The Philippine Star

Brad Pitt defies odds in Moneyball

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Brad Pitt earns his second Oscar Best Actor nomination for playing the true-tolife character Billy Beane in Columbia Pictures’ acclaimed sports-oriented drama,

Moneyball. Billy is once a would-be baseball superstar who, stung by the failure to live up to expectatio­ns on the field, turned his fiercely competitiv­e nature to managing a pro-baseball team.

Brad had an instant attraction to the Oakland A’s general manager, to his shrewd, outsized personalit­y, to his mix of obsessive focus and gritty resourcefu­lness and to his intimate personal relationsh­ip with the fine line between failure and success.

The real Billy Beane himself admits that having Brad play him felt a little strange, but he liked the actor’s down-to-business approach. “When I found out that Brad Pitt wanted to play me, at first I didn’t believe it. I work in a place where a lot of rumors fly around, and I thought when all was said and done, it was a bit of a joke,” he confesses. “But when we started to interact, I was impressed with how serious, bright and incredibly perceptive he is and how he had a vision of what he wanted to do.”

He goes on: “He’d read the book from which the movie was based and really loved it. I think that’s a testament to the character that Michael Lewis wrote, as opposed to myself, but it would be hard for Brad Pitt to play anybody and not do a great job. There are certainly a lot of mannerisms that I think he picked up in our short time together. And he couldn’t have been more of an absolutely class guy, not only with the people who work with me but with my family as well.”

Billy continues, “Seeing this story come to life in the form of a movie is a once-in-a- lifetime, surreal experience. And yet despite Brad Pitt being a megastar, he could not have been more down to earth or more genuine — a regular guy from Missouri. While it’s flattering to see him play this character, at times I forget that his character is actually supposed to represent my life in baseball. I was drawn into his acting like any other moviegoer will be.”

Brad explored Billy’s origins, which began as a naval officer’s kid who excelled at an early age on two different fields: baseball and football. Dubbed a true athletic “natural,” he was always told he would be destined for the elite echelons of pro sports. But after Billy declined a Stanford scholarshi­p for the chance to join the New York Mets, he faltered, then struggled mightily to revive a career that never truly got out of the starting gate. After playing six seasons as a reserve outfielder for several major league teams — all the time wanting to make good on the promise he’d always been told he had — he did something bold. Billy turned in his glove and walked from the field to the front office to try his hand at management, a decision that would prove visionary.

Miller explains, “Imagine being 15 years old and having grown men — experts — telling you that you have a destiny, you are meant to be a superstar of the next generation, and you have to make a decision based on that informatio­n — and you go down that road, only to discover 10 years later that it wasn’t going to work out. The dream was just a dream, and he would have to start again.”

“Billy really did something crazy by today’s standards,” says Brad. “He quit. I think in a way he felt that he was caught up in other people’s views of what he was supposed to be. I think he felt somewhat trapped. He explains it that he wanted to do something with his mind. Even though he was ‘in the show,’ the thing every boy dreams of, it wasn’t working for him.”

Brad continues: “So he embarked on this new career, but he came in knowing there was a need to tear down that bias that he felt he himself was entrapped by at an early age.”

Brad became fascinated by how the need to succeed on his own terms became the mother of invention for Billy in his second incarnatio­n as the A’s general manager — and how it all came to a head in 2002, when the A’s lost their most notable players and, to many, their only hope.

Opening soon in theaters, Moneyball is distribute­d by Columbia Pictures, local office of Sony Pictures Releasing Internatio­nal. Visit http://www.columbiapi­ctures.

com.ph for trailers, exclusive content and free downloads.

 ??  ?? Brad as would-be baseball superstart­urned-manager
Brad as would-be baseball superstart­urned-manager

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