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WSWS : Arts
Review : Film
Reviews
The absence of democratic sensibility in American filmmaking
By David Walsh
22 January 2005
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Million Dollar Baby, directed by Clint Eastwood, written
by Paul Haggis, based on stories by F.X. Toole
UPI News Service (01/14/2005)Hollywood tough guy
Clint Eastwood publicly threatened to kill Michael Moore if he
ever pointed a camera in his direction. Eastwood, a political
conservative, was accepting a Special Film-making Achievement
prize for Million Dollar Baby at the National Board Of
Review Awards dinner Tuesday in New York when he urged Moore,
a liberal, to avoid making him the subject of any future projects.
Michael, if you ever show up at my front door with a camera,
Ill kill you, said Eastwood. When the audience began
laughing, Eastwood emphasized his point: I mean it.
Million Dollar Baby, Clint Eastwoods new film
about a female boxer, has been met with virtually universal acclaim,
including from left critics. In my opinion, the acclaim
is entirely undeserved; the films rancid individualism will
prove no help to anyone. There is something foul at the heart
of Million Dollar Baby that no one wants to talk about.
Eastwoods work centers on the relationship between Frankie
Dunn (Eastwood), an aging boxing trainer who owns a gym in a rundown
section of Los Angeles, and Maggie Fitzgerald (Hilary Swank),
a refugee from a trailer park in Missouri with aspirations of
becoming a successful fighter. Frankie has known near success
in the boxing world. He also has some painful unhappiness in his
personal life; each one of his weekly letters to his daughter,
who we never meet, is returned unopened.
Frankies friend and employee, Eddie Scrap-Iron
Dupris (Morgan Freeman), narrates the film. A former boxer, Scrap
lost an eye in a fight that Dunn tried to stop. Coming upon her
late at nighthe has a small room at the gymScrap is
the first to offer Maggie advice about boxing technique.
When she asks Frankie to take her on, he sneeringly replies,
I dont train girls, but following the defection
of his most successful fighter, he changes his mind. Frankie agrees
to train, but not manage, Maggie. In the end, he does both, guiding
her to a title bout worth half of a million-dollar purse. Then
disaster strikes, and Dunn is obliged to make a difficult decision.
There are reasons why Million Dollar Baby will find
an audience, and not entirely bad ones. Hilary Swank (Boys
Dont Cry) in the central role is a talented, appealing
performer; her enthusiasm and energy are infectious. One wants
to see her on screen. Moreover, audiences, sick of gun play, bombast
and special effects, may find the Eastwood films relative
calm and quiet, its coherent story-line and its apparent concern
with everyday life attractive. It may appear a throwback to a
more human and humane kind of cinema.
However, spectators (as well as critics!) have a responsibility
to think things through, to approach what they see critically,
not to be satisfied with at first glance. Are there
not sufficient grounds, given the present ideological and political
atmosphere and Eastwoods own history and well-known social
viewpoint, to be cautious, at the very least? It is easy enough
to become teary-eyed, but perhaps somewhat more difficult to stand
back a bit and consider the films logic and implications.
A serious analysis will reveal that this is fools gold,
not genuine social drama, not genuine social realism ... and certainly
not genuine social criticism.
The film reviewers, often overlapping in their comments, muster
a number of arguments in support of Million Dollar Baby.
Eastwoods film, we are told, bears comparison with some
of the most compelling, hardboiled boxing films of the late 1940s
and 1950s. More generally, the veteran filmmaker is said to be
something of classicist, who eschews gimmickry; his supposedly
precise, patient and pared-down style reminds his admirers of
studio (particularly Warner Brothers) films from Hollywoods
golden age.
With varying degrees of forcefulness, the critics express sympathy
as well for Eastwoods themes. His deep pessimism and fatalism
are openly acknowledged, indeed viewed as positive traits. His,
it is said, is a violent, savage and unforgiving
universe, in which hope is nothing more than a memory and dreams
alone sustain you, even if they prove to be chimeras. The only
rules and obligations are those that people create for themselves,
independently of society, church, family and so forth. And this
apparently represents a progressive trend.
Is it true, first of all, that Million Dollar Baby substantively
resembles boxing films from an earlier decade? Some historical
perspective is called for.
Hollywood studios turned out a good many films dealing with
boxers and boxing in the 1930s, 1940s, 1950s and beyond, but certain
ones stand out in the memory: The Champ (1931), directed
by King Vidor; Kid Galahad (1937), directed by Michael
Curtiz; Golden Boy (1939), directed by Rouben Mamoulian;
They Made Me a Criminal (1939), directed by Busby Berkeley;
City for Conquest, directed by Anatole Litvak and Jean
Negulesco; Body and Soul (1947), directed by Robert Rossen;
Champion (1949), directed by Mark Robson; The Set-Up
(1949), directed by Robert Wise; The Harder They Fall,
also directed by Robson (1956); Somebody Up There Likes Me
(1956), also directed by Wise; and Requiem for a Heavyweight
(1962), directed by Ralph Nelson. (Of course Marlon Brandos
memorable character in Elia Kazans On the Waterfront
is also a former boxer.)
Disparate as they are, these films share certain common traits.
They generally treat boxing as a corrupt field, controlled or
influenced by ruthless businessmen or mobsters, or both. Working
class kids, naïve or otherwiseor aging, battered fightersare
used and tossed aside by the big shots, or they become
infected themselves by corruption and lose their way. The films
portray the boxers and their families and friends essentially
as victims of a money-making operation, ruled by violence. These
themes are developed with varying degrees of subtlety, sometimes
with little subtlety at all, but nonetheless their recurrence
suggests that they represented something more than mere opinion.
These were commonly accepted views, possessing the force of objective
truth.
Body and Soul, directed by Robert Rossen, written by
Abraham Polonsky and starring John Garfield, is widely recognized
as one of the most successful works in the genre, and indeed a
number of critics in their comments on Million Dollar Baby
refer to it as a kind of measuring stick, without, however, going
into detail.
In Rossens film, the Garfield character turns to professional
boxing out of economic need, after his father is killed in a gangland
slaying and his mother faces the prospect of going on relief.
Garfield rises in the boxing world, but along the way makes a
pact with the devil, in the form of an unscrupulous promoter.
He loses his girlfriend, who objects to his new management, and
takes up with an opportunistic nightclub singer.
The corrupt promoter sets up a fight between Garfield and the
old champion, played by black actor Canada Lee, who he knows is
one blow away from serious injury. Lee nearly loses his life in
the ring, and Garfield, stricken with guilt, hires him as a trainer.
Finally, the promoter orders Garfield to take a dive
in a fight with the new contender. Garfield agrees, but when he
is double-crossed, knocks out the challenger. When the promoter
threatens Garfield, the champion replies, What are you gonna
do, kill me? Remember what you told me, Everybody dies.
He and his old girlfriend walk off together.
As Carmen Ficarra, at moviemaker.com, notes: The
best boxing movies dote on the corruption of the sport, the evil
irony of strong men being owned by weaker ones and forced to do
their bidding. ... [In Body and Soul] John Garfield plays
Charlie Davis, another Lower East Side [of Manhattan] kid who
discovers hes got a chance at a career in the ringor,
as his old-world mother puts it, making a living hitting
people, knocking their teeth out. Heres where boxing
movies started throwing their own punches. Out went the tender
pathos of Keaton, the indomitable smile of Cagney. In came the
greedy fighters, crooked managers and malicious syndicate bosses
whod as soon use their boxers for ashtrays than treat them
with anything resembling respect.
A hostile, right-wing critic observes that in Body and Soul,
the corruption of the boxing ring is clearly a metaphor
for capitalism. Its business, is the mantra
of the corrupt promoter as he tempts the aspiring champ (John
Garfield) into moral compromise.
Indeed, any examination of the film is meaningless unless it
takes into account the left-wing views of Rossen (who subsequently
succumbed to the McCarthyites and named names), Polonsky
(who refused and was blacklisted) and Garfield (who suffered a
heart attack and died under pressure from the witch-hunters).
Most of the boxing films mentioned above were informed by left
or liberal ideas, generally critical of corruption, business and
profit-making. Left-winger (at the time) Clifford Odets wrote
Golden Boy; Garfield also starred in They Made Me a
Criminal. The central figure in Kid Galahad, a Warner
Brothers production from the late 1930s, is not the boxer, but
the promoter, played with ferocious energy by left-wing actor
Edward G. Robinson; Michael Curtiz, whom German filmmaker R.W.
Fassbinder loosely and admiringly termed an anarchist in
Hollywood, directed.
Even more than any single view of boxing as an industry, most
of these filmscertainly the best onesconvey discontent
and restlessness, specifically working class discontent and restlessness.
They take for granted popular aversion to big business, to authority,
to the police.
The significant directors, writers and actors of the time,
after all, had been intellectually and morally shaped by the Depression
and the Second World War, the horrors of fascism and authoritarianism
in Europe. Whether they more or less uncritically supported Roosevelts
New Deal or had more radical visions, of a socialist society,
the most substantial figures in Hollywood took for granted the
need for social change.
Speaking of the film industry in the postwar period, Paul Buhle
and Dave Wagner, in their Radical Hollywood, comment: The
vision of a reborn world, after the defeat of Nazism, had been
constructed out of the experiences of the New Deal and the widespread
public sentimentamong powerful sections of elites as well
as ordinary folkof the need for fundamental social and economic
reform. ...
Capitalism, at least old-style capitalism, still seemed
discredited globally, exhausted with fascism and colonialism.
... Hollywood reflected and perceived reality through a fun-house
mirror, distorted but nonetheless recognizable. (Emphasis
addedDW)
This is quite critical.
Where does Million Dollar Baby stand in relation to
this?
No protest
First and foremost, the element of a protest against existing
reality, including the reality of the boxing world, is entirely
absent from Eastwoods film. There is nothing remotely anti-establishment
here. Although Maggie comes from poverty, she accepts without
hesitation all the conditions and hardships imposed on her. Of
course such unquestioning individuals exist, but the director
registers the lack of resistance with obvious approval and even
relish. Maggie is willing to do anything to succeed. It should
be noted that her nickname for Frankie is Boss, accurately
reflecting the nature of their relationship.
Million Dollar Baby takes as a positive given an attitude
that would have been scorned by the filmmakers of another erarelentless
individualism. Frankie reminds Maggie on a number of occasions
that her one thought should be, Always protect myself.
The film recognizes the dog-eat-dog character of society and boxing
and accepts it entirely, indeed revels in it. Its substitution
of the authoritarian, paternalistic relationship between trainer
and fighter for a wider, human solidarity is hardly an advance
on the earlier films.
Aside from its three central figures, who are given some sort
of special dispensation, Eastwoods work expresses nothing
but contempt for humanity, especially for working class humanity.
The black and Latin kids in the gym are malevolent louts; the
one decent gym rat is mentally handicapped and a rather
pathetic figure. Maggies final opponent, a savage former
East German prostitute, is the product of someones
fevered and unpleasant imagination.
Most telling of all, and most grotesque, is the portrayal of
the members of Maggies family in Missouri, as lazy, selfish
monsters, caricatures of poor white trash. This slander
against a healthy portion of the American population, which is
one of the most socially revealing characteristics of Million
Dollar Baby, has gone almost unnoticed and certainly uncriticized
by the critics, suggesting they sympathize with or share this
view.
Far from expressing pride in her daughters accomplishments
as a boxer, Maggies mother ridicules her profession and
tells her to find a man ... live proper. More than
that, she angrily greets the gift of a house that her daughter
has bought her with winnings from the ring, because theyll
stop my welfare. I would be grateful to Eastwood and his
screenwriter if they could provide me the name of a single successful
athlete or entertainer whose working class family has responded
in such a manner. Truly, this is a case of unconvincingly and
absurdly distorting reality, damaging ones drama in the
process, to sustain a reactionary social conception.
Nothing about her lifenot poverty, not waitressing, not
living in a wretched little room, not the rigor of boxing, not
Frankies dictatorial waysangers the ever cheerful
and ebullient Maggie, with the exception of her impoverished family
(legitimately, of course, within the contrived framework of the
film). In Million Dollar Baby, the shiftless, parasitical
Fitzgeralds from the Ozarks are the principal villains.
The fate that the film holds in store for Maggie, after all
her backbreaking effort, is rather grim. However, we are still
not encouraged to criticize the circumstances of her life in any
shape or fashion or the brutal manner in which she has been obliged
to earn a living. On the contrary, Maggie accepts her destiny
without a murmur, and Scrap tells Frankie that she would never
complain because, after all, She got her shot.
The logic of Eastwoods film suggests a rather bleak prospect
for ordinary Americans. (He, meanwhile, is many times a millionaire.)
Million Dollar Baby, by implication, acknowledges that
the American Dream has become far less attainable
under contemporary conditions, but that does not prevent the filmmaker
from urging its pursuit.
How enticing this will prove to wide layers of the population
in the long run, that they should strive for individual success,
even though they are unlikely to come by it and may very well
pay a terribly high price, is an intriguing question.
The hollowness and falseness of its perspectivenot its
supposed grappling with the harshness of social realityimparts
to the film its dark, pessimistic tone.
Eastwoods outlook is unsavory; and, one would have to
say, on the basis of a viewing of Million Dollar Baby,
increasingly so. In terms of the desperately narrow continuum
of official American politics, Eastwood would seem to locate himself
on the Libertarian (which has nothing genuinely libertarian
about it) Right. He is obviously not of the Christian Right. The
filmmaker goes out of his way to make clear that he has little
use for organized religion. In fact, this latest film has come
under attack from fundamentalist circles for Frankies final,
amoral act.
The notion that the directors rejection of family and
church has a progressive character is profoundly naïve, and
mistaken, in my view. Eastwoods attitude appears to owe
more to some variety of Dont Tread on Me social
alienation and reaction. Above all, he wants elbow room. And he
is prepared to force the issue, to use violence in
that undertaking. Eastwoods persona consciously takes the
law into his hands, vigilante-style, and gets away with it. One
needs to bear in mind that there is also a right-wing, anti-democratic
critique of existing institutions. This is a man who would like
to be given the opportunity to see to it that the trains run on
time.
Commentators argue that in recent films Eastwood has portrayed
conflicted individuals wrestling with important moral dilemmas.
The filmmakers (and commentators) conception of a
moral struggle, however, is remarkably limited. The characters
Eastwood plays are not answerable to anyone, except themselves.
As long as they pull a long face, furrow their brows and look
pained after the fact, they are permitted to commit any number
of crimes.
In a serious artistic representation of an inner conflict the
individual is shown weighing the implications of his actionsincluding
the real possibility that his entire course of action is wrong
and should be abandonedand either not committing the
act or living differently afterward, atoning for it somehow, not
simply looking glum.
Eastwoods characters, on the other hand, take matters
into their own hands and then go about their business, convinced
of their essential rightness, with no indication that they
would not carry out the same act in the future. In other words,
as he mows you down, Eastwood tells you, with a grimace, This
will hurt me more than it will hurt you.
As for the films simple, pared down style, one has to
be blunt. This is not the result of some arduous and time-consuming
effort on the filmmakers part to subtract the superfluous.
As an artist, Eastwood has not yet arrived at anything terribly
complicated. Some of his films have bordered on the primitive.
In recent years the critics have made far more of him than he
deserves.
His direction of actors varies wildly. Sean Penn, Tim Robbins,
Marcia Gay Harden and the rest in Mystic River gave poor,
thoroughly misguided performances in a muddy, misanthropic work.
Swank, a gifted performer, is more effective here because the
character and story are rather more linear (although equally false).
The critical whitewash, with a few honorable exceptions, that
Million Dollar Baby has received speaks to the essential
unseriousness and superficiality of what passes for film criticism
in the US at present. Eastwoods film itself reveals the
extent to which elementary democratic sentiment, as the result
of a decades-long social and political process, including the
anti-communist purges, has eroded in the US film industry. And
these things have consequences!!
See Also:
Clint Eastwood, the
critics and the heart of darkness: Mystic River,
directed by Clint Eastwood
[3 [November 2003]
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