The Wrestler [DVD] [2008]
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #485 in DVD
- Released on: 2009-06-01
- Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
- Format: PAL
- Original language: English
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 105 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
Darren Aronofsky directs this searing drama about a past-his-prime wrestler who tries to regain his earlier fame. Mickey Rourke (ANGEL HEART, SIN CITY) continues a career revival of his own as the fighter, while Oscar winner Marisa Tomei (IN THE BEDROOM, MY COUSIN VINNY) and Evan Rachel Wood (THIRTEEN, DOWN IN THE VALLEY) co-star. Rourke is Randy 'The Ram' Robinson, a one-time superstar of professional wrestling who's down on his luck, estranged from his teenage daughter (Wood) and clinging onto the remains of his career by appearing in brutally violent bouts that barely pay him enough to make the rent on his trailer park home. It soon becomes clear that his broken body is incapable of following through the determination of his plucky spirit and when he succumbs to a heart attack he finds himself at a crossroads where he must decide whether or not to continue his futile pursuit of celebrity or make amends with those that he has alienated.
After his somewhat ambitious flirtation with the science fiction genre in THE FOUNTAIN, director Aronofsky returns to Earth and back to the emotional human drama of his earlier REQUIEM FOR A DREAM. Having fallen from grace in his own professional life, Rourke delivers a towering performance as Robinson; a man whose career trajectory is so close to the actor's own, the film is given a staggering level of poignancy.
Customer Reviews
Possible film of the year already!
`The Wrestler' stars Mickey Rourke as Randy "The Ram" Robinson, a superstar wrestler from the 80's who is now living in a trailer park, has numerous health problems, is working in a supermarket to make ends meet and does weekend wrestling gigs in school gyms to keep him still in the game.
Although we're only 26 days into 2009, I can't help but think that it is going to take something really incredible to top this as my film of the year already...it is brilliant! "The Ram" is a gentle giant (much like Stallone in Rocky) and this is his heartbreaking tale of what it is like once you step out of the spotlight and how he copes with holding onto the one thing that he truly loves in life - wrestling.
A very clever and moving part of the story that I liked in particular is Randy's friend Cassidy (Marisa Tomei) who is a lapdancer and is a bit older than most of other strippers in the club, as it is sort of a parallel to what Randy is experiencing in his life too.
I don't know if I enjoyed this more because I was a wrestling fan back in the "Golden Era" (the days of Hulk Hogan, The Ultimate Warrior and The Legion of Doom) so I can appreciate a lot of what is going on on the wrestling side of it, but then again my friends who have also seen it loved it too and they have never watched wrestling in their lives.
Overall this is one of the best films I've have seen in a long, long time and I highly recommend it to anybody. Any awards that this film wins this year are definitely well deserved.
The fighter still remains
Impressed by Mickey Rourke's Golden Globe winning speech, I decided to go see this movie.
Randy 'The Ram' Robinson fought the Ayatollah in Madison Square Garden back in the 80s, and still battles today. Ill met by fate, bruised and battered, his sinewy muscles scarred, his bones creaking in protest he still has the fight, and like a One Trick Pony he sticks to what he knows. It's a desperate life.
As you may recall in Raging Bull, Robert De Niro put on about 40 pounds to play fighter Jake La Motta as he got older, and he won an Oscar for his dedication to the role.
Mickey Rourke does something no less astounding here, putting on huge bulk to assume the persona and convincing physique of a professional wrestler. It's the most amazing acting performance of the year. The lines between actor and character blur and disappear. The kind of pain you see on Randy's face cannot be pretended. It can only be relived from the actor's parallel experience, which is what makes Rourke's performance so compelling.
For female companionship, he goes to a local bar, where a fetching stripper played by Marisa Tomei, Academy Award winner for My Cousin Vinny, gives him a lap dance for a fee. He can barely make rent, yet he has priorities.
Marisa gives an incredibly authentic performance, and it's a welcome surprise see her take it off in the name of art. I applaud her courage in doing so. Her physique is simply amazing, and her body art is very intriguing.
Evan Rachel Wood plays his estranged daughter. Previously, she played the female lead part in Across The Universe, and already has a quite impressive filmography under her belt. Here she sports a different look, and gives a perfect performance.
Some of the wrestling sequences are truly outrageous, and not a little disturbing. Having cut my finger on a ham slicer early in life, seeing people operating ham slicers gives me the heebie jeebies. If you have a problem with the sight of blood, I caution you that there are some disturbing sequences in the movie.
The Academy's actor awards tend to go to actors in two types of role:
1.Psychopath- No Country for Old Men, The Usual Suspects, There Will Be Blood, Training Day, Silence of the Lambs.
2.Mentally Disabled, Social or Physical Handicap, overcomes great adversity or discrimination- Shine, As Good as It Gets, A Beautiful Mind, Ray, Scent of a Woman, Capote, Philadelphia, The Pianist, A Beautiful Life.
Randy definitely has a handicap, and last year was the year of the psychopath, with both Daniel Day Lewis, and Javier Bardem winning Oscar.
I hope you find this review helpful.
Classic
The Wrestler is a terrific piece of cinema. A triumph.
Randy "The Ram" is a clapped out, skelp-faced, steroid guzzling, 80's throwback trailer-dwelling wrestler. Fame and money have long since been flushed down the pan.
Down on his luck and on his uppers, he's scraping together some money by doing nostalgia bouts at weekends and working a supermarket job during the week. His only conversation is with his favourite lapdancer at a local club.
Things can only get better, yes?
Well... no. Randy tries to repair his broken relationship with his estranged daughter. He tries to get lapdancer Cassidy (Marisa Tomei) to be a real lover and not a paid dancer. He succeeds in both of these goals. To an extent. But for some reason it just isn't going to be that simple.
The Wrestler is like Rocky Balboa's feral New Jersey cousin. There's no big money prize for Randy "The Ram", but way, way more of a film. Uncompromising avoidance of cliche, top notch acting from Rourke and Tomei, great story, great camera work. Affords its characters dignity.
THIS FILM IS A BULLDOZER, WITH A WRECKING BALL ATTACHED

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