Javascript Menu by Deluxe-Menu.com

SKNBuzz Radio - Strictly Local Music Toon Center
My Account | Contact Us  

Our Partner For Official online store of the Phoenix Suns Jerseys

 Home  >  Headlines  >  ENTERTAINMENT
Posted: Friday 9 September, 2011 at 5:08 PM

Brad Pitt pitches 'Moneyball' at Toronto film festival

Actor Brad Pitt speaks onstage at "Moneyball" Press Conference during 2011 Toronto International Film Festival. Watching sports movies like "The Bad News Bears" and "North Dallas Forty" as a child helped Brad Pitt hit a homerun in the newest addition to t
By: Michel Comte, TORONTO (AFP)

    (Toronto, CAN) - Watching sports movies like "The Bad News Bears" and "North Dallas Forty" as a child helped Brad Pitt hit a homerun in the newest addition to the genre, "Moneyball," the actor said Friday.

     

    Directed by Bennett Miller ("Capote") the film based on Michael Lewis' 2003 best-selling book "Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game," about the resurgence of the Oakland A's baseball team. The movie premiered on Friday at the Toronto International Film Festival.

     

    "As a kid, I loved '(The) Bad News Bears,' Ben and I talked a lot about that one. And I had loved (North) Dallas Forty with Nick Nolte; I think it was the first R-rated movie I snuck into, so it has a special place in my heart," Pitt said.

     

    "The Bad News Bears" (1976) was about US little league baseball, while "North Dallas Forty" (1979) was about professional American football.

     

    In "Moneyball," Pitt plays Oakland A's general manager Billy Beane who turns to a chubby young statistician (Jonah Hill) with a radical new system to evaluate players and rebuild his gutted team after losing key members of his squad.

     

    The recruiting tool showed it was possible to put together a competitive team in the National Baseball League at a quarter of the cost.

     

    Critics widely praised Pitt's performance.

     

    Sports movies, said the actor, "traditionally work on some level (because they're about) winning, overcoming adversity. It's something in our DNA, it's why we love our sports heroes and our sports teams."

     

    At a press conference, Pitt lamented that his favorite American football team, the New Orleans Saints, had lost the previous evening to the world champion Green Bay Packers in the opening game of the National Football League's new season. "I was very disappointed, but so be it."

     

    Director Bennett Miller opined that audiences are keen on baseball movies -- the genre includes such greats as "Bull Durham," "Eight Men Out," "Bang the Drum Slowly" -- because the sport itself mimics life experiences.

     

    "There's no clock in baseball," he said. "It's not over until the thing is over. It's like life in that there are prolonged periods of boredom and monotony and punctuated by extreme excitement and sometimes terror."

     

    "I think that's kind of like life," Miller said.

     

Copyright © 2025 SKNVibes, Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy   Terms of Service