseball movie, and "it's hard not to be romantic about baseball," as Beane says during a rare moment of happiness as the A's become, for a few weeks, the greatest team in the history of the American League. It really happened, it's really corny, and it's really great.

MONEYBALL | Directed by BENNETT MILLER | Written by AARON SORKIN and STEVE ZAILLIAN | Based on the book by MICHAEL LEWIS | Columbia Pictures | Citywide

 
My Voice Nation Help
3 comments
Babber
Babber

Pretty look forward to Brad Pitt's performance in this movie after a long time. As one of my favorite actors, I do hope he can get high fame with this movie. Even I still have not enjoyed this movie...

Roy Hobbs
Roy Hobbs

For baseball traditionalists, the use of sabermetrics to determine a player's strengths and weaknesses dehumanizes the great American pasttime. Probably just an outgrowth of how American society minimizes individuals by reducing them to a set of numbers. But how do you measure a ballplayer's heart? Not by using WHIP (walks plus hits per innings pitched) or OBP (on base percentage) or RISP (runners in scoring position). You do it the old-fashioned way like one of the grand masters of the game that no one remembers. Birdie Tebbetts, a catcher with the Boston Red Sox who played with Ted Williams and later managed the Cincinnatti Reds (formerly the Red Stockings), was one of three or four college graduates (philosophy, University of Rhode Island), when he played in the 30s and 40s. As such, Tebbetts was an ethereal thinker who delved into the minds of ballplayers to find their heart. If the Dodgers had used sabermetrics, would Mike Piazza have ever made it to the Bigs?

Birdie Tebbetts took charge of the Reds in the early 1950s. The Reds offered up a rag-tag roster everyone picked to finish last and melded them into a team that came ever-so close to winning the National League pennant on several occasions. He was named manager of the year, made the cover of Time magazine and was called the miracle worker. That was a time before the current playoff system when only one team from each league could go on to the World Series.

Tebbetts discovered hidden talent by visiting every backwater town in America to find his Frank Robinson or the next Shoeless Joe Jackson. So trusted was his keen eye that he scouted for the Yankees and Tampa Bay Rays even into his 80s. Tebbetts preferred to look someone in the eye to gauge, as another philosopher once put it, "the content of their character." Here's a Birdie vignette: The Reds were on a bus trip during Spring training and headed to Miami to play the Orioles. The bus stopped at a restaurant in the town of Bonita Springs near Fort Myers to eat. The owner refused to allow entrance to the black ballplayers but said he would feed the white ones. Birdie refused and loaded the team on the bus for the trip across Alligator Alley. On the way back, Tebbetts had the bus driver stop in Naples where Birdie made a phone call to the same Bonita Springs restaurant they had been at the day before. Birdie wanted to make a statement and placed an order for 50 sandwiches to go. When the bus got to the restaurant, Birdie met the owner at the door and told him to stick those sandwiches in a place where the sun never shines and left.Don't get me wrong. I can't wait to see "Moneyball" because I love baseball but I'll take "The Natural" and old school guys like Birdie Tebbetts any day.

John Ladd
John Ladd

When producer Rachael Horovitz first acquired Moneyball Stan Chervin was hired to write the adaptation. It was his draft that got Sony onboard and Brad Pitt for the project. He is also credited as the "Story By" writer and he should definitely not have been omitted from your review.

 

Now Showing

Find capsule reviews, showtimes & tickets for all films in town.

Powered By VOICE Places

Join My Voice Nation for free stuff, film info & more!

Box Office

  1. Star Trek Into Darkness, 70.2 mil, 83.7 mil
  2. Iron Man 3, 35.8 mil, 337.7 mil
  3. The Great Gatsby, 23.9 mil, 90.7 mil
  4. Pain & Gain, 3.2 mil, 46.7 mil
  5. The Croods, 3.0 mil, 177.0 mil
  6. 42, 2.8 mil, 88.8 mil
  7. Oblivion, 2.3 mil, 85.6 mil
  8. Mud, 2.2 mil, 11.7 mil
  9. Peeples, 2.2 mil, 7.9 mil
  10. The Big Wedding, 1.2 mil, 20.3 mil
Movie Title, Weekly Earnings, Total Earnings
©2013 LA Weekly, LP, All rights reserved.
Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places Los Angeles

    Voice Places

    Find everything you're looking for in your city

  • Happy Hour App

    Happy Hour App

    Find the best happy hour deals in your city

  • Daily Deals

    Daily Deals

    Get today's exclusive deals at savings of anywhere from 50-90%

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    Check out the hottest list of places and things to do around your city