









Product Description Brad Pitt stars in this film about Oakland A's general manager Billy Beane and his attempt to put together a baseball club on a budget by employing computer-generated analysis to draft his players. desertcart.com It's amazing that Moneyball makes baseball statistics seem fascinating--but that's because it's not really a movie about numbers, and it's not really a movie about baseball, either. It's about what drives people to take risks--in this instance, Billy Beane (played by Brad Pitt), general manager of the Oakland A's, who's just had his best players poached by teams that can afford to pay a lot more. Fed up with how money twists the game, he listens to Peter Brand (Jonah Hill), who persuades him that certain players are being undervalued for trivial reasons--that statistics reveal hidden strengths that could, when used in the right combinations, produce a winning season. Beane takes Brand's advice, then has to fight everyone else around him to follow it through. Moneyball skillfully takes the audience into Beane's psyche. Pitt is in excellent form; it's an understated but magnetic performance, the kind that rarely wins awards but should. Pitt has the physical presence of a former athlete and vividly expresses the mind of a man who's never achieved success but isn't ready to give up. Director Bennett Miller (Capote) shapes the supporting cast (Hill, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Robin Wright, and others less recognizable but just as solid) as carefully as Beane shapes his team. Miller has a few flashy (and highly effective) moments of sound manipulation and editing, but Moneyball is carried by its superb performances. --Bret Fetzer Review: Great movie - Even if you've never heard of the amazing 20-win streak of the Oakland Athletics, or Sabermetrics, this is just a good film. The entire sport and the conflict over the rise of statistic-driven baseball is told through a framing device where general manager Billy Beane (Brad Pitt) struggles to balance work and life during a momentous time in his career. At the end of the day, all he really wants is for his daughter to be proud of him. Any audience can understand that. The short version of the sports part of the plot is that even though baseball fans have always been obsessed with statistics, some economists and mathematicians figured out that the stats everyone focused on didn't correspond very well to wins. A new field- now referred to as Sabermetrics- was developed in an attempt to generate a new mathematical method for determining which factors of a game actually affect win rate. In short, "old" baseball relied on gut feeling and good looks. A player who looked strong and handsome and hit a lot of home runs was everyone's top pick. The New York Yankees spent hundreds of millions developing these sorts of players, since their nearly unlimited funding meant they could buy all the best talent. Meanwhile at the Oakland Athletics team where we meet Billy Beane, they couldn't afford much of anything. Instead, they had to use their limited resources to try and generate an edge. The new field of Sabermetrics told them that looks didn't really generate wins. What generated wins- in a very simplified form- was for batters to be very picking about when they swing at, and then get on base reliably. The best possible hitter wasn't someone who tried to hit a home run every time (home run hitters often have lousy averages). The best hitter was someone who would stand at the plate watching 3 balls and 2 strikes go by, and only then get a hit or a walk to first base. Repeat this over the course of the lineup, and you get reliable scoring, not to mention the pitchers get tired and have to be changed out for second- or third- rate replacements more quickly. The Oakland A's went on to generate the longest winning streak in the history of baseball, using relatively cheap players that nobody wanted, playing a style of baseball that people called boring. They even beat the Yankees on a few occasions, despite spending a fraction of the money to do so. The A's even made it to the doorstep of the World Series before finally losing- which as the statistics show- was probably just a fluke. There's so much to love about this film. There's an interesting core story- how a revolution in thinking changed baseball. There's a great human story of Billy Beane negotiating his life between the stress of his job and his home life. There are also a ton of great actors. Brad Pitt as Billy Beane is great. Jonah Hill plays his breakthrough role as Peter Brand, a hodgepodge representing sabermetrics figures of the time including Paul DePodesta. There's Phillip Seymour Hoffman, Robin Wright, and Chris Pratt. I'll give a special mention to Chris Pratt. Not only was this one of his first big roles, but his character Scott Hatteberg is amazing and crucial. Scott Hatteberg was totally washed-up under the old baseball system. He was a catcher who had a nerve problem which caused him to lose sensation in his fingers, making it impossible for him to throw the ball reliably to second base. He was done. That is, until the A's saw that Hatteberg had a habit of getting to first base every time he went up to bat, which went unnoticed since Hatteberg no longer "looked" like a good player. I won't spoil the movie for you but let me quote a line from the book, which says that if the A's could have stocked a team with people who could hit like Scott Hatteberg, they would have been projected to win every single game of the season including the World Series. This movie is therefore also a big story about redemption, and underdogs. It's beautiful. Review: I have no idea why I loved this movie, and yet, I did. Possibly, by accident. Which is how I saw the movie in the first place. - First. I am not a sports fan. I am a stadium junk food fan, but, according to my boyfriend, that is apparently not the same thing as being a sports fan. Whatevers. But then, I was going to iPic to see a movie, which was sold out, and I don't even remember what it was, and this movie was playing just at that time and frankly, i didn't even bother to see what movie it was, I just heard 'Brad Pitt' and I was like 'Yes, please.' And really, 'Moneyball'? How am I supposed to guess it's a sports movie, right? So, I was there. I watched it. Hooked from the first few minutes, really. Maybe it's because I like math and it's as much a math movie as it is a baseball movie. Well, it's not, but let's pretend it is. There is a line in the movie about baseball that I wouldn't have gotten before I saw this movie. Billy Beane says, "How can you not get romantic about baseball?" If you had told me that this line was said in a sports movie in a non-self-mocking way, I would have snorted and dismissed the comment. But now, I kinda get it. Kinda. Frankly, I still go to the games to watch the stretching and to eat garlic fries and Dippin' Dots. Woohoo! But now, I acknowledge the possibility that there might be other reasons why people might go. As to the "what about the movie?!?" portion of this review - Brief synopsis: So, Billy Beane hires Peter, an economics wiz from Yale (and apparent Baseball Fanatic) to help him put together a team that doesn't completely suck on a shoestring budget. And that's what they do. In a tremendous overkill type way. Great points: * I dislike Jonah Hill in virtually all of his movies. When I saw him in this movie, I realized that I had been wrong. It was the characters in his other movies that I hated. Jonah Hill himself is (apparently) a fine actor and was brilliant in this role as a high-functioning geek (FYI: High-functioning geeks are much like high-functioning sociopaths but with fewer manners and with less of the complete lack of morality). * Brad Pitt was also amazing. He was not in anyway heart-throb-y, which made him all the more heart-throb-y in my book. I mean, how can you not like a guy who turns down a bajillion dollars because he is loyal to his loser-ish team and because he doesn't want to leave the state that houses his daughter? Nice, right? Yah. I thought so as well. * Amazing acting by supporting roles, not the least of which being the greatly missed Philip Seymour Hoffman. * Chris Pratt of Guardians of the Galaxy fame also makes an appearance as Scott Hatteberg in one of the more touching scenes in the movies. Here again, was an example where I was surprised by the depth of a performance by an actor I had pretty much written off as a character actor, mainly put in to movies for laughs. My bad on that one, Chris. Oh, and Jonah. You both rocked it in this movie. In serious roles, yet. Kudos. Not-so-great: * The amazingly talented Robin Wright has not had luck in finding movie or roles that best display her talents, and this was another one. Brilliant movie but she was under-used as the ex-wife of Billy Beane. * Music soundtrack not the best. An amusing song (fictionally authored) by Billy Beane's daughter aside. On the other hand, this wasn't a movie where the soundtrack was pivotal (unlike say, in any superhero movie made, ever), so I give it a pass. *Not a lot of baseball players stretching on screen, which was kind of a let down for me since this was, in fact, a *baseball* movie. And, as mentioned previously, one of the two reasons I go to games in the first place. Hmmm..... Conclusion: All-in-all an excellent film. Great for sports-lovers and sports-meh-ers alike. As to the rating (for those who are sensitive to those things), there are some obscenities which is why this is PG13, but it was in keeping with the locker-room setting of the movie and so entirely appropriate. At no point did I roll my eyes and say 'Ah! The f-bomb. That must indicate the character is tough / angry / hungry / under 25, etc.' I have a pet peeve about gratuitous swearing being used in place of actual dialog. That was not the case in this movie.

| ASIN | B0060ZJ7BC |
| Actors | Brad Pitt, Jonah Hill, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Robin Wright |
| Aspect Ratio | 1.85:1 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #3,612 in Movies & TV ( See Top 100 in Movies & TV ) #17 in Sports (Movies & TV) #453 in Drama DVDs |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (12,945) |
| Director | Bennett Miller |
| Dubbed: | French, Spanish |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item model number | MFR043396392250#VG |
| MPAA rating | PG-13 (Parents Strongly Cautioned) |
| Media Format | DVD |
| Number of discs | 1 |
| Producers | Brad Pitt, Michael De Luca, Rachael Horovitz |
| Product Dimensions | 0.6 x 5.4 x 7.6 inches; 2.4 ounces |
| Release date | January 10, 2012 |
| Run time | 2 hours and 13 minutes |
| Studio | Sony Pictures Home Entertainment |
| Subtitles: | English, French, Korean, Mandarin Chinese, Spanish |
P**L
Great movie
Even if you've never heard of the amazing 20-win streak of the Oakland Athletics, or Sabermetrics, this is just a good film. The entire sport and the conflict over the rise of statistic-driven baseball is told through a framing device where general manager Billy Beane (Brad Pitt) struggles to balance work and life during a momentous time in his career. At the end of the day, all he really wants is for his daughter to be proud of him. Any audience can understand that. The short version of the sports part of the plot is that even though baseball fans have always been obsessed with statistics, some economists and mathematicians figured out that the stats everyone focused on didn't correspond very well to wins. A new field- now referred to as Sabermetrics- was developed in an attempt to generate a new mathematical method for determining which factors of a game actually affect win rate. In short, "old" baseball relied on gut feeling and good looks. A player who looked strong and handsome and hit a lot of home runs was everyone's top pick. The New York Yankees spent hundreds of millions developing these sorts of players, since their nearly unlimited funding meant they could buy all the best talent. Meanwhile at the Oakland Athletics team where we meet Billy Beane, they couldn't afford much of anything. Instead, they had to use their limited resources to try and generate an edge. The new field of Sabermetrics told them that looks didn't really generate wins. What generated wins- in a very simplified form- was for batters to be very picking about when they swing at, and then get on base reliably. The best possible hitter wasn't someone who tried to hit a home run every time (home run hitters often have lousy averages). The best hitter was someone who would stand at the plate watching 3 balls and 2 strikes go by, and only then get a hit or a walk to first base. Repeat this over the course of the lineup, and you get reliable scoring, not to mention the pitchers get tired and have to be changed out for second- or third- rate replacements more quickly. The Oakland A's went on to generate the longest winning streak in the history of baseball, using relatively cheap players that nobody wanted, playing a style of baseball that people called boring. They even beat the Yankees on a few occasions, despite spending a fraction of the money to do so. The A's even made it to the doorstep of the World Series before finally losing- which as the statistics show- was probably just a fluke. There's so much to love about this film. There's an interesting core story- how a revolution in thinking changed baseball. There's a great human story of Billy Beane negotiating his life between the stress of his job and his home life. There are also a ton of great actors. Brad Pitt as Billy Beane is great. Jonah Hill plays his breakthrough role as Peter Brand, a hodgepodge representing sabermetrics figures of the time including Paul DePodesta. There's Phillip Seymour Hoffman, Robin Wright, and Chris Pratt. I'll give a special mention to Chris Pratt. Not only was this one of his first big roles, but his character Scott Hatteberg is amazing and crucial. Scott Hatteberg was totally washed-up under the old baseball system. He was a catcher who had a nerve problem which caused him to lose sensation in his fingers, making it impossible for him to throw the ball reliably to second base. He was done. That is, until the A's saw that Hatteberg had a habit of getting to first base every time he went up to bat, which went unnoticed since Hatteberg no longer "looked" like a good player. I won't spoil the movie for you but let me quote a line from the book, which says that if the A's could have stocked a team with people who could hit like Scott Hatteberg, they would have been projected to win every single game of the season including the World Series. This movie is therefore also a big story about redemption, and underdogs. It's beautiful.
W**K
I have no idea why I loved this movie, and yet, I did. Possibly, by accident. Which is how I saw the movie in the first place.
First. I am not a sports fan. I am a stadium junk food fan, but, according to my boyfriend, that is apparently not the same thing as being a sports fan. Whatevers. But then, I was going to iPic to see a movie, which was sold out, and I don't even remember what it was, and this movie was playing just at that time and frankly, i didn't even bother to see what movie it was, I just heard 'Brad Pitt' and I was like 'Yes, please.' And really, 'Moneyball'? How am I supposed to guess it's a sports movie, right? So, I was there. I watched it. Hooked from the first few minutes, really. Maybe it's because I like math and it's as much a math movie as it is a baseball movie. Well, it's not, but let's pretend it is. There is a line in the movie about baseball that I wouldn't have gotten before I saw this movie. Billy Beane says, "How can you not get romantic about baseball?" If you had told me that this line was said in a sports movie in a non-self-mocking way, I would have snorted and dismissed the comment. But now, I kinda get it. Kinda. Frankly, I still go to the games to watch the stretching and to eat garlic fries and Dippin' Dots. Woohoo! But now, I acknowledge the possibility that there might be other reasons why people might go. As to the "what about the movie?!?" portion of this review - Brief synopsis: So, Billy Beane hires Peter, an economics wiz from Yale (and apparent Baseball Fanatic) to help him put together a team that doesn't completely suck on a shoestring budget. And that's what they do. In a tremendous overkill type way. Great points: * I dislike Jonah Hill in virtually all of his movies. When I saw him in this movie, I realized that I had been wrong. It was the characters in his other movies that I hated. Jonah Hill himself is (apparently) a fine actor and was brilliant in this role as a high-functioning geek (FYI: High-functioning geeks are much like high-functioning sociopaths but with fewer manners and with less of the complete lack of morality). * Brad Pitt was also amazing. He was not in anyway heart-throb-y, which made him all the more heart-throb-y in my book. I mean, how can you not like a guy who turns down a bajillion dollars because he is loyal to his loser-ish team and because he doesn't want to leave the state that houses his daughter? Nice, right? Yah. I thought so as well. * Amazing acting by supporting roles, not the least of which being the greatly missed Philip Seymour Hoffman. * Chris Pratt of Guardians of the Galaxy fame also makes an appearance as Scott Hatteberg in one of the more touching scenes in the movies. Here again, was an example where I was surprised by the depth of a performance by an actor I had pretty much written off as a character actor, mainly put in to movies for laughs. My bad on that one, Chris. Oh, and Jonah. You both rocked it in this movie. In serious roles, yet. Kudos. Not-so-great: * The amazingly talented Robin Wright has not had luck in finding movie or roles that best display her talents, and this was another one. Brilliant movie but she was under-used as the ex-wife of Billy Beane. * Music soundtrack not the best. An amusing song (fictionally authored) by Billy Beane's daughter aside. On the other hand, this wasn't a movie where the soundtrack was pivotal (unlike say, in any superhero movie made, ever), so I give it a pass. *Not a lot of baseball players stretching on screen, which was kind of a let down for me since this was, in fact, a *baseball* movie. And, as mentioned previously, one of the two reasons I go to games in the first place. Hmmm..... Conclusion: All-in-all an excellent film. Great for sports-lovers and sports-meh-ers alike. As to the rating (for those who are sensitive to those things), there are some obscenities which is why this is PG13, but it was in keeping with the locker-room setting of the movie and so entirely appropriate. At no point did I roll my eyes and say 'Ah! The f-bomb. That must indicate the character is tough / angry / hungry / under 25, etc.' I have a pet peeve about gratuitous swearing being used in place of actual dialog. That was not the case in this movie.
P**S
Great movie for baseball and economists alike!
This is a great storyline for any baseball enthusiast or mathematician who is excited about the history of modern baseball and how it has changed with statistics and using more science rather than intuition to determine which way to grow or modify a team in order to win more games great movie great acting great quality Copy!
A**R
A high-quality version of a true life story that is entertaining and interesting
I thought maybe this movie would be somewhat of a boring look at the business side of baseball. I was pleasantly surprised to discover that it had some real heart and also involved an intimate look at the experiences of some of the characters. This movie is based on the true story of the Oakland Athletics of the early 2000s who found some success as a small-market, low-budget team through the use of statistical analysis and the signing of unconventional but affordable players. The main character is the general manager who is forced to try something different and happens to discover a number cruncher while visiting another team during the off season. Along the way we get to meet a few of the players for that season and experience some of the highs and lows of the team such as a poor start to the season which eventually transformed into a record-breaking string of victories and an unexpected but bittersweet trip to the post season. This movie was interesting enough to make me want to read up on the real-life characters in the movie and the statistical techniques that changed the world of baseball signings. If you have even the slightest interest in baseball, this is a movie you will like. It is well-written, well-acted and well-filmed.
D**E
Good movie to see again
A**R
A movie you'll like if you like sports or you like maths. If you happen to like both maths and sports, you HAVE to watch it.
A**N
After playing 3 times..CD was stuck and i am not happy with the CD quality..I do not recommend this CD to the new buyers
T**T
Mit diesem Satz verabschiedet sich Baseballtrainer Billy Beane(Brad Pitt) von der Distanz zu seinem Team und schaltet um auf Nähe. Für ihn, ein spektakulärer Schritt, und das obwohl Beane ansonsten ein Mann der klaren Worte, Fronten und Vorstellungen ist. Doch im Spieljahr 2001, als Beanes Team, die Oakland Athletics, fast Meister geworden wären, ändert sich alles. Drei Top-Spieler verlassen den Verein und für große Neueinkäufe fehlt schlichtweg das Geld. Beane erkennt, dass "sein" Sport ungerecht ist. Aber anstatt auf seine Scouts zu hören und für vielversprechende Spieler Geld auszugeben, dass er nicht hat, wagt Beane den Sprung ins Baseball-Neuland. Beane kauft den jungen Wirtschaftsabsolventen Peter Brand(Jonah Hill) für das Team. Der glaubt an eine statistische Formel, die es ermöglichen soll aus Spielern, deren Fähigkeiten durch normales Scouting nie entdeckt werden, ein schlagkräftiges Team zu machen. Bei Beane trifft Brand auf Verständnis, egal wie schräg und unkonventionell seine analytischen Rechnungen auch sein mögen. Für die Old-School Scouts in Oakland rütteln Brand und Beane jedoch an den Grundpfeilern des Sports. Auch Trainer Art Howe(Philip Seymour Hoffman) kann sich keinen Deut mit diesem System anfreunden. So starten die Oakland Atheltics schlecht in die Saison. Trainer, Mannschaft und Manager passen irgendwie nicht zusammen. Das Ergebnis sind Niederlagen. Erst als Beane, früher selbst ein vielversprechender Baseballspieler, den Spielern klar macht, wie sich verlieren anhört, geht ein Ruck durchs Team... Ach, wie schön war das denn? Ein guter, gefühlvoller Baseballfilm. Wer auf -Der Unbeugsame- steht -Das Feld der Träume- liebte und noch immer eine Gänsehaut bekommt, wenn er an -Aus Liebe zum Spiel- denkt, der ist bei -Moneyball- genau richtig. Der Film bezieht, wie die genannten Beispiele, seine magischen Momente nicht aus den Spielszenen des Sports heraus, sondern aus dem Universum von Kleinigkeiten, das den Baseball umgibt. Dabei geht es eher um Philosophie, als um Sport. Wie sich Jonah Hill und Brad Pitt die Bälle der Story zuspielen, das ist schlichtweg genial. Dabei braucht Bennet Millers Film eine gute halbe Stunde, bis er in die Erzählspur gleitet. Doch ab dem Moment, wo Beane seinen Scouts die Regeln für die neue Saison erklärt, gibt es kein Halten mehr. Dann rauscht die Geschichte wie ein Sturzbach dem Ende entgegen. -Moneyball-, nach dem Roman von Michael Lewis, beruht auf wahren Begebenheiten. Es ist eine dieser Sportgeschichten, bei der es nicht auf das Ende ankommt. Der Weg ist das Ziel, wenn Beane und Brand versuchen ihre Philosophie des Spiels umzusetzen. Das muss nicht gelingen, aber es wäre eine Schande, hätten sie es nicht versucht. -Moneyball- ist mit einigen Originalaufnahmen gespickt, um die Realität der Geschichte noch ein Stück herauszuheben. Das ist wunderbar gelungen, wäre aber vermutlich nicht nötig gewesen, denn: Was Brad Pitt und Jonah Hill hier vor der Kamera zeigen, dass ist Realität pur. Genau so sollte gutes Schauspiel sein. Wenn dazu noch Drehbuch und Kamera stimmen, dann kann die Magie des Mediums Film die Regentschaft übernehmen. Bei -Moneyball- passiert genau das!
P**D
Très bon film parfait super heureux
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