Showing posts with label Moneyball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Moneyball. Show all posts

Monday, February 20, 2012

Academy Awards Week: Best Adapted Screenplay

Image DetailWelcome to Academy Award week!  I will be taking an in depth look at some of the categories that make the Academy Awards tick.  The first category is Best Adapted Screenplay. The Adapted Screenplay prize is one of the most coveted awards of the night.  This award honors films who have adapted source material from books, plays, television shows, short plays, and even other films. If an original film has a sequel good enough to make it in the screenplay category (I do not think it has ever happened) they would have to be nominated in the Best Adapted Screenplay category because the film would be based on the first film.

Throughout the years this award has become incredibly competitive as more and more films seem to be based on other material.  While the quality in the Best Original Screenplay category seems to peak and valley every year, the Adapted Screenplay category has seemed to stay strong picking screenplays with strong writing, which are based on some solid material.  The interesting thing about this year has been that it feels as though Hollywood did a much better job with the original work than it did with adapting screenplays.  While the five nominees as pretty strong this year, picking five original screenplays seems to have been a tough task.

Past winners in this category have been It Happened One Night (1934), Gone With the Wind (1939), Casablanca (1942), To Kill a Mockingbird  (1962), The Godfather (1972), and The Silence of Lambs (1991).  Although 5 out of the 6 of these films are Best Picture winners only about 35 films out of the 83 years went on to win Best Picture.  The Adapted Screenplay trophy tends to go to well written films like Sideways (2004), which the Academy like but to enough to win the Best Picture category.  Many times the the screenplay awards become a consolation prize, and I think history will repeat itself again this year, ironically with another Alexander Payne film.

The nominees for this years Best Adapted Screenplay category are:

The Descendants-Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon, and Jim Rash
Hugo-John Logan
The Ides of March-George Clooney, Grant Heslov, and Beau Willimon
Moneyball-Aaron Sorkin and Steven Zaillian, Stan Chervin
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy-Bridget O'Connor and Peter Straughan

This past weekend The Descendants gained a lot of ground in this category winning both the Scripter and the WGA for Best Adapted Screenplay.  Winning the Scripter does not always mean you will win Oscar, mainly because its decided by USC, but winning at the Writer's Guild and Scripter is a pretty good sign.  The Descendants is nominated for 5 Oscars, and while Clooney was a favorite to win Best Actor in the beginning it looks like Jean Dujardin will be swept up in The Artist sweep.  This Best Adapted Screenplay will be a consolation prize for this film.

What about the other nominees?  Moneyball would be my personal pick, it's one of the sharpest screenplays this year.  Moneyball is also written by two of the best screenwriters today, which makes sense.  If a film is going to spoil it's going to be this one.  Tinker Tailor is an impressive screenplay because it has taken an incredibly long book that was made into mini-series at one point and makes one great film.  Ides has a decent screenplay, but it has no shot.  I am not a huge fan of Hugo's screenplay, in fact I think it is one of the weaker elements of this film.  Hugo's wins will come in some of the technical categories.

Will Win: The Descendants
Should Win: Moneyball

Monday, February 6, 2012

2011 Top Ten Films of the Year

I know this list is late, but here are my top ten films of 2011.  This took a lot of effort and energy, and I hope you agree and disagree, but I made this list to spark conversation.  I finally saw all the movies I needed to make this list.


1-The Tree of Life-Like, Love or even hate this film this is potentially the most admirable film of the year.  Director Terrence Malick made this a passion project for many many years, and the end result is a breathtaking  film experience that transcends all other films this year. Malick's direction is the best of the year he works hard to create a piece of work that has so many layers it will take me years upon years to study and understand the depth to his work.  While in my review I did call this self indulgent (and I still think it is for at least 10 minutes) it still takes film to a different level that films rarely achieve.  Emmanuel Lubezski did the cinematography for the film, and I was blown away.  Lubezski's cinematography is some of the best shot work I have ever seen!

The film is mostly a visual experience, but the performances of the main cast add to this visual strong work.  Hunter McCracken is the best younger performance of the year; he said more with his face than many actors say with hundred of lines. Prior to this year I have to say I admired Brad Pitt for his comedic acting like in Burn After Reading or the Ocean's films but never thought he had the chops to do drama.  This film (along with Moneyball) changed my mind.  Malick brought out the strongest Pitt  role to date as the father with a long suffering relationship with his wife and sons.  This role is so complex and layered that it impressed me.  In her first mention on this list, Jessica Chastain gives a quietly subtle performance as Pitt's wife, and she is incredible!

This film is a spiritual experience that chronicles a families journey through paralleled experiences with the beginning of time.  In true Malick style the film has very little dialogue, but it does not use this as a gimmick.  This is the better quiet film of the year.

2-Take Shelter-The most under rated film of 2011, is the second best film of the year.  This coarse film about a man who fears he is succumbing to his mental illness like his mother, or are the visions he is having a signal of the end of days?  Jeff Nichols direction and screenplay are phenomenal; he captures this dark terse emotional breakdown of Simon (Michael Shannon).  Shannon is an excellent actor, and his performance in this film takes this film to another level; his visions/dreams create a haunting painful experience that starts to tear him away from his family and friends.  Jessica Chastain plays his suffering wife Samantha, in her strongest role of the year (and least talked about); she takes her performance to a whole different level  Chastain is more than the wife dealing with her husbands potential psychosis; she is the epitome of a strong female character.  The script and acting get most of the credit for making this film great, but the cinematography in the scenes where Curtis is seeing his different visions like the flock of birds creates a bitter chill that creeps up your spine.


3-Drive-The second most under rated film (by award shows) is a beautifully shot, directed, acted, and scored film entitled Drive.  Drive is about a nameless character played by Ryan Gosling that is both a driver for stunts on films, and has aided in helping men in robberies.  The opening sequence of this film helps set the frame for brilliant direction from Nicholas Winding Refn and the palpable cinematography from Newton Thomas Sigel.  Refn's direction won him Best Director at the Cannes Film Festival, a prize he deserved.  Refn's work pieces together the strength of the screenplay along with Sigel's cinematography to create a strong well plotted, and deep action film.  My two favorite things about this film (besides the fact that it stars the incredibly versatile Ryan Gosling) are the score from Cliff Martinez and the dark supporting performance from Albert Brooks.  Martinez's score was ruled ineligible by the Academy to compete for the Oscars, but in my opinion this was the best score of the year.  Martinez seemed to listen to Brook's character Bernie Rose when he stated "I used to produce movies. In the 80s. Kind of like action films. Sexy stuff. One critic called them European. I thought they were shit."  The score and the credit sequence capture this embellished 80s style.  Brooks is the best supporting performance of the year; he is dark, yet comical and works with great ease. What a great film with a wonderful lead performance from Gosling that makes this film near perfection. 



4-Shame-A raw powerfully emotional film that delves into the dark abyss of sex addiction. Steve McQueen has crafted a film so intimate that lacks intimacy and focuses on the sheer act of sex.  The film's star Michael Fassbender is brilliant in this film, and often provides some of his best moments with his facial expressions.  In the scene with his co worker where he is attempting to have sex with her, and can't perform his face looks shocked, stunned, and as though he then realizes sex can not be an act of love.  The editing of this film is also brilliant and helps to showcase Fassbender's performance.  While on the train home from his night of varying sexual acts the editor pieces together the different sexual acts to suggest such an intense emotional experience.  Meanwhile Fassbender emotionally breaks down as though he knows he is spiraling toward a much darker place.  Carey Mulligan plays his sister who is a brilliant role that stands in juxtaposition to her brother.  Yet the only real difference is her naive portrayal of the younger sister.  The only difference as she points out is that he has a job.  My favorite scene that was shot for this film is Fassbender running through Manhattan at night, the scene is brilliantly shot and connects things to make this an excellent film.

5-Hugo-The best film I have ever seen in 3D.  I have never seen that actually uses 3D throughout the entire film that gets the purpose of 3D like this film.  Even Avatar director James Cameron stated this was the best 3D experience he has ever had.  3D aside this is a beautiful film experience that captures the essence of childhood innocence along with the birth of film and the famed director Georges Méliès.  The story is told from the point of view of Hugo Cabret (Asa Butterfield) who lives in a clock tower and has a passion for adventure and innovation.  Butterfield's performance is quite brilliant and he does a wonderful job bringing this story to life.  The ensemble is comprised of Ben Kingsley, Chloe Grace Moretz, Sascha Baron Cohen, Emily Mortimer, Richard Griffiths, Frances de la Tour and a few more, and they come together to create one magical beautiful film experience.  This was a labor of love for director Martin Scorsese, whose passionate work in film has paved the way for him to create this beautifully shot, edited, and visually awe inspiring film.  Scorsese is a master in the director's chair and this change in direction of his films proves his brilliance in creating works of art.


6-A Separation- This is the only film on my list that is not in English.  A Separation is an Iranian film that takes the simple act of well, a marital separation and takes two families down a path neither wants to go down.  The film's pacing may seem slow to some but director and writer Asghar Farhadi uses his brilliant strokes in his screenplay and direction to create an intense build to an incredibly emotional final act.  Farhadi's work behind the scenes has created a story that is truly Iranian, but transcends cultural boundaries at the same moment.  The writing catapults the audience into a melodramatic world that never goes too far to become overwrought. Watching each family work through their emotional and financial difficulties is not only a test to the brilliants screenplay, but the tremendous acting.  Peymann Maadi plays the Nader who is going through the separation with his wife Simin played by Leila Hatami.  Maadi and Simin have such great chemistry as a couple whose best years together have withered away.  While the script shows there was once love, the acting by both parties conveys the emotional loss of their marriage which ultimately create extreme distress for their daughter.  The main premise of their separation seems to be surrounded by two things Nader struggle to want to stay with his father who has Alzheimer's disease, and Smin's desire to want to move to Europe where they can provide a better life for their daughter.  As Simin leave her family behind, Nader hires Razeih (Sarah Bayat) to take care of his father, and their lives are forever changed, all because of a separation.



7-Midnight in Paris-Charming, nostalgic, witty, and a beautiful tribute to the city of lights throughout the years. Woody Allen's first love may be New York City, but his mistress is Paris.  Midnight in Paris is one of the most likable of the films of the year.  The Woodman's script is so smart and captures the journey of a young writer as he tries to find his voice in the present day, only to find himself transported to 1920s Paris connecting with the roots of literature, art, and culture.  After Robert Altman Allen knows how to bring together an ensemble that pull things together so effortlessly.  With Owen Wilson, Rachel McAdams, Marion Cotillard, Kathy Bates, Corey Stoll, Adrien Brody, Allison Pill, and man others this is one impressive combination.  These actors may be the stars, but the real star is the beauty of Paris and the cinematography that captures just how inspiring this city is.


8-Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2-Not only is this the blockbuster of the year, but this film is one of the most gratifying conclusions to a film series ever.  Fans often wait for their films to provide a satisfying conclusion and  director David Yates provided an amazing concluding chapter.  This film balanced the wit, and darkness of the entire series (more darkness).  The film is visually stunning, providing some amazing cinematography, that takes the viewer through a visual sumptuous masterpiece. The performances were also some of the best they have ever been with Radcliffe proving that not only has he grown up in front of our eyes but his acting skills improved vastly.  Yet there is one person we all loved, Severus Snape, played by Alan Rickman, what a performance!

9-Martha Marcy May Marlene-The most haunting/terrifying film of the year. Sean Durkin's first feature film is  brilliant and tells the tale of a young girl named Martha (Elizabeth Olsen) who finds her way into a cult.  Durkin's writing and direction keeps the audience on the edge of their seat; he builds up this incredibly tense situation that leaves the viewer emotionally wrought.  Durkin's use of the ingenue Elizabeth Olsen is another masterful feat.  Olsen is the breakthrough performer of the year.  As you watch Martha go from being part of the cult to being with her family and paralleled paranoia play out you can see every emotion in her face.  Olsen goes from becoming a forceful follower of the brilliant John Hawkes who plays Patrick the cult leader to a scared little girl seeking protection from her sister after she escapes.  The editing on this film helps intertwine the emotional experience, and makes this an amazing film.


10-Moneyball-I remember hearing many people say, another film about baseball it's going to be the same thing again, I remember thinking the same thoughts.  It's not.  Combine the skills of director Bennett Miller (Capote), writers Aaron Sorkin and Steve Zaillian, and get Brad Pitt and Jonah Hill to work together in some of their best work, and you get one of the best films of the year.  The movie is not about baseball.  I repeat the movie is not about baseball, but if in the wrong hands this could have been handled wrong.  This film centers around Billy Beane (Pitt)  who was the general manager of the A's and the fact that at the end of great year he lost three great players to different teams because of money.  Beane meets Peter Brand (Hill) and together they come up with a system that would change the game forever!  This film is about teamwork, leadership, and imbibes this wonderfully great spirit about working towards a belief in changing a system that is broken.  The film is emotionally charged enough as it focuses on Beane as a father, but also in the sense that you grow to understand what baseball means to him and how it effected his outlook. With solid editing that pieces this work together, this film takes "sports" movies to a different level.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Moneyball is Home Run!

Moneyball (4 out of 5 Stars)
Directed by Bennett Miller (Capote)
Written by Steve Zaillian (Schindler's List) and Aaron Sorkin (The Social Network, The American President)
Starring: Brad Pitt and Jonah Hill


I wanted to see this movie when it was out in theaters, but no one would go see this with me.  They missed out!  I do not know why this film was not a hit.  The story is about America's past time, baseball, and it stars Brad Pitt.  While I am a baseball fan, I am a Yankees fan, and I honestly did not know or remember the story of the 2002 Oakland A's and their General Manager Billy Beene.

Moneyball is the story of the Oakland A's and their General Manager Billy Beene.  In 2001 the A's lost in the postseason to the New York Yankees,I remember being happy.  This was post September 11th and the Yankees winning was a symbolic win.  At the time of this playoff game the A's had three clutch player Johnny Damon, Jason Giambi, Jason Isringhausen.  After the A's lost they lost each of these players-Damon to the Red Sox, Giambi to the Yankees, and Isringhausen to the St, Louis Cardinals, because each player was a free agent.  After the season ended the A's General Manager Billy Beene (Brad Pitt) went to Cleveland to try and negotiate to get a stellar team.  The problem is that unlike the New York Yankees and many other ball clubs is that the A's do not have as much money to spend on players.  While in Cleveland Beene meets Peter Brand (Jonah Hill) a Yale educated economist who convinces Beene to use a different strategy to beat dynamic in baseball.  Beene and Brand's strategy is met with a lot of opposition, including head coach Art Howe (Phillip Seymour Hoffman).

Bennet Miller's precise direction makes this more than a film about a team or even a specific baseball game.  This film tackles an issue the plagued baseball for many years, teams that paid for their teams so they could be winning ball clubs.  Like within his film Capote, Miller uses autobiographical material to tell an intricate tale about a man who works to understand things on a deeper level.  Miller's direction is complemented well by the brilliant screenplay from Zaillian and Sorkin who weave real life images into their work.  These men are two of the best screenwriters working today, and it is no surprise that their collaboration has yielded one of the best scripts this year.

The words on the page are given life but strong performances from Brad Pitt, Jonah Hill and Phillip Seymour Hoffman.  Pitt has grown as an actor throughout the years, and as he takes on roles like this one, and The Tree of Life it is great to see him flex acting muscles he has never shown before.  Hill always plays someone who provides cheap laughs, but in this role he not only makes you laugh a little, but his acting grounds Pitt.  This is the best role Hill has ever had and I am glad to see him challenging himself.  Pitt and Hill have a terrific dynamic on screen, their teamwork appears effortless.  I would like to see them work together more.  Hoffman, who has worked with Miller before; he won an Oscar for his starring role in Capote, displays, albeit brief, an evolution of understanding the game of baseball.

The film made me smile, laugh, cry.  I hit every emotion in the two hours.  There is something to be said about how infectious this film can be.  The movie uses sports as a metaphor for life, and knocks it out the park with a grand slam.