Rourke, Tomei win the belt in ‘Wrestler’
Has-been grappler saga overcomes familiarity thanks to strong acting
Video |
‘The Wrestler’: Dec. 17 After a retired wrestler (Mickey Rourke) has a close brush with mortality, he begins to evaluate his life while considering the comeback that could very well kill him. |
Slideshow |
November movies The “Twilight” sequel, “New Moon” hits the big screen, along with George Clooney in “The Men Who Stare at Goats” and “Fantastic Mr. Fox” and the apocalyptic “2012” and “The Road.” more photos |
Video: Celebrity interviews |
Terry Gilliam on ‘Imaginarium’ Director Terry Gilliam sits talks about working with the late Heath Ledger on "Parnassus," how he found out about Ledger's death, and the process of calling upon Ledger's closest friends to help finish the film. |
Video |
Mickey Rourke: ‘Wrestler’ is a fresh start Dec. 18: TODAY’s Matt Lauer talks to actor Mickey Rourke about his role in the new film “The Wrestler.” Today show |
|
It’s hard not to look for traces of the off-screen Rourke, ’80s movie legend gone off the rails, in his portrayal of Randy “The Ram” Robinson, past-his-prime ’80s wrestling legend, in “The Wrestler,” and perhaps director Darren Aronofsky would rather we didn’t. But Rourke’s work in the film transcends mere stunt-casting; his performance is a howl of pain that seems to come from a very real place, and it’s a potent reminder — as was his compelling role in “Sin City” a few years ago — that even if Rourke has made a mess of his career, his talent remains intact.
Life is rough for “The Ram”: He competes in barely promoted bouts in school gyms to tiny but devoted audiences, paying the rent on his mobile home with a grocery store job. His body’s falling apart, but he continues the rituals of steroids, tanning beds and hair bleaching, because he still feels like he’s got an image to maintain.
|
And while Randy is haunted by his estrangement from his adult daughter Stephanie (Evan Rachel Wood), he does at least find a glimmer of affection from Cassidy (Marisa Tomei), an aging stripper. While Cassidy is looking to hang up her G-string for good, however, Randy risks what’s left of his health on a rematch with his former adversary, The Ayatollah, on the anniversary of their Madison Square Garden fight that broke pay-per-view records.
While Randy’s inability to give up a way of life that is destroying him is the tragedy that drives “The Wrestler,” I found the Randy-Cassidy relationship to be the film’s most compelling element. Aronofsky brilliantly demonstrates that stripping is to femininity what wrestling is to masculinity — a cartoonish exaggeration of gender. These characters could easily have been stereotyped “lovable losers” in a less humane filmmaker’s hands, but here they are wonderfully sad and true.
If “The Wrestler” errs, it’s in overplaying its hand regarding Randy’s return to the ring. While his self-destructive bent is certainly true to the character, the climactic sequence goes over-the-top. Aronofsky sometimes just doesn’t know when to quit — take a look at the last 20 minutes of “Requiem for a Dream” if you don’t believe me — and the film’s final overkill damages the delicacy of the character study it has created.
The movie remains well worth seeing thanks to the poignant, powerhouse performances by Rourke and Tomei. The movie business hasn’t always been kind to either actor — Hollywood seemed to be punishing Tomei for years over her Oscar win for “My Cousin Vinny” — but both of these great actors rise brilliantly to the occasion.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM AT THE MOVIES |
| Add At the movies headlines to your news reader: |
Sponsored links
Resource guide




