Song: Million Dollar Baby
Sound track
If You've Seen The Movie, You'll
Identify With The Song.
Everyone should
see this movie. It has everything, except sex (Which is
great!). It's a powerful film, and I'd see it again. I
highly recommend it.
"Million Dollar Baby" has great
characters, but it doesn't glorify them. It has a wonderful story, but
it never tries to impress you. The photography, score and direction is
superb, but never distracting. What this movie is, if I have to call it
something, is passion. Passion for film-making, passion for
storytelling, passion for its characters, passion for its actors, and
passion for its story and the means at which it will go to tell it.
Amazing.
Frankie Dunn (Clint Eastwood) owns a messy boxing gym which is
populated, mostly, by downbeat losers who he spends some time training.
He runs it with his friend and former student Eddie Scrap-Iron Dupris
(Morgan Freeman), who now lives contently at a room in the gym. One day
a young woman named Maggie (Hilary Swank) walks in, looking for a
manager and trainer. Frankie shafts her immediately ("girly, tough
ain't enough"). Frankie has bigger things on his hands. He's
managing a fighter who has a shot at a title bout.
But Frankie is old and weathered and not an appealing manager, so the
fighter leaves him. Frankie is broken by this; it is another in a long
line of rejections and separations. We can tell that, at this time in
his life, he only gets really close with those he's training (Scrap is
the only exception). We can tell that his loneliness – and a bit of
persuasion from Scrap – cause him to agree to teach Maggie. Teach,
that is the agreement, not manage. But, by the end of the film he will
have devoted his life to her.
So the rest of the story follows these two people. There is no real
'plot' that you could describe in a trailer because it is constantly
changing…it is not the inspiring underdog story you may think of it
as. No, what it's 'about' is these characters, and how they react to the
circumstances around them, which change with each scene.
Narrating the story is Scrap, speaking like he's looking back to a time
long ago when everything has passed. His voice seems flat, deadpan, but
there is a working of subtle sorrow in it. Scrap is a sad human being,
he sees himself as the result of missed opportunities in the past, and
so he spends his time helping the others, offering them his wise advice,
with a tone of deadpan humor and even cockiness. Scrap knows what should
be done, and what will happen regardless, and he is sort of okay with
everything, in a sort of passive way. But the man also knows what's
right and he has a deep, inner strength which is displayed in one scene
in particular where you just have to cheer. It is an intriguing
character, and personally I think it's Freeman's best performance.
And Eastwood's best too. He is an elderly man; some might say too
elderly to still be working. After all, most people are retired by his
age. But if you had to guess when you're watching this film, you would
never, ever say the man is seventy-four. You would say something closer
to the sixties, because the man has such amazing energy and dedication,
and above all, he has talent. It's been forty long years since "A
Fist Full of Dollars" and film has come a long way, and so has this
man. At seventy-four, passed all those years as an action hero, nearing
what's could be the end of his career, Eastwood has made his best movie.
I really, really hope he has time to make many more.
As for Swank, well, she must have found something big that she shared
with her character, because this is not acting, it is existing. Swank is
Maggie. That's all there is too it. This could be the movie she will be
remembered for.
In the wake of a painful estrangement from his daughter, boxing trainer
Frankie Dunn has been unwilling to let himself get close to anyone for a very long time--then Maggie Fitzgerald
walks into his gym. In a life of constant struggle, Maggie's gotten herself this far on raw talent, unshakable focus and a tremendous force of will. But more than anything, she wants someone to believe in her. The last thing
Frankie needs is that kind of responsibility-- let alone that kind of risk--but won over by
Maggie's sheer determination, he begrudgingly agrees to take her on. In turns exasperating and inspiring each other, the two come to discover that they share a common spirit that transcends the pain and loss of their pasts, and they find in each other a sense of family they lost long ago. Yet, they both face a battle that will demand more heart and courage than any they've ever known.
Clint Eastwood is a man of
faith. He is an artist who is confident and experienced enough to have a
deep faith in the audience that he is trying to reach. He is also a
master of omission, of the left-out detail/line, trusting in his gut
that his audience is willing to participate in his films by exercising
their imaginations; that they never want any aspect of the story to be 'dumped-down'
for ready consumption. In fact, his trust in the audience to use their
own minds to fill in gaps is like a gift of part ownership in the film.
"Million Dollar Baby" is a beautiful gift, and a masterpiece
if film-making.
Eastwood plays Frankie Dunn, an elder boxing coach, manager, and expert
'cut man' who runs a gym and is learning Gaelic on the side. He's a nice
enough guy, but he can't seem to shake the guilt from ghosts in his past
(some we're in on, some not quite). His guilt/shame is a constant just
beneath the surface and gives him something of a cold exterior,
sometimes frozen. Yet, as played by Eastwood, you know
Dunn's aware of
his own plight, but just doesn't know how to melt the ice. Or more
importantly, if he's deserving of such a meltdown.
Enter Maggie Fitzgerald (Swank). She's a thirty-something trailer trash
woman from southwest Missouri. An unlikely hero for sure. But for my
money, Maggie is this generation's Rocky. That may seem an easy,
simplistic, and over-reaching comparison, but the parallels are deep,
obvious and myriad. Like many people, Maggie's dream (being a
professional boxer) is always just out of reach, yet she cannot give it
up. She works as a waitress to make ends meet (or at least the ends are
almost touching), but spends all her spare time training. Like Dunn,
Maggie has her own ghosts haunting her, and through these ghosts they
bond tighter than super glue. The heart and work (incalculably huge
amounts) that Swank put into becoming Maggie are unnoticeable. It's a
silly phrase but it's as if she was born to play this part. It fits like
a glove. The real life parallel of her relationship to Eastwood no doubt
played a part in her ability to connect with the character's
relationship to Dunn. Yet this in no way diminishes her accomplishment.
She is brilliant.
Morgan Freeman plays Dunn's right-hand man (Scrape) at the gym, and
reprises a role similar to Red from "Shawshank Redemption". He
also voices the omniscient narration to the story, a la Red. Like Dunn
and Maggie, he's similarly bruised, but somehow less deeply. He's there
when both of them need support and helps to bring them together. I can
think of nobody acting in film today who can embody kindness and wisdom
through friendship and support better than Freeman.
He also serves to
bring in another Eastwood trademark – 'Banter'.
Even when themes are
heavy, Eastwood's sense of humor is never entirely absent and he and
Freeman have a good time with each other, as did Bacon and Fishburne in
"Mystic River". These three characters together create a
beautiful and true, albeit small, family unit Eastwood's lifelong themes
and 'blurring of lines' are on full display: good vs. evil, right vs.
wrong, the role of violence, redemption, guilt/shame over previous acts,
even god and death. Never one for easy answers, his version of the truth
lies in the shadows, quite literally. Cinematographer Tom Stern crafts
characters in shadow, shifting in and out of light. There is a grey area
between the light and the dark where something approaching truth lies
waiting, and this is where Eastwood takes us, then leaves us there to
ponder. "Million Dollar Baby" is a shadow play. As
accomplished as "Unforgiven" and "Mystic River", yet
even more personal, this film is a triumph of human storytelling. As
Bacon's character says in "Mystic River", "…and the
hits just keep on comin'."
Saw "Million Dollar
Baby". Clint Eastwood, one of the
all-time most famous actors -- and directors -- has more than enough
money where he could choose to pull the strings on block-buster,
mindless action pictures, ala Jerry Bruckheimer, or comic books. Or,
hell, in his twilight years he could just lay back and enjoy his
millions. But no. He has chosen instead to make quieter, lower-budget,
heart-felt, character driven films like "The Unforgiven"
"True Crime" "Mystic River" and now Million Dollar
Baby. And the world is a better place for it. Eastwood uses his
multiple talents to make films that have something valuable to say. In
the emotionally powerful, Million Dollar Baby, he tells an allegorical
tale of boxing to subtly express themes of hope, redemption,
sacrifice, persistence, and belief in one's self. The movie emphasizes
that failure is a more honorable and personally fulfilling trait than
never having tried, while also frowning upon laziness and leeching off
others. But see the movie and judge for yourself. I personally
consider great films as the ones where I leave the theater with a
better understanding of human nature, or a desire to improve the world
by even a little bit. Eastwood's latest more than succeeds on those
counts.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0405159/combined
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Miracles In The Mist


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