Wrestler, The
Front Cover
Rating:
17.517.517.517.517.5
Medium:
Digital
Release Date:
4/21/2009
Theatrical Date:
1/1/2008
Date Imported:
4/18/2010
List Price:
$29.98
Genre:
Drama
Studio:
Fox Searchlight
Cast:
Rourke, Mickey / Tomei, Marisa / Wood, Evan Rachel
Audience Rating:
R (Restricted)
Aspect Ratio:
2.35:1
DVD Region:
1
Running Time:
109
Format:
AC-3 / Color / Dolby / Dubbed / DVD / Subtitled / Widescreen / NTSC
Language:
English (Original Language) / English (Unknown) / English (Subtitled) / Spanish (Subtitled) / Spanish (Dubbed)
Features:
ISBN13: 0024543574996 / Condition: NEW / Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
EAN:
0024543574996
UPC:
024543574996
Description:

Product Description A FADED PROFESSIONAL WRESTLER MUST RETIRE, BUT FINDS HIS QUEST FOR A NEW LIFE OUTSIDE THE RING A DISPIRITING STRUGGLE.

Amazon.com The mystery of Mickey Rourke's career comes to a grungy apotheosis in The Wrestler, the much-battered actor's triumphant return to the top rope. He plays Randy "The Ram" Robinson, a heavily scarred and medicated battler who's twenty years past his best moment in the ring. But he still schleps to every second-rate fight card he can get to, stringing out the paychecks (more likely a fistful of cash) and nursing what's left of his pride. His attempts to adjust to a more normal kind of life form the most absorbing sections in the movie, whether it's flirting with a stripper (Marisa Tomei is in good form, in every sense), establishing a bond with his understandably angry daughter (Evan Rachel Wood), or working behind the deli counter at a nondescript megastore. Rourke is commanding in the role; he obviously spent hours in the gym and the tanning salon, and his ease with the semi-documentary style adopted by director Darren Aronofsky allows him to naturalistically interact with the colorful real-life wrestlers who crowd the movie's ultra-believable locations. All of which helps distract from the film's overall adherence to ancient formula. You might find yourself waiting for the scene where the risk-taking Aronofsky (Requiem for a Dream) pulls the switch and reveals his true motives for pursuing this otherwise sentimental story, but there's no switch. The Wrestler is an old-fashioned hoke machine, given grit by an actor who doesn't seem to be so much performing the role of ravaged survivor as embodying it. --Robert Horton

Stills from The Wrestler (Click for larger image)



 

Average Customer Rating:
4.5