Tuesday, December 21, 2010

The Fighter


David O. Russell pulls off many great achievements with this new flick portraying a dysfunctional urban family. The pacing is inspired, the shots and edits done with intent and the moments of emotional interest deliver quite potently.

Micky Ward (Mark Wahlberg) is a "fighter" not just in the ring, but within his own family. He has to look out for his own interests and, at times, must resist aide from those that he loves. Unfortunately, his character seems to be doing much less fighting than the females around him (who end up in a full-fledged brawl on the front porch). Ward's ascent to the title has been described as "Rocky-like" but Rocky went through personal anguish to achieve his objectives whereas Ward seems to arrive at the title somehow via a much more passive rout. He faces many troubles from outside forces, but very few internal ones.

The cast are the real heavyweights here. I'm tempted to claim that they deserve to take home the SAG award for ensemble cast. Amy Adams and Melissa Leo deliver earnest portrayals of two women fighting for presence in one man's life (one as a girlfriend and the other as a mother) and Christian Bale will win this year's supporting actor Oscar for embodying the persona of not just the crack addicted man he is directly portraying, but the manner in which a person who has been consumed by something self-destructive responds to the world around him.

While I tremendously enjoyed myself nearly the entire duration of the film, the most substantial flaw came with the flat finale. Much of the conflict was less focused on Ward's boxing matches and more on his family. Indeed, I'm willing to go as far as saying that I really did not care nearly as much about the results of Ward's fights as much as I did about the outcome of his family's altercations.

However, our story wraps up with its focus on the boxing without even hinting at how the conflicts between the featured individuals will play out. This is a family whose personalities will lend to ongoing, cyclical turmoil (whether their real lives played out in that manner, I'm not sure, but that's the impression here). The suggested assumption by the end seems to be that everything is fine and dandy, but a discerning viewer knows better yet isn't given anything to chew on. The movie has much to say, but it doesn't all seem to come out.

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