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She is however facing an uphill struggle convincing Billy as his manager, who sees his champion simply as a cash cow, fights back with even more lucrative offers which she insists that they reject. Then one night after a nasty public scuffle Maureen is accidentally fatally shot and soon after, a distraught grieving Billy without his wife to advise and protect him, is pressured into signing up for another match that will lead to his downfall and him losing everything. Including the custody of Leila.
Rock bottom, homeless and broke he ends up in a rundown gym in the projects belonging to a once very successful trainer Tick Willis. Billy needs a job and money to be able to get Leila back but as Tick has sworn off training professional boxers anymore, he has a tough job persuading him to take him on so that he can fight one last major match and win his
daughter and his dignity back.
This riches to rags (and back again) melodrama had been written very specifically for Eminem almost as a follow on from his semi-autobiographical ‘8 Mile’ however when he passed on the project, the producers made the inspired choice of beefing up Jake Gyllenhaal to tie on the gloves. He rises to the occasion so perfectly with a set of washboard abs and muscles that totally transform him for this very overly dramatic physical role that the Academy love handing out Awards for. His performance is every bit as good as the one he gave in ‘Nightcrawler’ last year that many considered was Oscar worthy. He is directed here by Antoine Fugua (slightly heavy-handily at the beginning) and the fact that Fugua himself was once a boxer accounts for some of the stunning staging and photography of the matches that have such a glorious intense realism to them. He does however never ever spare us from all the blood and gore at any time.
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Credit too for Rachel McAdams as Maureen who ensured that the short time she was on screen was powerful enough that we would also share Billy’s loss when she was killed. Also to Curtis '50 Cent' Jackson, (who I had failed to recognize), in the crucial role of Billy’s manipulative manager.
There is however only one real reason to see this enjoyable and entertaining movie and that is Jake Gyllenhaal. We all knew that ‘Donnie Darko’ would just keep getting better and better.
★★★★★★★★