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Bennett Miller, 'Moneyball' Director, On His Non-Baseball Baseball Movie

Brad Bennett

First Posted: 09/12/11 07:55 AM ET Updated: 11/12/11 05:12 AM ET

Bennett Miller was not much of a baseball fan; outside of a brief flash of interest at the Yankees' revival in the mid-90s, the 44-year old New York native insists that hadn't paid attention to the sport since he was 14-years old. As it turns out, it was that disinterest in the game that helped him rescue a languishing blockbuster film about one of the sport's greatest visionaries.

When Miller, a 2005 Oscar-nominee for 2005's "Capote," got wind that the "Moneyball" director's chair was open, he wasn't very much aware that the seat had already been well-warmed by Oscar winner Steven Soderbergh. But unlike Soderbergh's aborted plan, which was to make a semi-documentary about Oakland A's general manager Billy Beane's revolutionary, statistics-based approach to the sport, Miller envisioned a full-blown narrative feature. Yes, the vessel would be the major shift in baseball player evaluation that Beane helped shepherd into the mainstream, but the true story would be about his drive to succeed in a way that exorcised the demons that still haunted him from his disappointing run as a player.

That Beane is a real person, and not just a character to infuse with convenient backstory and motivation, required that the filmmaker strike a careful balance of fact and fiction.

"I was interested in telling the story that's going to make a good movie, that respected the essential truth of his character, of who he is, and essentially what happened," Miller explained, allowing that he was willing to bend certain details to create a better narrative. "He's not the kind of guy who likes to bare his soul to somebody that's doing something that could possibly be construed as an exposé, but we did spend a bunch of time with him and get to know him, and of course, Michael Lewis' book illuminates the things that are portrayed in the movie, about his past, the failure to live up to expectations."

A first round draft pick of the Mets in 1979, Beane was considered a can't miss prospect, talented in all facets of the game. His performance fell far short of his potential, though, and after a hitting just .219 in 148 games over six seasons, he moved over to management. In the film's timeline, Beane was greatly troubled by his failure, and when his cash-poor team was poached of its big stars and he had to "adapt or die" and find a new way to make a winner, he got the chance to rewrite his past and author a new chapter in baseball.

In this telling, then, portraying Beane demanded more than a business suit and a command of complicated mathematical and baseball jargon. The film's Beane is, on the outside, a fast-talking and cocksure character, with his angst serving as a subtext that, aside from a number of brief flashback scenes, is authored in glances and facial expressions the rest of the way. Having pushed the project from the start, Pitt stretched himself to capture the duality for which the role called.

"I think it's a different kind of role for him," Miller offered. "And I think that Brad possesses these two dimensions that we're talking about: the charismatic public persona, and also the private, guarded, driven and perhaps more hidden traits of an ambitious character. And so, it's not an easy thing to do, especially because the latter thing happens obliquely, it's never explicitly stated. He never comes out in the scene and says, 'Oh, I really want this because I failed.' It had to come across in different frequencies, and he did the job."

Intentions of inner-turmoil and character established, where does that non-baseball baseball film get told, then? It's a question Miller asked of himself and screenwriters Aaron Sorkin and Steven Zaillian as they decided how best to bring to life drama that had elements of sport, business and personal reckoning running throughout.

"You want to remember the story that you're telling, and where does the movie end?" Miller asked rhetorically, explaining how they worked to break down how much to show of each disparate setting. "What do you get to? What's the last moment of the film meant to feel like, what's it meant to deliver? Then you can reverse-engineer from that and approach it from a perspective of, is this serving to build to this?"

Their decision shouldn't be surprising. "To the degree that baseball served the story and could be an expression of the drama, it's in there," Miller said, "but hopefully not a frame more."

Indeed, it would have been hard to include any fewer on-field scenes in the film. The last remnant's of Soderbergh's documentary show up in snippets of footage archived from the real team's magical late-season run in 2002, and a few scenes featuring the on-screen versions of the handful of unlikely A's players that Beane championed and whose journeys the film highlights. For the most part, the scenes come in brief anecdotal glimpses, a pitch here, a swing there, a few jubilant pile-ons to quickly establish that this miracle turnaround is underway.

Still, the real Billy Beane's day job -- which, as he told the Huffington Post in Toronto, he "enjoys very much" -- is baseball; the sport is the entire focus. His goal, beyond reorganizing the values of the sport's talent evaluation system, is to win a championship. It would seem that a perfect Hollywood ending, like in so many sports movies to come before it, would see his team reach that ultimate glory. But in the hard reality of hardball, it's something that, for all his success, has yet to happen.

Which is why Miller made the film in the first place.

"I think had they gone to the World Series and won the World Series, there would be no movie there for me. I think it's, you know, a perfect world as it happened," he said, continuing, "I was not interested in the convention or the trope of the big victory, of the bright and fast burn of the ultimate triumph of them winning the game, and the excitement and just that ephemeral catharsis. This is not a movie that concedes to those conventions or tropes."

Instead, it's that lack of victory parade that allows Miller's Beane to finally move forward.

"It's a drama about a guy who thinks he is trying to win baseball games, who imagines that's the most important thing, has come to believe that in order to be okay with who he is, this thing has to happen," the director explained. "And it ends up being a classic wisdom story, a King Arthur type of thing. You know, get the grail and all will be restored to order. And of course, it's an impossible task but it's the actual journey of the thing that teaches the lesson that needs to be learned. And so you never quite get your hand right around it, but you realize, it's not about the grail."

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Bennett Miller was not much of a baseball fan; outside of a brief flash of interest at the Yankees' revival in the mid-90s, the 44-year old New York native insists that hadn't paid attention to the sp...
Bennett Miller was not much of a baseball fan; outside of a brief flash of interest at the Yankees' revival in the mid-90s, the 44-year old New York native insists that hadn't paid attention to the sp...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dre31
12:58 PM on 09/14/2011
I want to see this.. I think Brad is cute...
10:19 PM on 09/13/2011
Pretty face, mediocre actor.
03:17 PM on 09/13/2011
Oscar talk, about Brad Pitt??? Hmmmm, maybe, but then I remember "The Mexican" and I return to reality. They said the same thing about him in "The Tree of Life", that turned out to be a bust.

He's ok (Seven was pretty good, and he was good in Ocean's eleven, but that was years ago.), but Hollywood's anointed golden boy oscar worthy? Nah, don't think so.
08:36 PM on 09/13/2011
It's not about Pitt winning an Oscar. It's about the director.
03:12 PM on 09/13/2011
he deserves an Oscar.
02:54 PM on 09/13/2011
Brad Pitt is just not a likeable guy. He's not even a decent actor, so all this Oscar talk....I'm not buying it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cybesq
02:57 PM on 09/13/2011
Have you seen the movie? I have. It's good and his performance is Oscar worthy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PoliticalJunkie65
"Buzzinga!"
08:00 PM on 09/13/2011
Get over the jilted thing and you will be a lot happier.
Karama
Procrastinator
10:34 PM on 09/13/2011
http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6081/6144047895_b7e54df2ea_z.jpg

(credit neleh from jjb)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DogTown
Your micro-bio is empty
02:29 PM on 09/13/2011
Brad Pitt and Oscar in the same sentence...I think not!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
UncleJimbo
BLANK!
07:55 PM on 09/13/2011
I bet he could play a Good "Oscar Madison" in an "Odd Couple" Remake!.....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PoliticalJunkie65
"Buzzinga!"
08:01 PM on 09/13/2011
Says you.
02:02 PM on 09/13/2011
Brad looks so unpolished lately -- maybe he's going for the Kurt Cobain look, but
Kurt, even with the stubble, never looked grimey.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PoliticalJunkie65
"Buzzinga!"
08:02 PM on 09/13/2011
HELLO he's doing a movie about zombies and the end of the world stuff, he is supposed to look scruffy.

Geez, get over the whole jilted thing ok?
Karama
Procrastinator
10:18 PM on 09/13/2011
There are so many pictures, but not here in HP.
Karama
Procrastinator
10:26 PM on 09/13/2011
http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6078/6142571626_b2eb8e9661_b.jpg
(credit dulcinea13)
02:01 PM on 09/13/2011
This story has been a headline on the HuffPost for days, and I don't think Mr. Pitt is any closer at all to that Oscar. But, someone apparently wants to help him win it by keeping the story on here as long as possible.
12:16 PM on 09/13/2011
I think the entire story is crap. The effort to lead baseball teams better by using statistics was not invented in Oakland. It was launched by Earl Weaver in Baltimore. That's how he won all those pennants with players everyone else rejected.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
jl4141
Unless I'm wrong, I'm never wrong.
11:26 AM on 09/13/2011
Just don't go full retard and you're golden.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
UncleJimbo
BLANK!
07:56 PM on 09/13/2011
"Tropic Thunder" Reference?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:23 AM on 09/13/2011
Oh brother ... another HP writer in love with Pitt. Me, not so much (in fact, not at all)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Thomas Bradley
10:50 AM on 09/13/2011
Thank you for sharing.
10:53 AM on 09/13/2011
I have a man crush on Brad Pitt.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
05:56 PM on 09/13/2011
Ew ... but, yeah, whatever ..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PoliticalJunkie65
"Buzzinga!"
08:03 PM on 09/13/2011
Word man, word.
07:56 AM on 09/13/2011
Pitt is just another pretty (greasy) boy
10:58 AM on 09/13/2011
Brad Pitt is not a pretty boy. He's done more for hurricane Katrina victims with his hands than the US gov or any other non-profit organization has done. He's a man's man. A man's good looks doesn't make him better or less of a person.

Sincerely,
Kim Jong-Il
08:38 PM on 09/13/2011
Pitt is kitty whipped. He and the children travel with a live in psychiatrist.
07:36 AM on 09/13/2011
When did Pitt get the double chin?
12:15 PM on 09/13/2011
Gravity doesn't cease to exist simply because one wants it to avoid their own face...
07:19 AM on 09/14/2011
Pitt's plastic surgeon screwed up. Well now Pitt can make a few bucks on the flub.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
J Owen Williams
My micro-bio is empty
02:25 AM on 09/13/2011
Jonah Hill lost all that weight and gained it right back, its really too bad.
02:47 AM on 09/13/2011
I'm assuming that you are not joking, by making an some sort of ironic comment (movies are filmed well in advance of their release date not the week before opening).

Moneyball was filmed last fall and Jonah Hill's The Sitter (comes out Nov/Dec) was also filmed last year as well. 21 Jump Street for which he lost weight for just wrapped. He's been in Toronto for Moneyball premiere, he has not gained his weight back.
03:07 AM on 09/13/2011
You are aware that movies are shot a year or so in advance of their release, right?

He hasn't gained the weight back. He shot a movie and lost the weight since then.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MsLizabeth
Flaming liberal, burned out attorney
12:36 AM on 09/13/2011
I haven't read the article. I just saw the photo. I want to nibble on that collarbone.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MsLizabeth
Flaming liberal, burned out attorney
01:13 AM on 09/13/2011
Now that I have read the article and seen the video, it sounds like a good movie. Jonah Hill is a pleasant surprise.
07:57 AM on 09/13/2011
Any other parts?