THE
WRESTLER
By TODD McCARTHY
Variety, 9/4/08
Talk
about comebacks. After many years in the wilderness and being considered
MIA professionally, Mickey Rourke, just like the washed-up character
he plays, attempts a return to the big show in "The Wrestler."
Not only does he pull it off, but Rourke creates a galvanizing,
humorous, deeply moving portrait that instantly takes its place
among the great, iconic screen performances. An elemental story
simply and brilliantly told, Darren Aronofsky's fourth feature is
a winner from every possible angle, although it will require deft
handling by a smart distributor to overcome public preconceptions
about Rourke, the subject matter and the nature of the film.
Co-produced by Wild Bunch in France, where Rourke has retained his
most loyal following through thick and thin, this is nonetheless
an American picture through and through, beginning with the way
it strongly evokes the gritty working-class atmosphere of numerous
'70s dramas. Spare but vital, and with the increasingly arty mannerisms
of Aronofsky's previous work completely stripped away, the film
has the clarity and simplicity of a great Hemingway short story
-- there's nothing extraneous, the characters must face up to their
limited options in life, and the dialogue in Robert Siegel's superior
script is inflected with the poetry of the everyday.
All the same, for the first few minutes one could be excused for
imagining the film was directed by Belgium's Dardenne brothers,
as ace lenser Maryse Alberti's camera relentlessly follows around
aging wrestler Randy "the Ram" Robinson (Rourke) from
the back, concentrating on his long, dyed-blond hair and hulking
body before fully revealing his mottled, puffy face. This guy is
20 years past his prime, but he's still in pretty good shape and
aims to get back on top on the pro wrestling circuit.
Ram seems to have always been a big fan favorite -- he is one of
their own, a fearless bruiser the white working stiffs can root
for against the assorted freaks, ethnic interlopers and outright
villains in this macho cartoon universe. A beguiling early scene
that firmly sets the movie on its tracks shows an event's muscled
participants, all warmly easygoing and chummy with one another,
pairing up and discussing what moves they'll make in their matches.
A similar later scene has one of the wrestlers offering Ram his
choices from a laundry list of dubious-sounding pharmaceuticals.
Apart from the momentary camaraderie of his ringmates, however,
Ram is alone in life. At the outset, he's also penniless, locked
out of his dismal trailer home until he can pay up. He works occasionally,
lugging cartons at a big-box store, and his tough-guy posture is
adored by small kids, but he's got no friends and nothing to show
for his strenuous efforts.
From time to time, he has a drink at a gentlemen's club, where he
visits aging stripper Cassidy (Marisa Tomei), whose days of using
her body for her livelihood are similarly numbered. After getting
a load of some of Ram's battle scars, Cassidy, whose real name is
Pam, tells him he ought to see "The Passion of the Christ."
"They threw everything at him," she says, to which Ram
guesses Jesus must have been a "tough dude." Ram must
confront his mortality after the film's second wrestling match,
a bout so gruesome and barbarous it will force some people to look
away.
Assessing his options while recovering, Ram decides to gently step
up his relationship with Pam, as well as to try to reconnect with
his daughter, Stephanie (Evan Rachel Wood), whom he hasn't seen
in years. Both women have good reasons not to allow such a damaged
man into their intimate lives, but even their most tentative signals
of openness give Ram reason to hope for a new chapter in his life.
His encounters with them are sensitively written and acted with
impressive insight and delicacy, and Ram has one monologue in which
he lays his feelings bare to Stephanie at a deserted old Jersey
boardwalk -- "I deserve to be alone," he admits -- that
is so great, one wishes it were longer.
After a stint at a deli counter that is the source of more good
character humor, Ram decides to unretire and fight in a 20th-anniversary
rematch of one of his most legendary bouts, "Ram vs. Ayatollah."
Despite the hoopla, the way it all plays out is as far from "Rocky
Balboa" as one could get, resulting in a climax that is exhilarating,
funny and moving.
Shot in rough-and-ready handheld style, pic atmospherically reeks
of low-rent lodgings, clubs, American Legion halls, shops and makeshift
dressing rooms on the Eastern seaboard in winter (it locationed
in New Jersey and Philadelphia). Stylistically, it's agile, alert
and most interested in what's going on in the characters' faces.
And that is a lot. Physically imposing at 57, with a face that bespeaks
untold battering and alteration, Rourke is simply staggering as
Ram. The camera is rarely off him, and one doesn't want it to be,
so entirely does he express the full life of this man with his every
word and gesture. Ram's life has been dominated by pain in all its
forms, but he's also devoted it to the one thing he loves and excels
at, so he asks for no sympathy; he may have regrets, but no complaints.
As vibrant--and as naked--as she was in last year's "Before
the Devil Knows You're Dead," Tomei is in top, emotionally
forthright form as she charts a life passage similar to Ram's, if
much less extreme. Once her character stops stonewalling her father
and hears him out, Wood provides a fine foil for Rourke in their
turbulent scenes together. The many supporting thesps, especially
the wrestling world habitues, are richly amusing and salt-of-the-earth.
A Wild Bunch (France) presentation of a Protozoa
Pictures (U.S.) production. (International sales: Wild Bunch, Paris.)
Produced by Scott Franklin, Darren Aronofsky. Executive producers,
Vincent Maraval, Agnes Mentre, Jennifer Roth. Co-producer, Mark
Heyman. Directed by Darren Aronofsky. Screenplay, Robert Siegel.
Randy "the Ram" Robinson - Mickey Rourke
Cassidy/Pam - Marisa Tomei
Stephanie - Evan Rachel Wood
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