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Sunday 22 September 2013

SOS Pain & Gain Review.

“Jesus Christ has bestowed me with many gifts… and one of them is knocking people the f** out"

I have to say I was really looking forward to this as I sat down with my partner in crime Mike "Air" as the main cast was shaping up to be a good one with Mark Walberg and Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson being in some decent films as of late. Then I saw that the director was the same man that killed my childhood Micheal Bay grrrrrr!!

I am a professional after all so I gave my time this film as I would with any other films I have watched. So did Michael Bay manage to kill the careers of the aforementioned actors like he did with Optimus Prime and chums? Or has he finally managed to direct a semi decent film? Read on my friends and find out more....

Plot

Based on the true story of Daniel Lugo (Mark Wahlberg) a Miami bodybuilder who wants to live the American dream. He would like to have the money that other people have. So he enlists the help of fellow bodybuilder Adrian Doorbal (Anthony Mackie) and ex-convict, Christian bodybuilder Paul Doyle (Dwayne Johnson). Their kidnapping and extortion scheme goes terribly wrong since they have muscles for brains and they're left to haphazardly try to hold onto the elusive American dream.

Review

It's very easy to ridicule Michael Bay's movies... and also great fun. Despite attempting to witness his latest endeavour Pain & Gain with an open mind, it was only a matter of time before a coping strategy was instigated to ensure some modicum of sanity was preserved throughout this painfully (not gainfully) overlong and execrable affair. More on that later...

Based on a true story, a fact which is shoehorned into viewers' minds with "THIS IS A TRUE STORY" captions intermittently flashing up during seemingly contrived sequences, Pain & Gain follows three pumped up bodybuilders as they embark on an evil and greedy quest involving kidnap, extortion and murder.

There's Mark Wahlberg's gym instructor Daniel, the ringleader who often adopts a saucer-eyed expression of derangement; Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson's Paul, a Jesus-loving bodybuilder who likes to snort cocaine off the skinny derrières of strippers; and Anthony Mackie's trainer Adrian, who has rendered himself impotent through steroid use. They join forces in a bid to nab all of Tony Shalhoub's shady businessman Victor's money - only to have Ed Harris's retired investigator on their trail.

One would hope that the factual basis of the narrative would ensure that the makers steered clear of a hysterically sensationalised approach, or if not, at least the adoption of a satirical slant. But any shred of credence or intelligence is quashed by a plethora of one-dimensional ciphers masquerading as real-life people. This was Michael Bay's chance to show some storytelling prowess away from the mega-budget terrain and twisted metal of the Transformers franchise, but the same problems have materialised courtesy of a crass script that targets the lowest common denominator.

The representation of the central trio seeks to position them as more sympathetic than psychotic, with their despicable deeds played for laughs and their malevolent motivations attributed to a flawed interpretation of the American Dream. It's fair to say that Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman is never challenged in that thematic respect. Not that mainstream, multiplex entertainment needs to have such weighty aspirations. It should just steer away from being insulting and patronising on so many levels, epitomised by the presentation of a dangerous brand of masculinity - all rippling biceps, quickfire wisecracks and callous dislike of the unlike - as being iconic and desirable.

That's why the aforementioned 'coping strategy' was spontaneously adopted during the film. This movie is one long orgy of women who are either pouting, flesh-baring sluts or morbidly obese figures of mockery with terrible personal hygiene. A movie where rampant homophobia is deemed funny and laddish, and where crude racial stereotyping is acceptable. Of course this is All presented with plenty of Michael Bay Slo-Mo just to prolong the agony and make us loathe the aesthetic as much as the script. If I had realised that this was Micheal Bay directed I may never have seen it, and honestly I wish I hadn't!

Verdict

Pain and Gain is awful beyond imagining. Awful beyond dictionary definitions of awfulness. Scenes of violence and torture are directed as if violence and torture were audio-visual rock ’n’ roll. The story structure sways like a drunken elephant. The permutating voiceover narrations resemble an idiot’s Citizen Kane. Mark Wahlberg, looking overweight, and Dwayne Johnson, looking dazed, search vainly for that seam of gold that lies somewhere between comedy and tragedy. It is a search that has defeated better actors and much better films.

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