NEW MOVIE and DVD REVIEWS
DVD REVIEW: The Wrestler |
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| Written by Trent Daniel | ||||||
| Tuesday, 21 April 2009 | ||||||
The Wrestler is a drama starring Mickey Rourke, Marisa Tomei and Evan Rachel Wood. Directed by Darren Aronofsky.What a quietly exceptional, yet bitterly sad movie this is. The Wrestler is about a person (actually, two people) whose time for glory has passed, yet keeps doing the only thing he knows how to do well. What he does helps (barely) pay the bills, yet more importantly, gives him his only sense of identity and self worth. If he loses even that, he might as well be dead. The film opens on a wall showing one-sheets, posters and magazine clippings documenting the once great wrestling career of Randy “The Ram” Robinson. It then cuts to a man in ridiculous green tights, battered and bruised. He sits on a folding chair, alone in an elementary school classroom. A promoter in a hockey jersey brings him his cut of the gate receipts that night (less than expected). The Ram’s fall from grace, sadly, is almost de rigueur for the “sport” of professional wrestling. The storylines are scripted, yet it is a mistake to call it “fake.” The punches might be pulled, but when a body hits a concrete floor, a body hits a concrete floor. Such physical punishment takes a toll on everyone who takes up this profession. Many former superstars now work the small town circuit. Instead of 20,000 screaming fans, they might wrestle for 200 or less. Instead of making $50,000 a show, they might make $50. What money they’ve earned in their glory years is usually gone, spent either on steroids to keep their body at an unhealthy muscular size or on numerous painkillers, all out of their own pocket. (In the exceptional round table extra, former wrestler Greg “The Hammer” Valentine asks why, if it is “fake,” then why are wrestlers refused health insurance?) In a sense, those still working are the lucky ones, as the number of pro wrestlers who have died in their 30s and 40s is frightening (brought to light by the Chris Benoit tragedy of a few years ago). For playing The Ram, Mickey Rourke should have won the Oscar. His performance never once rings false. It is quite a tour de force, both in quiet, painful scenes with the two women he loves (his estranged daughter [Evan Rachel Wood] and a stripper he hopes to establish a relationship with [Marisa Tomei]) and in the shockingly brutal matches he participates in. It really looks at times like Rourke is taking a beating the ring, including being stapled with a staple gun and thrown through a table laced with barbed wire (one gruesome scene shows Rourke “juicing” himself-the actual practice used by wrestlers to use a small piece of razor to slice open their foreheads). Tomei, as Cassidy, is quietly terrific as well and her performance in many ways rings as true as Rourke’s. In the making of feature, Director Aronovsky makes an insightful and eloquent comparison between professional wrestlers and strippers: “They use their body to sell themselves; they are selling a fantasy to their audience; they use fake names; age is their worst enemy.” It is clear she feels an attraction for Randy (she even offers him her real name of Pam), especially after he defends her from some drunken young men having a bachelor party who insult her over her age. However, she is just as much a performer as The Ram and still feels she must walk that tightrope between keeping the illusion real and revealing her true feelings. The film makes brilliant use of late 80’s “hair metal” music for its soundtrack. Hair metal classics from bands such as Ratt, Accept, Quiet Riot and Guns n’ Roses play on the soundtrack like an elegy. They are fitting. Randy and Cassidy cling to these songs, as they are from their time of glory, when they were younger, more beautiful and loved by the world. In another sad, but beautiful scene, Randy connects one final time with his daughter (whom he burned his bridges with years ago). They walk along a boardwalk and remember the past great times they had there, how much fun they had. Fittingly, the boardwalk is boarded up. How the story ends, I will not reveal, yet like the entire film, the ending feels real and inevitable. The final shot is perfect: admittedly ridiculous on the surface, yet surprisingly sad and poignant as well. The film gives an amazing about of detail about what happens backstage before a wrestling match. It shows the men gathering together in a school classroom or the backroom of a local American Legion post. The warriors are paired up with each other, they talk through the high spots they want to hit in the match, talk about what to expect from the other (even including the aforementioned staple gun). They then go out and literally beat the shit out of each other, then go to the back and get patched up together. I have to admit that I am a wrestling fan. There is really no excuse for it, yet, since WWE Raw has been the highest rated basic cable show for nearly a decade, at least I know I’m not alone. Maybe it feels some basic need of mine to see violence as entertainment, with the personal “pass” I can give myself by knowing its not “real” (a secondary appeal of wrestling is that at its best, it truly is a “male soap opera” with compelling mini-stories created between two combatants, all to be resolved at the next pay per view). This great film gives me newfound respect (and sympathy) for the men and women who wrestle for a living. They have to have some compulsion, some need, to put their bodies on the line like this. I also have great respect for Rourke and Tomei as actors, for they both fully inhabit their characters. Perhaps they could too easily identify with their characters, as (before this film) it could be argued that the best years of their careers were long past. Not anymore. Extras:
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