Watched: 02/27/2024
Format: Netflix
Viewing: First
Director: Bennett Miller
Selection: Jamie, but I was happy to do so
We're getting geared up for baseball season, so I'd expect we'll watch another baseball movie or two til the end of Spring Training and then switch over to regular Cubs-viewing.
I hadn't seen Moneyball (2011) when it came out basically because I was busy watching other stuff. I thought the premise - based on real-life events - seemed great. And the aftermath of the events has wildly informed how baseball now works for MLB teams, analysts, fantasy players and even casual fans like myself trying to better understand the game (and occasionally checking on a hunch).
The basic plot of the movie is based on the 2002 season for the Oakland A's - and I can tell you now, I have zero memory of any of this happening as I didn't follow baseball at the time. Following a great 2001 season that ends in a loss at the ALDS, the A's lose their best players and have no budget. GM Billy Beane (Brad Pitt) sits with his scouts/ brain-trust to think about who to bring in, and he knows it will be a disaster. Coming across a bright young man with a degree in economics and a head for SABRstatistics, Beane and Peter Brand (Jonah Hill) return to the recruiting session and put a roster down of players who are cheap, but - statistically - should be able to take the team far farther than best guesses and the weird mumbo jumbo that informs sports-think.
The team doesn't perform, and then it does. (This is all on Wikipedia and common knowledge to A's fans, I'd guess).
Meanwhile, Billy navigates his past and present, informing him how he should proceed. And somehow they landed Robin Wright for what's usually a walk-on part of the ex-wife.*
SPOILERS