Director: Martin Scorsese
Stars: Robert De Niro, Cathy Moriarty, Joe Pesci, Frank Vincent
Martin Scorsese's brutal character study incisively portrays the true
rise and fall and redemption of middleweight boxer Jake La Motta, a
violent man in and out of the ring who thrives on his ability (and
desire) to take a beating.
Opening with the spectacle of the
over-the-hill La Motta (Robert De Niro) practicing his 1960s night-club
act, the film flashes back to 1940s New York, when Jake's career is on
the rise. Despite pressure from the local mobsters, Jake trusts his
brother Joey (Joe
Pesci) to help him make
it to a title bout against Sugar Ray Robinson the honest way; the Mob,
however, will not cave in. Jake gets the title bout, and blonde teenage
second wife Vickie (Cathy Moriarty), but success does nothing to
exorcise his demons, even as he channels his rage into boxing.
Alienating Vickie and Joey, and disastrously gaining weight, Jake has
destroyed his personal and professional lives by the 1950s. After he
hits bottom, however, Jake emerges with a gleam of self-awareness, as he
sits rehearsing Marlon Brando's On the Waterfront speech in his
dressing room mirror: "I coulda been a contender, I coulda been
somebody." Working with a script adapted by Mardik Martin and Paul
Schrader from La Motta's memoirs, Scorsese and De Niro sought to make an
uncompromising portrait of an unlikable man and his ruthless
profession. Eschewing uplifting Rocky-like boxing movie conventions,
their Jake is relentlessly cruel and self-destructive; the only peace he
can make is with himself. Michael Chapman's stark black-and-white
photography creates a documentary/tabloid realism; the production
famously shut down so that De Niro could gain 50-plus pounds. Raging
Bull opened in late 1980 to raves for its artistry and revulsion for its
protagonist; despite eight Oscar nominations, it underperformed at the
box office, as audiences increasingly turned away from "difficult" films
in the late '70s and early '80s. The Academy concurred, passing over
Scorsese's work for Best Director and Picture in favor of Robert Redford
and Ordinary People, although De Niro won a much-deserved Oscar, as did
the film's editor, Thelma Schoonmaker. Oscar or no Oscar, Raging Bull
has often been cited as the best American film of the 1980s. ~ Lucia
Bozzola, Rovi
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