It seems that every year at least one good sports movie comes out and garners a lot of praise and awards. In 2010,
The Fighter released to a lot of good press and won two Academy Awards for Christian Bale and Melissa Leo. The year before that,
The Blind Side garnered a lot of accolade and gave Sandra Bullock her first Academy Award. This year's Oscar-bati sports offering,
Moneyball, is nominated in six categories, including Best Picture, and Brad Pitt and Jonah Hill are both nominated for awards for Best Actor in a Leading Role and Best Supporting Actor, respectively.
Moneyball is the story of Billy Beane (Pitt), the Oakland A's general manager that used the concept of sabermetrics to create a winning team with a very limited budget and pioneered a new way of player scouting in professional baseball.Yes, it's the classic Cinderella story that is seen so many times in sports dramas, so what makes Moneyball so special? The answer: superior writing and acting. Moneyball is unique because it's a baseball movie where baseball isn't the true focal point of its story. You're really watching the story of a man, what makes him run, and how he survives in an environment that has stacked the deck heavily against him. It's not a movie about trying to beat the other team. It's a movie about a man trying to validate himself in his own eyes and in the eyes of those he loves.
Of course, a main reason that the story is so powerful is due to the powerful performance by the lead. Brad Pitt delivers a great performance and fully deserves his nomination for Best Actor. Philip Seymour Hoffman plays Art Howe, the manager of the A's that serves as Beane's foil for the majority of the movie, and Jonah Hill rounds out the main cast as Peter Brand, the Yale graduate in economics that introduces the idea of sabermetrics to Beane. Hill is nominated for an Academy Award for his performance, and I have no idea why. The character is done well and is a nice fit for the movie, but it's the same character Jonah Hill uses in every movie he's ever been in. If anyone is excited to see this movie because they think his nomination represents a stretch out of his comfort zone, they will be sorely disappointed.
There are a few minor complaints I have about the film. First, the middle of the movie starts to drag immensely. I feel like it could have been easily a half-hour shorter. The second thing was a minor annoyance, and that's the fact that Pitt's character seemed to overturn things a lot when he was angry. Phone call didn't go so well? Throw my desk. My player is dancing after a game we lost? Overturn the watercooler. I've been sitting in silence too long? Chuck the chair out of my office. It's very overused. But aside from those minor complaints, Moneyball really is an excellent film for sports fans and non-sports fans alike. I give the film an overall 8 overturned desks/chairs/watercoolers out of 10.