Southpaw (2015) [Blu-ray]
Action | Drama | Sport | Thriller

Boxer Billy Hope turns to trainer Tick Wills to help him get his life back on track after losing his wife in a tragic accident and his daughter to child protection services.

Storyline: As tragedy strikes him in his prime, famed boxer, Billy Hope, begins to fall into a great depression. Once the decision regarding the custody of his daughter is under question, Billy decides to get his life back on track by getting back into the ring.

Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Martin Liebman, November 2, 2015 -- The more you get hit, the harder you fight.

Boxing may not hold the prestige it once did, particularly amongst more casual sports fans, but it's still a canvas on which cinema can thrive. Director Antoine Fuqua's (Training Day) latest picture is the best boxing-themed movie since Rocky, and much like it is in Sylvester Stallone's Oscar-winning masterpiece, the sport is more a plot device than it is a central focus. Fuqua's rich, raw, and powerful story is a human interest tale, one that looks into the deepest depth of the soul where pain hits harder, lasts longer, and wounds more deeply than any opponent's blow.

Billy Hope (Jake Gyllenhaal) has moved beyond the constraints of his troubled Hell's Kitchen roots to become a champion boxer with an undefeated record. He's married to Maureen (Rachel McAdams), another product of the Kitchen's orphanage system, and they have a young daughter named Leila (Oona Laurence). Maureen is becoming ever more concerned for her husband's future. They've already got it made, living a life of unparalleled luxury, and she fears that fighting will eventually take an irreversible toll not only on his body, but on his spirit. Billy finds himself dogged by an up-and-coming fighter named Miguel Escobar (Miguel Gomez) who wants his shot against the champ. An impromptu confrontation between them leads to tragedy that drives Billy to a dark place from which he may not be able to recover and what remains of his shattered personal life in question. His only hope for salvation is a return to the ring and training under the tutelage of a man named Tick Wills (Forest Whitaker), training that will prepare him for more than just the fight to come.

Much like fighters dig deep to find the will to withstand punishment, the stamina to remain upright in the ring, and the strength to achieve victory, Southpaw digs deep to find an intensely raw and very powerful emotional center that drains the audience just as it drains the character. But it's the sort of sobering, heart-wrenching journey that, when done well -- smartly, believably, purposefully -- makes cinema such a fantastic and effective storytelling medium. Antoine Fuqua and Writer Kurt Sutter (Sons of Anarchy) tell an essential human interest story in Southpaw, one that's deeply powerful and long resonating. The story isn't complicated but the underlying themes are as it explores humanity at its most vulnerable, at a point when the body is wounded but, more, the heart is broken, the soul is shattered, the spirit is wilted, and the stamina to continue on has all but evaporated. Few films so honestly, intimately, and darkly get to the center of human emotions quite so well as this. It uses boxing as a metaphor, and a rather simple one at that, but whatever takes place in the ring and its surroundings are simply facilitators for a greater story of the classic fall from grace and the will to will to return to the top, not for the glory of man but in the need of the spirit to rediscover a purpose for continuing on, for defeating the most challenging opponent every person will ever face: life.

With that in mind, the movie isn't all that original. It's rather predictable, but Fuqua has crafted the film not so much to puzzle audiences or keep them guessing but instead experience a tidal wave of emotions, the sort of ebbs and flows that see humanity at its highest pinnacle and lowest depth. The film isn't about broad story details -- who will win this fight or that or how Billy trains -- but instead the emotional journey, a journey that's written through those core story details but that's made by the powerful performances that give it a tangible life across those peaks and valleys. Jake Gyllenhaal is absolutely spectacular as the film's lead. His Oscar-worthy performance finds not just a depth to the character but a tangible, believable intimacy through which the audience comes to not simply see his pains but experience them, to not simply appreciate his plight but get down into the depths of a ravaged, exposed soul to a nitty-gritty, heartbreaking level few films have found before. Southpaw will leave its audience emotionally devastated through its middle stretch but hopeful as the character begins a recovery that's not about getting in fighting shape or participating in a difficult match with a particular opponent but instead battling back against the pains and crawling out of the hole. Gyllenhaal's ability to carry the audience on his back and share such a personal journey so openly makes the film a staggering success not so much of raw entertainment but instead precision filmmaking and inspired storytelling that explores a tangibly realistic journey through life's deepest wounds and what it takes, and what it means, to recover from them.

Southpaw is a fantastic movie that's not about boxing but about life, using the sport as a cut-and-dry metaphor but one supported by tremendous narrative depth, precision filmmaking, and a remarkable lead performance. This is one of 2015's best films and it'll be a shame if it doesn't receive several Oscar nominations, including for both Jake Gyllenhaal and Antoine Fuqua. Anchor Bay's Blu-ray release of Southpaw delivers striking video and audio. Supplements are fairly average in terms of both quality and quantity. Very highly recommended.

[CSW] -3.3- Boxing lends itself to sad stories , comebacks, grit and paeans to hard work and Southpaw is another one that works these themes quite nicely. Jake Gyllenhaal and Forest Whitaker are superb as the boxer and trainer who resurrect the career of fallen fighter Billy Hope. They fight the corrupt sport system and the equally disliked Child Protective Services Systems and it is heart wrenching and convincing, albeit all a bit much. You do feel a bit used by all the old tropes of boxing films but it is so well done it doesn't matter.
[V4.5-A5.0] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box 10/10.


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