Redbelt is screaming for the guidance of someone with enough distance from the subject to mold it into satisfying drama.
Redbelt (2008)
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Reviews Counted:134
Fresh:91
Rotten:43
Average Rating:6.3/10
Consensus: Mamet's mixed marital arts morality play weaves between action and intellect but doesn't always hit its target.
Theatrical Release:26-09-2008
Synopsis: Actor Chiwetel Ejiofor follows his turn in AMERICAN GANGSTER by taking the lead role in this thoughtful fight movie from writer/director David Mamet. Ejiofor plays Mike Terry, a man who runs his... Actor Chiwetel Ejiofor follows his turn in AMERICAN GANGSTER by taking the lead role in this thoughtful fight movie from writer/director David Mamet. Ejiofor plays Mike Terry, a man who runs his own Jiu-jitsu studio in Los Angeles. Terry's business is failing, causing tension between him and his wife, Sondra (Alice Braga). But their lives change drastically when Terry is compelled to come to the aid of an actor, Chet Frank (Tim Allen), during a bar fight. Frank befriends Terry and invites him to come and work as a consultant on a movie he is shooting. Just as Terry's fortunes seem to be changing, he finds himself caught up in a deceitful plan that has been carefully hatched by Frank's devious agent (who is played by Mamet regular Joe Mantegna). With his debts piling up, Terry decides to go against all his instincts and enter the competitive fighting world, where he stands to win a huge cash prize. But the good-natured fighter is in for a shock when he gets a close-up glimpse of the corruption that runs rife throughout the sport. REDBELT is full of the usual plot twists and fine performances that mark any Mamet movie. It's fascinating to watch the director draw on his longstanding passion for Jiu-jitsu to fill out the storyline, and Ejiofor does a convincing job as a man who draws on the discipline of the sport to stay calm during some testing times. As with many Mamet films, a series of cons are liberally sprinkled throughout the script, calling on viewers to remain alert as each strand of the storyline slowly unravels. The bulk of the movie is conversational, shying away from the action sequences that mark most fight movies, and making REDBELT an unusual and invaluable addition to the genre. [More]
Starring: Chjwetel Ejiofor, Joe Mantegna, Emily Mortimer, Ricky Jay
Starring: Chjwetel Ejiofor, Joe Mantegna, Emily Mortimer, Ricky Jay, Alice Braga, Tim Allen, Ray Mancini, Rebecca Pidgeon, Rodrigo Santoro, John Machado, David Paymer
Director: David Mamet
Director: David Mamet
Screenwriter: David Mamet
Producer: Chrisann Verges
Composer: Stephen Endelman
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
Reviews for Redbelt
Redbelt, David Mamet's characteristically sinister take on the mixed-martial arts craze, is like a noir, grownup version of The Karate Kid or of the recent featherweight teen MMA drama Never Back Down.
Incompetently made and covered in corn, this is a martial arts movie that makes you yearn for The Karate Kid. Yes, that movie was corny, as well, but at least it was fun. Redbelt isn't fun, just laughable.
So gifted is Mamet as a writer and director that he can fascinate us even when he's pulling rabbits out of an empty hat.
A sour little 70s-style David Mamet play about the lies, calculations, and ice-cold politics of Hollywood.
While Redbelt may be a character study in search of a movie, that character feels fresh and real.
In the end, Redbelt prevails, just as Terry teaches his students to prevail, but getting there isn't always pretty.
Among its other virtues, the film reminds us that Chiwetel Ejiofor is one of the most comfortable, consistently convincing and undervalued actors in movies today.
The combat, even the obligatory big fight, bruises bodies just as painfully as Mamet's killer words attack the soul.
Ejiofor gives one of the most well-rounded and intriguing turns of the year and carries the entire film to the winner's circle.
...a mash-up of Mamet's familiar stylized stories of victims and con men with a conventional sports underdog movie set in the relatively novel world of mixed martial arts fighting
Reasonably worthy MMA successor to classic downbeat boxing movies like The Set-up, and tells the same kind of truth - you do what you're told, or you're met in the alley by thugs who smash your hand with a brick.
Teeters precariously between Mamet's typically noirish realm and the kick-ass commercial galaxy, looking not quite at home in either.
"Redbelt" is a smart and stirring drama in which the intellectual conflicts turn out to be almost as exciting as the more visceral physical ones.
Just when you think (Mamet) can't plow more storylines into his situations, the slightly bloated script finds room for five or six more.
...a sporadically uneven yet consistently engaging effort that'll undoubtedly please Mamet's devoted fans.
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