Slowly, I've made my way through this year’s best picture nominees.
I just hit “W” for “The Wrestler” and what a phenomenal picture!
Mickey Rourke contributes an unforgettable performance as Randy "The Ram" Robinson, a famous wrestler in the 1980s who has fallen on hard times.
He was the stuff of legends in his day. There were The Ram action figures.
Today, he performs at little venues with much younger wrestlers-turned-actors. Seconds before they go on stage, they decide how it will be done.
It is invariably the same. Randy is beaten almost to an inch of his life. His face is bloodied, mostly because he whips out a razor-blade and slits his forehead. Somehow, he rallies and defeats the upstart young thud.
The crowd goes wild. The ring is covered in blood. All is well.
Except Randy's life is a mess. He is battered and beaten. His face looks like chopped meat, both before and after he fights.
He can't see anymore. His hearing is gone. He lives in a battered trailer park. He tries to make time with a stripper played by Marisa Tomei. His daughter, played by Evan Rachel Wood, hates him.
The battering he takes in the ring doesn't even cover the cost of the extensive line of painkillers and other drugs he buys. He also sells his autograph and charges to have his picture taken.
Oh yeah, he also works part-time at a grocery store, begging for extra hours, but not on weekends. Weekends are when he slits open his forehead.
There are many priceless scenes in this unforgettable movie, from the choreography of the wrestling to trying to make time with Tomei, whose character tries to convince herself while she is a stripper, she considers herself a mother first who wants to buy a condo. Messed-up, washed out, highly troubled wrestlers only add to her problems.
Rourke's character endures many indignities. After having a heart attack, he decides to end his wrestling career and reconnect with the daughter he has ignored for years. He also agrees to work weekend hours at the store. There the sadistic manager takes great pleasure in making him wear a hairnet over his long locks and sell half-pounds of honey-glazed ham to clueless old ladies. He also must wear a nametag with his real name on it, Robin Ramzinski.
I have two faults with the film. Wood doesn't have enough screen time and the film ends too soon. You want to know more about what happens to Randy next.
Rourke is exceptional. His character endures many indignities but retains a real eloquence.
If you are working your way through best picture nominees, don't stop before you get to “The Wrestler.” You will miss a real gem.
THE WRESTLER
• Directed by Darren Aronofsky
• Written by Robert D. Siegel
• Runtime: 111 minutes
• Rated R for violence, sexuality/nudity, language and some drug use
• 5 stars out of 5
WEEKENDER / Entertainment
Mickey Rourke excels as washed-up wrestler
BOB LEBZELTER / VIDEO VIPER
- WEEKENDER / Entertainment
-
-
Rabbit Run celebrates Dickens’ birthday all season
WEEKENDER for Feb. 10, 2011: In celebration of the 200th birthday of the world-renowned author Charles Dickens, Rabbit Run Theater is basing the productions of the 2012 season on the works of this ground-breaking author.
-
‘Imagining Argentina’ needed concentration more on people
WEEKENDER for Feb. 10, 2012: It’s a story about life in violent Argentina in the mid 1970s, where people often just “go missing.”
-
Hear any ‘Rumors?’
WEEKENDER for Feb. 10, 2012: Imagine what would happen if the deputy mayor of New York City invited some influential friends for an anniversary party and they arrived to find him delirious from a gunshot wound and his wife nowhere in sight.
-
CALENDAR for February 10, 2012
WEEKENDER for February 10, 2012
-
No need to feel guilty watching ‘The Vow’
What a difference five years can make. For Paige (Rachel McAdams), it meant a new life free from her rich, controlling parents, free-spirited new friends, a loving marriage to Leo (Channing Tatum), and a promising career as a sculptor. Then she loses her memory after a car crash, and without those experiences, who is she?
-
True story shows what father will do for his children
WEEKENDER for Feb. 3, 2012: “Extraordinary Measures” has that made-for-TV-movie feel about it, at least initially.
-
Saving whales becomes delightful family film
WEEKENDER for Feb. 3, 2012: The title isn’t an exaggeration. It was something of a “Big Miracle,” the way the plight of a family of gray whales, stranded under the Alaska ice, captivated the country and forced oil men and environmentalists, natives and Cold War foes to team up back in the waning days of the Reagan administration.
-
CALENDAR for Feb. 3, 2012
WEEKENDER for Feb. 3, 2012
-
"The Help' helps itself to some wins at SAG awards
Viola Davis and Octavia Spencer were the maids of honor at Sunday's Screen Actors Guild Awards, where their Deep South drama "The Help" won them acting prizes and earned the trophy for overall cast performance.
-
‘Ten Chimneys’ offers insider’s look at stage
“Ten Chimneys” seems a strange name for a play.
- More WEEKENDER / Entertainment Headlines
-






