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Moneyball art
Moneyball art






moneyball art

With the impending departure of the star players Johnny Damon, Jason Giambi and Jason Isringhausen to free agency, Beane needs to assemble a competitive team for 2002 with Oakland's limited budget.ĭuring a scouting visit to the Cleveland Indians, Beane meets Peter Brand, a young Yale economics graduate with radical ideas about evaluating players. The film was nominated for six Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Actor for Pitt and Best Supporting Actor for Hill.īilly Beane, the general manager of the Oakland Athletics, is devastated by the team's loss to the New York Yankees in the 2001 American League Division Series.

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Moneyball premiered at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival and was released on September 23, 2011, to box office success and critical acclaim, particularly for its acting and screenplay. Filming began in July 2010 at various stadiums such as Dodger Stadium and Oakland Coliseum. Soderbergh exited, and Miller was hired to direct, with Pitt becoming a producer and Sorkin hired for rewrites. But before its July 2009 filming start, the film was put in turnaround due to creative differences between Soderbergh and Sony over a last-minute script rewrite. David Frankel was initially set to direct with Zaillian now writing the screenplay, but was soon replaced by Steven Soderbergh, who planned to make the film in a semi-documentary style featuring interviews from real athletes, and having the real players and coaches on the team portray themselves. Philip Seymour Hoffman also stars as Art Howe.Ĭolumbia Pictures bought the rights to Lewis's book in 2004, hiring Chervin to write the screenplay. In the film, Beane ( Brad Pitt) and assistant general manager Peter Brand ( Jonah Hill), faced with the franchise's limited budget for players, build a team of undervalued talent by taking a sophisticated sabermetric approach to scouting and analyzing players. The film is based on the 2003 nonfiction book by Michael Lewis, an account of the Oakland Athletics baseball team's 2002 season and their general manager Billy Beane's attempts to assemble a competitive team. Moneyball is a 2011 American biographical sports dramedy film directed by Bennett Miller with a script by Steven Zaillian and Aaron Sorkin from a story by Stan Chervin.








Moneyball art