‘Warrior’ Blu-ray Review: Intensely Moving, Beautifully Acted Sports Drama
by John NolteWriter/co-director Gavin O’Connor’s “Warrior” opens with an emotionally bruising scene that not only sets the tone of this intensely moving story but beautifully uses silence and what remains unspoken to communicate a gulf so wide between an estranged father and son that it seems impossible to bridge. Dad is Paddy Conlon (Nick Nolte), a bear of a man who traded in the drink for the forgiveness of Jesus Christ. Today, alone in his beat up, working class house, his only companion is the terrible cost abusive alcoholics pay for their sobriety, the memories of the physical and mental abuse inflicted on a family eventually lost.
The son is Tommy Conlon (Tom Hardy), a former Marine just home from Iraq, who didn’t drop by after fourteen years to see how dear dad was doing,. He’s here to hurt the old man in every way possible without laying a hand on him. Tommy expected to find a drunk, and Paddy’s sobriety only angers him more. Dad doesn’t deserve forgiveness, Christ’s or anyone else’s. Tommy is a seething young man made dysfunctional by the baggage he carries around like the bulk of his muscle — an unreachable force of anger and bitter resentment that extends to his older brother Brendan, as well.
Brendan didn’t run away from his father like Tommy and his mother. He was older, had a girlfriend, and had already planted the seeds of a life. Eventually, he married that girl, went to college, became a teacher, had kids, and bought a house. Though they’re very different in so many ways, Tommy and Brendan do at least have one thing in common. No matter how many days sober, they will never forgive their father.
Paddy is a former martial-arts trainer, and this experience is the only thing these three still have in common. For reasons I won’t spoil, Tommy needs to make some quick cash, and that means getting back into the octagon and the competitive world of mixed-martial arts. The same goes for Brendan (a former UFC contender) who refuses to accept charity or file a bankruptcy to save his family from financial ruin. “I don’t do things that way,” he tells a banker, and though he’s a little long in the tooth, into the octagon he goes looking for whatever prize money he can scrape up.
A number of those matches occur in sleazy strip bars, something the school administration doesn’t look kindly on. This leaves Brendan no choice but to fight full-time, and a winner-take-all $5 million championship is something that catches the eye of both brothers. Because Tommy asked Paddy to train him, this means that all three men will fight for more than prize money. The conflict they’ve been running from is now inevitable, and the fight will be between their shared demons for a resolution to the pain they’ve shared and inflicted on one another.
“Warrior” is one of the best films of the decade and one of the most moving stories I’ve seen in years. O’Connor directs a brilliant performance out of all three of his leads and never allows melodrama to rear its head. Nolte’s performance is especially impressive. We’re meeting a genuinely good man living with unimaginable regret, a Dr. Jekyll burdened by his monstrous behavior towards his wife and sons as Dr. Hyde. Everything comes from Nolte’s haunted eyes. This is the most restrained performance of his career and most certainly an Oscar-caliber performance.
“Warrior” is also a rare opportunity these days to see men act like men on the big screen. These are men doing what a man’s gotta do to right wrongs and meet their responsibilities. These are men of action, not talk, men with pride and honor and a sense of duty. They’re not perfect men, far from it, but they’re striving to be good men the only way they know how. This is also the rare Hollywood picture that treats the working class, our military, and the Christian faith with respect.
This is a film about big things, and I don’t mean the brutal world of mixed martial-arts. Like the very best sports films, the sport itself is nothing more than a vehicle to explore characters, their relationships, and a theme. “Warrior’s” theme is the most powerful element of the film, a living, breathing thing that grabs hold of your insides and tightens its hold as the story passes by. It’s not about who wins the tournament or even if Brendan can keep his house.
It’s about forgiveness.
“Warrior” is available at Amazon.com.







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15 Comments
I'm a big fan of Mixed Martial Arts so when I heard about this movie I was hoping it would be the first decent MMA movie. And I wasn't disappointed. It's a good movie on it's own and you don't need to be an MMA fan to appreciate the movie. I will pick up a copy of the DVD as I will re-watch this movie.
I am not a fan of MMA but you don't have to be to love this movie. All the actors were wonderful, but Nolte was amazing. On my very short list of movies I will watch more than once, and sooner rather than later.
The movie has one big flaw: the MMA fights are poorly shot and edited in a near-incomprehensible fashion. I liked it, but those fights were an eyesore in the theater.
This is a MMA movie like Hoosiers was a basketball movie. It has it, but it's not the main subject matter. Excellent movie, great review, John!
I second everything that John says here! This was one of my favorite movies of the last ten years and I AM an M.M.A. fan. I implore anyone who hasn't seen it to go get this movie! The fight scenes are the best I have seen since Raging Bull and are very very effective without being as graphic as they were in that movie. Just great film making. Film making based on plot and real characters. And great film making doesn't require large amounts of money to make it so.
It's this generation's Rocky. A powerful movie that beat through most fight tropes and left me a blubbering, applauding mess at the end. In fact, it pitted two different fight tropes against each other, allowing us to wonder which one would prevail. And in the center, Nick Nolte, one of his best performances ever, and he really deserves a best supporting actor nod.
That said, I wanted a bit more of a wrap up. How does the money get spent? Do the brothers reconcile with the father? If they're not going to use the "death of the trainer/father" trope, you might as well play that card. Perhaps they left that for the sequel.
I love this movie. Not much to add to this awesome review other than Tom Hardy is rapidly becoming one of the best actors in the business.
I don't buy for one second that a teacher would get fired for cometing in UFC fights in strip clubs. Heck, these days a teacher can take his students into the club and buy them lap dances, and he probably wouldn't get fired for it.
No surprise that Nick Nolte has a hand in this. Who else can pull off the Nick Nolte tells all to Nick Nolte documentary? I'm just a BIG fan of the guy so I was riveted by it.
I'll throw down for Warrior.
I'm not into MMA, but this was easily one of my favorite movies of the last few years. With different actors and director, it could have become a slick piece of fluff, but the performances are raw and honest. It didn't find the audience it deserved in the theater, so hoping great word of mouth will bring it to more people's attention now that it's on DVD.
As a fan of MMA since the tender age of 8, you do not know how thankful I am to finally see a movie that does the sport justice. Great performances (with the highlights being Hardy and Nolte), excellent martial arts sequences, and above all that, a genuinely heartfelt story that even at nearly 2 and a half hours, flies by with ease. Warrior is my pick for film of the year, hands down.
Agreed. I assume you've seen BRONSON? To use the over-worked word… AWESOME/
Oh yes, Bronson was exellent. Anyone that hasn't seen that yet should make it a point to Netflix it ASAP.
This movie was pretty much universally well reviewed and clearly well made, featuring a popular sport. I saw a great deal of advertising (here in Los Angeles), both billboards, tv ads, and I saw the trailer quite a few times. So why was it such a resounding flop? Glad it's getting DVD love, but I was actually shocked this wasn't a theatrical home run.
Since it was pretty much a box office flop, a sequel seems unlikely. We'll be seeing "Bridesmaids 2" long before 'Warrior 2."
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