Wow, I liked the Blind side. Is your problem with the Blind Side or that this movie might be like it? Or both?
I imagine there's fear this could be an entertaining movie, and not an intricate 90 minute PowerPoint presentation.
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Posted 16 June 2011 - 10:16 PM
Wow, I liked the Blind side. Is your problem with the Blind Side or that this movie might be like it? Or both?
Posted 16 June 2011 - 10:16 PM
Posted 16 June 2011 - 10:40 PM
Aaron Sorkin's writing alone should make it 100 times more interesting than anything associated with The Blind Side. He can be pompous and annoying, but he's never saccharine and boring.I'm absolutely terrified it's just going to be The Blind Side on a football field. The scenes of Pitt with the daughter and of him sitting in the bleachers looking forlorn didn't decrease that worry.
Posted 16 June 2011 - 11:34 PM
Well, both. I thought The Blind Side (movie) was a heartstring tugging mess of cloying sentimentality, but I also hate Sandra Bullock and felt that turning Michael Oher into a retarded puppy who could only be a real person with the help of some nice white lady was a bit much.Wow, I liked the Blind side. Is your problem with the Blind Side or that this movie might be like it? Or both?
Posted 17 June 2011 - 12:08 AM
Posted 17 June 2011 - 12:17 AM
I suspect it's not going to be about the moneyball theory itself, it's going to really be the story of our hero Billy Beane, which will play into the hands of people like Dolomite and Joe Morgan.
Much like that steaming pile of shit, The Blind Side, it'll end up a human interest story.
Still, there's not all that many really good baseball movies out there so it'd be pretty cool if that was a by product.
Edited by dolomite133, 17 June 2011 - 12:19 AM.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 12:25 AM
Posted 17 June 2011 - 07:38 AM
This. Sorkin won an Oscar for THE SOCIAL NETWORK, and this looks closer to that narrative style, the way SOCIAL NETWORK itself was following in the storytelling docu-drama footsteps of ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN. The co-writer was Steven Zaillian, who also Oscared for SCHINDLER'S LIST and made chess interesting in SEARCHING FOR BOBBY FISCHER.Aaron Sorkin's writing alone should make it 100 times more interesting than anything associated with The Blind Side. He can be pompous and annoying, but he's never saccharine and boring.
Edited by Trlicek's Whip, 17 June 2011 - 07:41 AM.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 07:46 AM
Posted 17 June 2011 - 07:58 AM
Bit of a hijack. I'm reading The Big Short now and am so impressed I'm planning to read more from Michael Lewis. What are your general opinions of his other books? Must reads?
Posted 17 June 2011 - 08:00 AM
Well, both. I thought The Blind Side (movie) was a heartstring tugging mess of cloying sentimentality, but I also hate Sandra Bullock and felt that turning Michael Oher into a retarded puppy who could only be a real person with the help of some nice white lady was a bit much.
Edited by Rocco Graziosa, 17 June 2011 - 08:02 AM.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 08:04 AM
Yeah. The Blind Side was awful. The magical Sandra bullock reforming the poor retarded gentle giant storyline? There's sweet and there's cloying.
But... The point made was they stripped the written blind side's interesting aspects of recruitment and the role of these boosters and stuff and turned it into a Disney movie.
The fear is they'll take the interesting parts of Moneyball - the strategy of recruiting undervalued 'talent' and also just turn it into the life story of Billy Beane, failed minor leaguer who builds a team (with the awesome spectacle of a putting the team together montage hilariously mentioned by the Filthy One, which will probably be set to a cool song like The Boys are Back in Town or Thunderstruck) of lovable losers and teaches them how to win, mighty ducks style.
Which is kind of not what Moneyball was all about, similar to the way the film of the Blind Side ignored the parts of the book that weren't about Sandra saving the poor kid.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 08:07 AM
Posted 17 June 2011 - 08:28 AM
Aaron Sorkin's writing alone should make it 100 times more interesting than anything associated with The Blind Side. He can be pompous and annoying, but he's never saccharine and boring.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 08:46 AM
...you got all that from the trailer? I understand the concern, and I hated the Blind Side too because of the book to film disparity, but don't you think you're being a bit harsh given it's Brad Pitt and Aaron Sorkin? Sandra Bullock and Disney are AA to Pitt/Sorkin's MLB quality.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 09:39 AM
Posted 17 June 2011 - 09:45 AM
Love Chris Pratt as Hatteberg.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 09:47 AM
Yeah, but what if thats what happened?
Posted 17 June 2011 - 10:16 AM
Edited by 8slim, 17 June 2011 - 11:54 AM.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 10:17 AM
Posted 17 June 2011 - 11:16 AM
Posted 17 June 2011 - 11:24 AM
Posted 17 June 2011 - 11:35 AM
Posted 17 June 2011 - 12:44 PM
Edited by Philip Jeff Frye, 17 June 2011 - 12:46 PM.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 12:46 PM
BTW I obtained Sorkin's script for Moneyball. It includes several long takes following Billy Beane as he walks through hallways, concourses, etc. delivering dense dialogue to other characters.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 12:56 PM
Posted 17 June 2011 - 01:09 PM
Posted 17 June 2011 - 01:12 PM
I hope they devote a lot of time to how awesome and underrated Dusty Brown is.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 02:24 PM
Posted 17 June 2011 - 02:32 PM
IMHO, Moneyball is one of the most overrated books in history.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 02:47 PM
Posted 17 June 2011 - 05:03 PM
Edited by SydneySox, 17 June 2011 - 05:04 PM.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 05:29 PM
The narrative of "scrappy reformer overthrows establishment old guard and creates a winner from nothing", when applied to the book, is a bit of a straw man.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 07:18 PM
It's still a great look at a forward-thinking GM and even if all the moves didn't work out so well, it's rare that we get so much on the thought process behind the acquisition of a middle reliever. That LaRussa book had the same problem (to a greater degree, really, because LaRussa is a tool) but the same appeal, and as a baseball fan I could read a lot of that kind of thing.I didn't start reading Moneyball until a couple years after it came out. And I stopped reading during the chapter on Hatteburg. I mean, the book was enjoyable, but it was such a Beane knob-wash that reading it after most of his prized guys had flamed out rendered it pointless.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 07:30 PM
My biggest complaint about Moneyball was always that it missed the point: at LEAST 75% of that team's success was due to 1) hitting the lottery with three pitchers in the draft, and 2) playing in a division with a) only three other fucking teams in it and b) no juggernauts. Even if you take "Beane is a genius" as gospel, it wasn't nearly as important as those factors. Not even fucking close.
"My shit doesn't work in the playoffs" is a nice way of saying "It's a super nice tailwind to play in a mediocre division with only three competitors in it, so my As teams make the playoffs and then get exposed as good but not great teams."
Posted 17 June 2011 - 07:42 PM
Edited by Old Fart Tree, 17 June 2011 - 07:51 PM.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 07:57 PM
It's because I lived in the Bay Area and had to put up with As fans bragging about dominating a weak AL West. It was tiresome. Granted, that Ms team was outstanding, but there's no fucking way they would have made the playoffs in the AL East, even with that pitching.
Edited by WayBackVazquez, 17 June 2011 - 08:00 PM.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 08:01 PM
My biggest complaint about Moneyball was always that it missed the point: at LEAST 75% of that team's success was due to 1) hitting the lottery with three pitchers in the draft, and 2) playing in a division with a) only three other fucking teams in it and b) no juggernauts. Even if you take "Beane is a genius" as gospel, it wasn't nearly as important as those factors. Not even fucking close.
"My shit doesn't work in the playoffs" is a nice way of saying "It's a super nice tailwind to play in a mediocre division with only three competitors in it, so my As teams make the playoffs and then get exposed as good but not great teams."
Oakland, with its limited funds, wouldn't spend payroll to buy power hitters. Instead, it invested in cheaper, patient hitters. And those hitters, it seems, bought the power themselves.
Edited by Gunfighter 09, 17 June 2011 - 08:09 PM.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 08:08 PM
Edited by Gunfighter 09, 17 June 2011 - 08:09 PM.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 08:15 PM
It's because I lived in the Bay Area and had to put up with As fans bragging about dominating a weak AL West. It was tiresome. Granted, that Ms team was outstanding, but there's no fucking way they would have made the playoffs in the AL East, even with that pitching.
Moreover, the hagiography you're now seeing (appropriately) about Timmy Thomas was nothing compared to the knob-slobbing that Beane was getting from As fans, many of whom are Raider fan types. The combination of their bristling arrogance about how "we're so smarter than everyone else and we're going to win a world series LONG before the free-spending Red Sox do" (remember, we hadn't won shit) and the violent hostility at As games makes my first inclination to say "Hey, guess what, fucksticks? Money really does matter, and Beane wasn't actually 11 standard deviations smarter than everyone else. So fuck off and enjoy all those world series rings that Jeremy Brown won."
Edited by Gunfighter 09, 17 June 2011 - 08:16 PM.
Posted 17 June 2011 - 08:22 PM
Posted 18 June 2011 - 07:31 PM
I assumed your post was coming from something more than bullshit wine and cheese 49er fan snobbery/"I get scared when I go to Oakland" crybabyism, but I was wrong.
Posted 18 June 2011 - 10:14 PM
Looking back at their B-Ref pages, you're right; those AL West teams were significantly better than I remember them being. Mea Culpa.
As for this,
You can kind of fuck off. We've had this argument before, when basically anyone who points out that Oakland is really not the nicest place to go to watch a game gets accused by you of being a pussy, a snob, a racist, or all three. The difference is when I say something demonstrably wrong, I'll acknowledge it and retract, but you will never be convinced that I could be anything but a "whine and cheeser" who is "scared" of Oakland. No, dude - it just fucking sucks to watch games there. Whatever.
Edited by Gunfighter 09, 18 June 2011 - 10:25 PM.
Posted 03 July 2011 - 11:26 PM
Posted 05 July 2011 - 10:21 PM
Saw the new trailer for the Moneyball movie. Hadn't been following things and assumed it was dead after all the talk a couple of years back, but alive it is!
The trailer was actually surprisingly compelling. Will be interesting to see how the final product turns out, but was encouraging to see some evidence that they may try to preserve some of the key points of the book.
Pitt Oscar vehicle? Jonah Hill as Paul DePodesta? SABR goes Hollywood? All slightly strange, but looking forward to Sept 23.
Posted 02 August 2011 - 03:08 PM
Posted 03 August 2011 - 06:00 AM
Posted 03 August 2011 - 08:21 AM
I believe Billy Beane has said they would not have agreed to do the book if they knew how popular it would be for just this reason. They gave up their competitive advantage.Does anyone else wonder if the A's might have had more success over the past few years if they had kept the Moneyball concept quiet.
I realize other teams were going to do some similar stuff anyway. Still they haven't actually won anything...
Posted 14 September 2011 - 05:25 PM
Theres no way they'll spend a lot of money on popular, big name actors. They'll just find some washed up has beens or actors you've never heard off to cast the movie.
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