THINGS I SAW RECENTLY:
1) The Trip: This movie RULES. Coogan's expectedly awesome but that other dude -- I haven't seen him anything before and he's pretty incredible. A buddy of mine from work is a Brit and swears by him. The Rob dude also apparently went to the same high school (or whatever they call it across the pond -- I should really know these things) as Catherine Zeta Jones who now magically lists her age as three years younger than him despite growing up right near each other. I can't stop saying, "It tastes like a childhood garden." I doubly like this since I'm subjected to non-stop food-related shows and blogs courtesy of Mr. Ulator.
2) Moneyball: As a movie, it's pretty great. It's well-acted, Jonah Hill really delivered in his first serious role. But as a baseball nerd, I can't stress enough how full of shit the film and book both are. Scott Hatteberg was a great story (and indeed did hit the home run in the legendary 20th win game -- that was accurate to what happened in the game itself, and Billy Beane did never watch games in person but did watch that one. But for him to be cast as the savior of the A's that season is a tad ridiculous -- he had a good year and did get on base a lot, but he was a contributing factor. The movie and book both conveniently forget that Tim Hudson, Barry Zito and Mark Mulder were three of the top 10 pitchers in the AL that year. Barry Zito won the CY Young and Miguel Tejada was the team's MVP -- nary a mention of that in either version, which is complete bullshit and misleads the multitudes of non-baseball fans who read/saw both (and helped both Michael Lewis and Billy Beane end up with fat wallets.) I also loved short, squat Jeremy Giambi -- in real life, he's a musclebound, steroid-using creep.
The movie also trashes Art Howe. By all accounts, Howe's a really great guy. And by a lot of accounts, he was totally and unfairly treated like dirt by Billy Beane who completely marginalized him.
So I am completely torn on that film. It is pretty amazing they took what's essentially a book about statistical analysis and made it into a film which might grab a few Oscar nominations. But it's accuracy is so misleading that it's somewhat revolting.