Posted on 02/18/2005 1:10:19 PM PST by mrustow
If you give Million Dollar Baby half a chance, you're gonna cry.
"You're gonna cry," the ticket-seller, a Spanish lady in her late fifties, told me. And she was right. Frankie: Father, that was a great sermon ... made me weep. Meanwhile, Maggie just wants a chance. Frankie tells Maggie, "I don't train girls," but she is not to be denied.
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AMEN!
The character Rowdy Yates on "Rawhide" was a hand. The trail boss was Gil Favor.
"Sometimes you can tell in seconds that a performer has no talent -- think Sean Combs, Jennifer Lopez, Ben Affleck."
Ouch. So what, are these people incredibly attractive? I've never seen a movie with any of them in it, but I believe that Lopez and Affleck are big-name actors. They're so famous that I, culturally disconnected citizen, recognize their names.
I like his old stuff, Josy Wales, Man with no name films, some of the Dirty Harrys. Thats about it.
This is the closest the reviewer appears to come to even hinting at the euthanasia plot twist.
P.S. Plenty of FReepers have criticized Eastwood for this movie.
Having failed to convince the public that killing babies in the womb is courageous and compassionate, American devotees of the Culture of Death have now trained their propaganda guns on the elderly and the disabled. What Jane Wilson called an "unsettling turn" in Clint Eastwood's "Million Dollar Baby" is in fact a cinematic endorsement of euthanasia.Last month the National Spinal Cord Injury Association accused Eastwood of a "disability vendetta," describing the last scene of his film as a "brilliantly executed attack on life after a spinal cord injury." The group's chief executive said Eastwood was using the "power of fame and film to perpetuate his view that the lives of people with disabilities are not worth living." The disability-rights group Not Yet Dead has picketed "Million Dollar Baby" because, as one of its reviewers argued, the film "plays out killing as a romantic fantasy and gives emotional life to the `better dead than disabled' mindset."
As the USCCB review of the film indicates, because of the artistic power of the film "our sympathies and humane inclinations may argue in favor of such misguided compassion, but our Catholic faith prohibits us from getting around the fact that, in this case, the best-intended ends cannot justify the chosen means: the taking of a life."
It hardly seems coincidental that such a film is coming out at the same time self-styled progressives are demanding that the state of California lift its ban on doctor-assisted suicide. As the Terri Schiavo case so sadly illustrates, the Catholic Church is one of the few institutions in this country willing to take a stand for those whose lives depend entirely on the care of others.
Jane Wilson noted with approval that the Hollywood elite loved "Million Dollar Baby." She did not mention that this is the same elite that rejected "The Passion of the Christ" as overly violent and propagandistic. Not did she point out that our bishops have given "Million Dollar Baby" a rating of O - Morally Offensive. I think Catholic readers have a right to expect greater moral clarity in the archdiocesan paper, even in the film reviews.
we need some Hillary Swank pictures. Please, no Crusty pics of the other Hillary.
See it, don't see it, no one else cares. But judge it as a movie, not as a pro-euthanasia screed, because if it were that there would be no drama in the decision--if he's doing something the movie's point of view says is a good, right thing, why is it shown as a dramatic decision?
"My dear, it's only a movie. Don't take it too seriously."--Alfred Hitchcock
Was Dirty Harry a pro-shoot-people-in-the-head-with-a-44-magnum movie?
I have seen many of the movies cited in this review. Beyond Million Dollar Baby let me mention one. Mystic River was, I thought, interminable. I thought Robbins did a decent job in it. Sean Penn proved for the latest of a long line of parts that he doesn't know the first thing about acting, but he is quite the emoter. He also proved he can inhale fiercely through his nasal pasages. That's about it.
I thought Million Dollar Baby was well worth the time and money. It didn't make me cry. I didn't walk away feeling any better about euthanasia or anything close to it.
I went to it because my wife and daughtter wanted to see it. I normally don't care for boxing movies and never made it past about Rocky XXII or something like that. Female boxers do even less for me. I thoroughly planned to hate the movie.
Morgan Freeman was superb, as always. Clint Eastwood was also superb as a multi demensional character. I even liked the Hilary Swank character. I went to the movie planning to hate it and came away recommending it.
The Oscars can't be taken seriously. My only interest in them is to ogle the comely young actresses doing the red carpet bit.
My wife came away ambivalent and my daughter hated it.
RE: Catholic church supporting pro-euthanasia film Million Dollar Baby - just as this reviewer repeats the carnard that this is a movie about boxing and not about mercy killing - the Jesuit magazine America review of MDB couldn't praise it enough for its content and 'message'.
Pretty sick.
Dirty Harry was not promoted as a romantic comedy.
Why do commentators so often say a person is a "devout Catholic," when the person clearly doesn't believe the Catholic Faith? I guess it's shorthand for "performs rituals popularly associated with the Catholic Church, irrespective of belief."
Amen. A voice of sanity...
And as best I can tell almost none of them have actually seen it; they're letting Medved do their thinking for them.
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