
Moneyball
2011 · Directed by Bennett Miller
Woke Score
CriticCritic Score
Audience
Ultra Based
Critics rated this 85 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #194 of 1469.
Representation Casting
Score: 0/100
The cast is predominantly white and male, reflecting historical demographics but without intentional diversity casting choices. Female characters are peripheral to the narrative.
LGBTQ+ Themes
Score: 0/100
No LGBTQ themes, characters, or representation appear in the film.
Feminist Agenda
Score: 0/100
No feminist themes or critique of gender dynamics. Female characters exist as supporting players with minimal development.
Racial Consciousness
Score: 0/100
While baseball's racial history is relevant to the sport, the film does not engage with racial consciousness or systemic racial issues in any meaningful way.
Climate Crusade
Score: 0/100
No climate themes or environmental consciousness present in the film.
Eat the Rich
Score: 0/100
The narrative celebrates a protagonist who succeeds within capitalist frameworks and wealthy institutions. No critique of capitalism or class hierarchy is present.
Body Positivity
Score: 0/100
No engagement with body positivity or body diversity. The film does not address physical appearance or bodily autonomy.
Neurodivergence
Score: 0/100
No representation of neurodivergence or engagement with neurodivergent themes.
Revisionist History
Score: 0/100
The film adapts recent historical events straightforwardly without revisionist reinterpretation or contemporary progressive reframing.
Lecture Energy
Score: 5/100
The film contains expository dialogue explaining statistical analysis and challenging baseball orthodoxy, though this serves the narrative rather than functioning as overt social messaging.
Synopsis
The story of Oakland Athletics general manager Billy Beane's successful attempt to put together a baseball team on a budget, by employing computer-generated analysis to draft his players.
Consciousness Assessment
Moneyball arrives as a conventional sports drama animated by a protagonist's willingness to challenge institutional precedent through quantitative reasoning. The film celebrates intellectual meritocracy within existing capitalist structures rather than interrogating those structures themselves. Billy Beane succeeds by working within the system more cleverly than his rivals, a narrative that finds nothing objectionable in the wealth and hierarchies that surround it.
The cast reflects the historical demographics of professional baseball circa 2002, which is to say predominantly white and male. The female characters, particularly Robin Wright's role, exist in the margins of the narrative. There is no meaningful engagement with representation as a conscious artistic choice, nor any attention to the racial composition of professional athletics beyond what historical accuracy demands. The film does not gesture toward contemporary progressive sensibilities regarding diversity or inclusion.
The absence of progressive markers is not a failure of the film by its own standards, but it remains negligible when assessed through the specific lens of 2020s cultural progressivism. Moneyball is fundamentally a procedural about statistics and baseball, predating the cultural moment we are measuring.
Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm
Critic Reviews
“While a hopelessly awkward-looking Hill provides fish-out-of-water laughs, Pitt gives a genuinely soul-searching performance. ”
“A smart, intense and moving film that isn't so much about sports as about the war between intuition and statistics. I walked in knowing what the movie was about, but unprepared for its intelligence and depth.”
“The movie is an absolute triumph of culturally relevant filmmaking – a film that will thrill and fascinate sport junkies and non-fans alike. If you like baseball, you will love this movie. If you hate baseball, you will still love this movie.”
“Naysayers have been claiming for years that the "Moneyball" book wouldn't work as a movie. But ultimately, it's the cinematic touches that keep this film version from becoming something exceptional. ”
Consciousness Markers
The cast is predominantly white and male, reflecting historical demographics but without intentional diversity casting choices. Female characters are peripheral to the narrative.
No LGBTQ themes, characters, or representation appear in the film.
No feminist themes or critique of gender dynamics. Female characters exist as supporting players with minimal development.
While baseball's racial history is relevant to the sport, the film does not engage with racial consciousness or systemic racial issues in any meaningful way.
No climate themes or environmental consciousness present in the film.
The narrative celebrates a protagonist who succeeds within capitalist frameworks and wealthy institutions. No critique of capitalism or class hierarchy is present.
No engagement with body positivity or body diversity. The film does not address physical appearance or bodily autonomy.
No representation of neurodivergence or engagement with neurodivergent themes.
The film adapts recent historical events straightforwardly without revisionist reinterpretation or contemporary progressive reframing.
The film contains expository dialogue explaining statistical analysis and challenging baseball orthodoxy, though this serves the narrative rather than functioning as overt social messaging.