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A Film Freak Central DVD Review by Walter Chaw & Bill Chambers


REDBELT (2008)
*** (out of four)

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starring Chiwetel Ejiofor, Tim Allen, Alice Braga, Randy Couture
written and directed by David Mamet

To say that Redbelt is the best David Mamet film since probably House of Games is to confess that I really didn't think that much of House of Games and that Redbelt is actually David Mamet's best film. He often experiments with narrative, see; he wants to make a movie without proper pronouns, or with language reduced to its connective tissue and the metered parroting of key phrases. It's like watching a film directed by Ionesco (or Gertrude Stein, or e.e. cummings), all form over function--except that Mamet's ideas about direct theatre aren't terribly interesting. He's so honoured in letters (and I like many of the films he's only written, such as The Untouchables, The Verdict, Glengarry Glen Ross, Ronin, and Hannibal) that he believes himself bulletproof in any format. Because of that, his movies are antithetical to cinema. Mamet aims for the novel, but he's only ever just a ship in the collective fleet weighted down with a giant, pretentious, brass anchor for a rudder. Take his Spartan, for example, a film that distinguishes itself from a mini-spate of First-daughter films by bending over backwards not to say the words "the president's daughter." A scene where William H. Macy's lawbringer commands, "You, the man, stop," to someone in flight is a monument to philosophy over execution (and bad scripting). His pictures--even inexplicably lauded fare like The Spanish Prisoner--play like satires of themselves. Pinioning, excoriating satires. I'm reminded of SCTV's classic takedown of Ingmar Bergman flicks, moreover how I'm incapable of watching Bergman anymore without thinking of it.

So when Redbelt reveals itself as a simple film about dignity and honour that only occasionally seems like a David Mamet flick--well, colour me pleasantly surprised, and more than a little astonished. Without an obvious ulterior motive, Mamet has constructed a hagiography for his martial arts passion, the lack of pretense and artifice indication enough for me that Mamet only saves that kind of bullshit for everything else. He creates a film about economy and honour with economy and honour. Chiwetel Ejiofor, our most principled-seeming actor now that Morgan Freeman can't be taken seriously, plays chopsocky-studio sensei Mike Terry, who, like Miyagi before him, opines that all a belt is good for is holding up your pants. Daniel-san is Officer Joe (Max Martini), who, one fateful night, declines to prosecute attorney Black (Emily Mortimer) for attempted murder so as to save his beloved dojo from a loss of face, setting in motion a series of events that culminate in Terry having to confront his Bushido code in a world gone Bush II. Almost flip in description, Redbelt is about the last honourable man, the last tuna in a shoal full of sharks. Terry is, accordingly, besieged by a wash of outstanding bills, facing foreclosure, and tempted at every turn to betray that in which he most believes for a quick payday. His missus (Alice Braga, gorgeous and fantastic) shows her frustrated devotion (she reminds me of Gretchen Mol's wife character from James Mangold's 3:10 to Yuma--another film about making a living and still entering your house justified), wanting her husband to enter a mixed-martial arts contest to plug whatever dyke will enable them to survive.

They meet a movie star (Tim Allen), there's a Mamet-ian double-cross, and Terry and his moral code are brought to their proverbial knees. Redbelt is very possibly how Mamet sees himself in the movie business: misunderstood for his diehard devotion to his dead letters and practical aesthetics, left standing tall in the righteous light of his true faith. And seeing it that way makes it hard to like. Yet it's possible to watch Redbelt as a text more plaintive than that--as a thoroughly felt piece about what it's like to try to nurse idealism in a time that's hostile to idealists. Freed from Mamet's rhythmic verbal gymnastics and the other ugly accoutrements attendant to his pictures, Redbelt awakened in me this sense of outraged justice I thought had died. It was the sense as a child that betrayals and stings were too awful to contemplate; here I was feeling for Terry, hoping for him, and feeling elation with him that although nothing gets solved, at least the whole of him remains intact. I wonder if that's not the best you can wish for once you've aged to the point where everything appears to be made of compromise and lip-service. Redbelt is a grown-up underdog sports-uplift movie. It has too much Mamet in it still to brand it any kind of masterpiece, but, stripped-down and mean, it honours its character and his artistry. For all its genre glances and occasional awkwardness, it's hard not to respect it.-Walter Chaw


Sony brings Redbelt to Blu-ray in a handsome 2.40:1, 1080p transfer. Although black level plunges into crush territory now and then, it never seems to alter the intent of the noir-ish imagery. There is also an awesome level of fine detail preventing things like Chiwetel Ejiofor's hair from blending into the scenery when the actor is stationed against pitch-dark backgrounds. Grain is subtle, supple, and helps maintain an illusion of celluloid purity; overall, I found fewer faults with this BD presentation than I did with those of DP Robert Elswit's other big movies of late, Michael Clayton and There Will Be Blood. The film's soundmix comes to us in 5.1 Dolby TrueHD and is impressive enough (Stephen Endelman's percussion score particularly resonates), though from an aesthetic standpoint I wish it weren't quite so hemispheric. On another track, writer-director David Mamet and UFC announcer/champion Randy Couture contribute a feature-length commentary, a rarity for Mamet that points to his pride in the film. They're an odd couple, to say the least, but it works because of a palpable mutual respect. I enjoyed the revelation that the opening credits were inspired by a silent Italian version of King Lear--and thanks, Dave, for that rental tip of Lower City, nudge-nudge, wink-wink. "That's the wonderful thing about makin' movies: you're playin' Bauhaus," some bit of background ephemera prompts Mamet to enthuse, and his joy is infectious. Me, I was just glad for the clarification on an inexplicably fleeting cameo by the great Ed O'Neill, who was going to have a bigger part in Redbelt until production on "John from Cincinnati" ran long.

Produced by the Grossmyth Company, video-based extras begin with "Behind-the-Scenes of Redbelt" (19 mins., 1080p), a B-roll-and-talking-heads featurette slightly less disposable than the norm. To give you a taste, production designers the Wascos reveal that Mamet's mandate for the look of Redbelt was a "'40s boxing movie," leading them to the dated architecture of Long Beach, CA. Mamet touches on the cross-pollination of the martial arts and film industries in Hollywood while Tim Allen--who almost never deigns to appear in these things--admits to feeling overpaid in the absence of comedy. "Inside Mixed Martial Arts" (19 mins., 1080p) delves into the genesis of the UFC and includes precious footage of high-school wrestler-turned-Pulitzer Prize-winner Mamet getting his freak on in the ring. I appreciated the exegesis on Brazilian jiu-jitsu, a branch developed to take into account that most fights end up on the ground. If this piece and the attendant "An Interview with Dana White" (17 mins., 1080p) are ultimately glorified advertisements for the UFC, so be it. "Q&A with Director David Mamet" (26 mins., 480i/4:3) is a no-frills record of a post-screening interview conducted by the ubiquitous Kent Jones this past April. Especially early on, there's a lot of crossover with Mamet's comments elsewhere on the disc, but Jones' questions grow increasingly geek-centric and force Mamet out of his comfort zone, as when the conversation turns to CinemaScope. Capping off the BD Live-enabled platter: a montage of "Fighter Profiles" (4 mins., 1080p) for Renato Magno, John Machado, Dan Inosanto (one of three people authorized by Bruce Lee to teach Jeet Kune Do), Randy Couture, Ray Mancini, Enson Inoue, and Rico Chiapparelli that utilizes extensive clips from the film; "The Magic of Cyril Takayama" (5 mins., 1080p), a spotlight on the real-life magician cast in the pivotal role of Jimmy Takata (you can actually see a few seams in the cigarette trick he demonstrates if you go through it frame-by-frame); and HD previews for "Blu-ray is High Definition!", Married Life, Standard Operating Procedure, 88 Minutes, The Counterfeiters, Youth Without Youth, Persepolis, Sleuth, Steep, CJ7, and Felon, the first three of which cue up automatically on startup.-Bill Chambers

© Film Freak Central; filmfreakcentral.net. This review may not be reprinted, in whole or in part, without the express consent of its author.

Redbelt cover
Buy at Amazon USA
Buy at Amazon Canada

DVD GRADES:
Image A
Sound A-
Extras B+

DVD VITALS:
Running Time
99 minutes
MPAA
R
Aspect Ratio(s)
2.40:1 (1080p/MPEG-4)

Languages
English Dolby TrueHD 5.1,
French Dolby TrueHD 5.1,
Portuguese Dolby TrueHD 5.1,
Spanish DD 5.1
Thai DD 5.1

Subtitles
English, English SDH, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Chinese, Korean, Thai, Indonesian, Arabic, Dutch
BD-50
Sony


Buy REDBELT posters at Moviegoods (click on image)

What's coming out on DVD? Check the release calendar

AUTEUR'S CORNER
also by David Mamet

HOUSE OF GAMES

STATE AND MAIN

HEIST

SPARTAN

Published: August 18, 2008

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