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Raging Bull

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Mudcat

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I watched this recently. It had been so long since I had seen it, it felt almost like a first viewing.

My conclusion: this is a vastly over-rated movie. I don't get why there is such a fuss about it. As a depiction of boxing, it is really bad. So distractingly fake (not just in the ring but some of the out-of-the-ring scrapping was well into the realm of unintentional comedy). I realize it is hard to do many sports convincingly for movies and Raging Bull is not alone in that, but nevertheless it has to be said.

I also realize it is not really supposed to be about boxing. It is a character study - and as a character study, I found it really weak. I feel like if you are going to do a biography of a marginal historical figure, there should be something about them that stands out - but apparently Jake LaMotta was just a dime-a-dozen idiotic manchild. That's what he was at the start and that's what he was at the end.

He was a boxer with some violent tendencies. It does not amaze me.

It's in black and white. Wow? :dunno:

Great Performance by Deniro - I see that. Pesci too. Normally for a movie where I feel so clear that I don't ever need to watch it again, my rating would be thumbs down - sub-5 - however the strength of those performances bumps my rating to 5.7 out of 10.





I dunno. Maybe someone can tell me why this is in the top 5 AFI movies of all time.
 
I think the big deal about movies like Raging Bull is the whole "flawed protagonist" thing just works.

Except, in this case, it really doesn't. You spend hours with a violent selfish man, then at the end he's a fat, disillusioned night club owner and we are supposed to feel sorry for him.

I do like the very last scene though, and if you're like me, the feeling I get is more like getting revenge on the character as opposed to feeling pity for him.