Pain And Gain (2013) [Blu-ray]
Comedy | Crime | Drama | Thriller
Tagline: This is a true story.
Michael Bay's "hilarious crime comedy Pain & Gain is GoodFellas on steroids." (Kyle Smith, New York Post) When a group of personal trainers (Mark Wahlberg, Dwayne Johnson and Anthony Mackie) decide to steal the American Dream, they get caught up in a
criminal enterprise that goes horribly wrong. Now, living large will take everything they've got in the unbelievable true story that critics are calling "outrageously entertaining." (Marlow Stern, Newsweek)
Storyline: Based on the true story of Daniel Lugo (Mark Wahlberg) a Miami bodybuilder who wants to live the American dream. He would like to have the money that other people have. So he enlists the help of fellow bodybuilder
Adrian Doorbal (Anthony Mackie) and ex-convict, Christian bodybuilder Paul Doyle (Dwayne Johnson). Their kidnapping and extortion scheme goes terribly wrong since they have muscles for brains and they're left to haphazardly try to hold onto the elusive
American dream. Written by napierslogs
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Martin Liebman on August 9, 2013 -- If you're willing to do the work, you can have anything. -- Colossal calves, titanic thighs, quality quads, awesome abs, formed forearms, bulging biceps,
toned triceps, and shredded shoulders. Put in the time (lots of time) and the effort (tons of effort), chug the protein (how many scoops?), keep that metabolism running (it's a furnace!) and the heart rate up (thumpthumpthump), the weight plates clanking
(the sound of hard work), the grunts grunting (grunt), and the sweat pouring (splash, ew, wash that shirt tonight), and all of those things -- everything from the neck on down -- will become a reality. Bodybuilders look great -- at least the ones
that aren't soaking up steroids and who appear to be more veins and bumps than muscles -- and hats off to them for putting in a tremendous amount of effort, but the stereotype says that classic million-dollar Olympia physiques usually come with the
proverbial ten-cent heads. Indeed, the reputation of bodybuilders proceeds them, even more than the formidable shadow they cast. But like most stereotypes, it's not always true. It's smart to train the body along the with the mind, but just as there are
plenty of scrawny and unhealthy brains, so too are there plenty of knucklehead bodybuilders who probably have to add weight to the barbell by plate size rather than adding up the numbers on said plates. In Michael Bay's fascinating true-life tale Pain
& Gain, it's not so much sheer stupidity that get three bodybuilders in a whole heap of trouble, it's instead bad luck, poor decision making, a failure in foresight, and definitely a whole lot of hubris and incontrollable drive. Ultimately, the
weightlifting is but a backdrop; the film is really about human failings and a shockingly rapid descent into self-induced chaos.
Daniel Lugo (Mark Wahlberg) knows how to build a body. He works as a personal trainer to get by, and his real job is building his own body. He takes pride in his work and beams when he can help others live their bodybuilding and fitness dreams, whether
it's through hard training sessions or a smile and word of encouragement. He convinces the head of Sun Fitness, John Mese (Rob Corddry), to hire him on with the promise of tripling membership and turning what is, for all practical purposes, a gym for the
elderly into a hotspot for Miami's best bodybuilders and most attractive women. He succeeds. Business is thriving and he's promoted, but he's still not satisfied. He wants more, the social status and wealth to match his sculpted physique. One of his
clients is an ultra-wealthy entrepreneur named Victor (Tony Shalhoub) who endlessly brags on his own success. Lugo recruits another of his clients, Adrian (Anthony Mackie), and a new employee and ex-convict-turned-Christian named Paul (Dwayne Johnson) to
help him execute a plan to kidnap Victor and force him to sign away all of his assets to them. The plan ultimately succeeds, but a single mistake leads to an out-of-control situation that will see the men find everything they've ever wanted but face the
very real prospect of losing it all through their own mistakes, vices, and greed.
Pain & Gain finds a good bit of success in what amounts to a curious mishmash of styles. The film creates a visual excitement to go along with its story (Michael Bay apparently doesn't know any other kind of way to shoot a movie but, hey, he's
great at what he does) but also yields a sometimes uncomfortable sense of humor amidst some pretty dark themes and story elements. Audiences won't know whether to laugh or look away in disgust, at times, but no matter what might be happening there's an
unmissable draw to the story as it quickly but very believably spins so far out of control that it defines the old adage about something being so crazy that it can only be real. However, the film never feels disjointed, clumsy, or forced. On the contrary,
there's a very strong cohesion to it. Bay's direction -- for as frenetic as it usually is (it only slows down for slow motion accent shots) -- emphasizes the story and builds the characters smartly and distinctively. Even as the picture grows
significantly more grim, the characters expand and evolve with a natural progression as their actions and the reactions to their actions take shape and impact their lives.
What Pain & Gain boils down to is a fascinatingly morbid tale of material obsession, of allowing good ideas, strong words, and positive results to become mutated somewhere on the way into the eyes and ears, through the brain, and back out the
mouth, hands, and feet. Lugo takes pride in his physique and his ability to turn the fortunes of his gym and allows that pride to transform into a want for more, to expand his status beyond his body and acquire the material goods to match. He wants social
status as big as his arms, no matter the price. And it's his pursuit of those things -- or, his wayward, unintelligent pursuit of those things -- that destroy several lives along the way. Pain & Gain is as much a tragedy as it is anything else, the
story of how one bad choice can destroy a lifetime's worth or work. It almost needs that underlying sense of humor in order to make it bearable. Bay blends it all together with an expert hand, keeping things in his familiar style but, perhaps more
than in any other film he's made, finding a legitimate center beyond sight and sound and constructing a story and the characters that make it with an expert touch along every step of the way.
Likewise, the cast digs deep and finds the substance of the character spirals. Certainly, they look the part, but Wahlberg, Johnson, and Mackie explore beyond the exterior to craft convincing portraits that, at the most fundamental level, depict a literal
and figurative fall from grace. They all lose something through the course of the film, not only what they gain through their actions but everything they worked so hard to accomplish before making their poor choices. Johnson in particular delivers a
surprisingly well-rounded performance as he, first, battles himself and his commitment to cleaner living and the spiritual walk while a willing part of the group and forced into performing actions he finds unpalatable or worse. He convinces the audience
of his commitment to maintain his faith, dignity, and everything he's built even when confronted with the ultimate temptations and cornered into working contrary to his beliefs. And with every turn the character takes, Johnson finds both the evolving and
in-the-moment but also the greater heart and soul of the character. No, it's not some classic, intimate, dark character study, but it's beyond proficient and helps define the movie further than its superficialities would otherwise allow.
Pain & Gain: less of the former, more of the latter. There's a lot to like about Michael Bay's most character-driven film. Morbid humor, sorrow, excitement, and fascination all come together into a fairly unique movie about man's ability to lose
everything in the pursuit of the material, particularly by shady means and poor choices before, during, and after corruption. The story constantly evolves and becomes more and more ridiculous, but for all the unraveling, the tighter and better it becomes.
Solid direction, superb pacing, and quality performances make this a surprise winner. Paramount's Blu-ray release of Pain & Gain features reference video and audio. Oddly, no extras are included. Recommended.
Trivia:- Rebel Wilson, an avid nunchucks user, brought her own for the sex scene to "spice things up."
- For his role as a body builder, 'Mark Wahlberg' bulked up to 212 pounds for this film.
- Dwayne Johnson bulked up to nearly 300 pounds for his role.
- Anthony Mackie put on 17 pounds of muscle for the role and bulked up to 213 pounds. He had only 3 weeks to train before filming began.
- Mark Wahlberg said that his sons loved the enormous, muscular, body-builder physique that he was sporting during filming of this film but his daughters hated it.
[CSW] -2.4- Not easy to review for the simple fact it was a true story with saying that why would they make a movie out of that of all things which happens to people more often than it should. There are so many true stories they could do and they choose
that!? True stories, as a general rule, are less entertaining that fiction. And what where those actors thinking doing this movie and was the director so bored he thought "hey why not"!? I recognize the attempts at humor but it just wasn't that funny to
me. I think if you find the humor really funny then you will really enjoy this movie. I didn't ,so I suggest you rent it and see whether it strikes your funny bone or not.
[V5.0-A5.0] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box.
º º