Redbelt Movie Review
Redbelt Review
"Redbelt" Overview

Rating: R
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : David MametProducer : Chrisann Verges
Screenwiter : David Mamet
Starring : Chiwetel Ejiofor,Alice Braga,Tim Allen,Joe Mantegna,David Paymer,Ricky Jay,Emily Mortimer,Max Martini
David Mamet is a difficult guy to figure. His latest film, Redbelt, which he wrote
and directed, is perhaps his most confounding project yet. That's not to say it's
not enjoyable -- at its best, Redbelt is twisty, heady, butt-kicking fun -- but it's
hard to recognize the writer of Glengarry Glen Ross as the man behind a film set in the
mixed martial arts (MMA) subculture. Sure, the world of MMA fighting is fertile territory
for Mamet's twin obsessions -- masculinity and domination -- but seriously... MMA?
I've seen some MMA bouts in my day, and those guys don't look capable of speechifying
the way Mamet's character's do. And yet somehow, in ways past reckoning, Redbelt manages
to be pretty darn entertaining, even, in some parts, affecting.
Let me quickly establish some caveats. Redbelt is one of the most unapologetically
macho movies made in the last several years, and the story ultimately buckles under
the weight of its earnestness. The plot is constructed on the theme of warrior culture,
personified by the lead character Mike Terry, played soulfully by Chiwetel Ejiofor
(American Gangster, Dirty Pretty Things), who seems incapable of anything short of brilliance. Terry
is a mixed martial arts instructor who lives his life by a code. His ethos is never
really explained, but it clearly involves things like honor, integrity, and a bunch
of other quiet, old-fashioned virtues most people don't think too much about. But Terry has
a problem: Despite a loyal stable of disciples, his gym doesn't make any money and
he has to do something to dig his way out of debt.
Terry refuses to raise money by competing in an upcoming MMA tournament -- competition
is against his belief system. Instead he reluctantly turns to a loan shark (David
Paymer), at the insistence of his wife (Alice Braga). It looks like everything is
going to work out when Hollywood action star Chet Frank (Tim Allen) enters the scene
and offers Terry a job as a consultant on his latest movie, but it's at this point
that Mamet's typical crosses and double-crosses begin to multiply, forcing Terry
to question his principled stand against formal competition.
The whole enterprise wouldn't work at all without Ejiofor's marvelous performance.
Terry's ethos is so unyielding, anachronistic, and at times unbelievable that without
Ejiofor's subtle righteousness the movie would have failed at launch. As it is,
Redbelt works its hypermasculine charms right up to the conclusion, when the ponderousness
of Terry's philosophy brings the whole edifice crashing down in a heap of testosterone-fueled
backroom brawling.
Mamet deserves some credit for the slickness of the plot he constructs. His scripts
often suffer from being overly clever. Incomprehensible plot twists emerge from nothingness
with the sole purpose of inveigling the viewer into believing that he or she is wit
nessing narrative genius. But not so here. Character motivations are intelligently
established and each turn and betrayal feels rooted in the film's internal logic.
It's easy to deride a movie like Redbelt. Admittedly, some derision is probably deserved.
Its main character is like a superhero, a lone crusader with a sincere belief in
the goodness of people, pitted against the dark forces of greed, power, and lust
for acclaim. But the movie's simplistic worldview is also part of its charm. Redbel
t features a reluctant hero mopping the floor with bad guys -- not because he wants
to, but because he has to -- and it's been a long time since I've seen a thoughtful
movie like that. Sure, it occasionally swerves into cheesiness and its ending is
several measures over the top, but Redbelt's also good, smart, manly entertainment.
Third prize is you're fired.
Reviewer: Matt McKillop





