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Editorial Reviews
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video
Martin Scorsese's brutal black-and-white biography of
self-destructive boxer Jake LaMotta was chosen as the best film of the 1980s in
a major critics' poll at the end of the decade, and it's a knockout piece of
filmmaking. Robert De Niro plays LaMotta (famously putting on 50 pounds for the
later scenes), a man tormented by demons he doesn't understand and prone to
uncontrollably violent temper tantrums and fits of irrational jealousy. He
marries a striking young blond (Cathy Moriarty), his sexual ideal, and then
terrorizes her with never-ending accusations of infidelity. Jake is as
frightening as he is pathetic, unable to control or comprehend the baser
instincts that periodically, and without warning, turn him into the rampaging
beast of the title. But as Roman Catholic Scorsese sees it, he works off his
sins in the boxing ring, where his greatest athletic talent is his ability to
withstand punishment. The fight scenes are astounding; they're like barbaric
ritual dance numbers. Images smash into one another--a flashbulb, a spray of
sweat, a fist, a geyser of blood--until you feel dazed from the
pummeling. Nominated for a handful of Academy Awards (including best picture and
director), Raging Bull won only two, for De Niro and for editor Thelma
Schoonmacher. --Jim Emerson --This text refers to the
DVD edition.
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