DVD Review: Redbelt

Redbelt is writer-director David Mamet's exciting movie set in the burgeoning world of mixed martial arts. The movie's diverse cast is brought together from the worlds of sports, film, and Mamet's usual ensemble. This riveting film is a mashup of two classic genres, the samurai movie and the fight movie. Using some of the traditional elements of these genres, and infusing the film with his own predilection for "now-you-see-it, now-you don't" trickery, Mamet (Homicide, State and Main) gives us a fresh take on what could have easily been a cliche-ridden story.

Chiwetel Ejiofor plays Mike Terry, a master of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu who runs a self-defense-studio with his wife, Sondra (Alice Braga). He's pursued a samurai-like life, preserving his honor by avoiding a more lucrative life in prize-fighting. Faced with mounting debt, due to a series of events that began with an incident involving nervous lawyer, Laura (Emily Mortimer), and off-duty cop, Joe (Max Martini), Terry is lured into the ring.

Chiwetel Ejiofor in RedbeltThe strong cast has been forged from many different areas in the world of entertainment. Ejiofor's intense performance always keeps all eyes on him, despite the better-known actors that fill out the cast lineup. As movie star Chet Frank, Tim Allen is remarkably convincing playing an unusually serious part of an over-the-hill action star who still needs Terry to bail him out of a bar brawl. Former boxer Ray "Boom-Boom" Mancini manages to execute his role as a film stunt coordinator adequately, as well. And Mamet ensemble players Joe Mantegna and Ricky Jay are effective as a couple of duplicitous "good-cop, bad-cop" fight promoters corrupting the competition.

Redbelt really gets its singular perspective on the world of mixed martial arts competition by melding two distinct but classic genres of film. Mamet frames the story in the traditional structure of the fight film (some of which he cites by name in a congenial Q&A included on the disc) such as Jules Dassin's Night and the City (1950), and Robert Wise's The Set-Up (1949). The elements of those films usually involve a retired or washed-up boxer being seduced back into the ring by the lure of money or redemption of some kind. They usually find themselves sinking into a morass of morally compromising corruption. Frequently they are asked to deliberately lose a fight in exchange for money. Our hero, Terry, is hesitant to sully the philosophy behind Jiu-Jitsu, that of defending oneself by any means necessary but only after exhausting all other options. He believes competition of any kind to be exploitative, and contrary to Jiu-Jitsu's underpinnings. But like in Akira Kurosawa's The Seven Samurai (1954), where seven principled fighters must defend a village against preying marauding samurais, he finds that he is alone among many other practitioners who don't mind selling their talents, and their souls in pursuit of riches. By bringing in the genre elements of the samurai film, Mamet elevates what could easily have been a tired story into a unique one.

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Article Author: Tony Dayoub

Tony Dayoub is a screenwriter and film critic whose reviews can be found at Cinema Viewfinder, one of the top 100 film blogs according to Technorati. He recently covered the 47th New York Film Festival. Coverage of the festival and current releases can be found at Cinema Viewfinder. …

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