Released a little over a year after the grand success of his Oscar-winning feature MYSTIC RIVER, Clint Eastwood returns to the director's chair for MILLION DOLLAR BABY. Eastwood also stars, in the role of Frankie Dunn, a down-on-his-luck former boxing manager who spends the twilight years of his life running a small, dilapidated gym in downtown Los Angeles. Frankie's previous career was blighted by an injury to one of his prize fighters, Scrap (Morgan Freeman), who lost the sight in his right eye during a particularly brutal bout; Scrap now wiles away the hours working as a cleaner in Frankie's gym. Wary of similar occurrences being inflicted on the prestigious young talent that passes before him, Frankie lets a succession of great boxers slip through his fingers. But when the brash, confident young boxer Maggie Fitzgerald (Hilary Swank) strides into the gym, Frankie's life is irretrievably altered. Initially refusing to train Maggie due to her gender and age, Frankie relents when faced with her tenacity, spirit, and burning ambition. The combination of Maggie's talent and Frankie's tutelage paves the way for the adroit fighter to rise steadily through the ranks of women's boxing, with the unlikely coupling forming a genuinely touching bond in the process.
Clint Eastwood has crafted a boxing film fit to stand alongside classics such as RAGING BULL and ROCKY with MILLION DOLLAR BABY. The scenes between Eastwood and Freeman are a delight to watch, with the two old hands pulling off masterfully understated performances as a couple of men teetering on the brink of failure. Likewise, Swank puts in a powerful turn as Maggie, further emphasizing her penchant for unusual roles, and perhaps even bettering her incredible, Oscar-winning showing as Teena Brandon in BOYS DON'T CRY.
Theatrical Release: DECEMBER 17, 2004 (LIMITED)
JANUARY 21, 2004 (EXPANDS)
HD-DVD Features:
Elite Red Case
Widescreen - 2.40
Audio:
Dolby Digital Surround Sound 5.1 - English, French (Quebec)
Subtitles - English SDH, English, French, Latin Spanish - Optional
Closed Captioned - English - Optional
Additional Release Material:
Trailer - 1. Theatrical Trailer
Interviews - 1. "James Lipton Takes on Three: Roundtable with Clint Eastwood, Hilary Swank, Morgan Freeman, and Moderator James Lipton"
Featurettes - 1. "Born to Fight: A Discussion with Real-Life Boxer/Actress Lucia Rijker"
2. "Producers Round 15: Behind the Scenes"
Distributor Notes: Million Dollar Baby
"I DON'T TRAIN GIRLS", trainer Frankie Dunn growls. But something's different about the spirited boxing hopeful who shows up daily at Dunn's gym. All she wants is a fighting chance.
Clint Eastwood plays Dunn and directs, produces and composes music for this acclaimed, multi-award-winning tale of heart, hope and family. Hilary Swank plays resilient Maggie, determined not to abandon her one dream. And Morgan Freeman is Scrap, gym caretaker and counterpoint to Dunn's crustiness. Grab your dreams and come out swinging.
Source: Warner Home Video
Stars
Hilary Swank: Oscar Winning American Actress, BOYS DON'T CRY
Morgan Freeman: American Actor
Clint Eastwood: American actor/director, THE GOOD, THE BAD.../UNFORGIVEN
Jay Baruchel: Actor
Christina Cox: American Actress
Director
Clint Eastwood: American actor/director, THE GOOD, THE BAD.../UNFORGIVEN
Producer
Tom Rosenberg:
Albert S. Ruddy: American Producer
Paul Haggis: Screenwriter, THE LAST KISS (2006)
Clint Eastwood: American actor/director, THE GOOD, THE BAD.../UNFORGIVEN
Screenwriter
Paul Haggis: Screenwriter, THE LAST KISS (2006)
Composer
Clint Eastwood: American actor/director, THE GOOD, THE BAD.../UNFORGIVEN
Editor
Joel Cox: Editor, MILLION DOLLAR BABY (2004)
Director of Photography
Tom Stern: Director/Screenwriter
Executive Producer
Gary Lucchesi: Producer
Executive Producer
Robert Lorenz: Producer, MYSTIC RIVER (2003)
Production Designer
Henry Bumstead: Production Designer, MILLION DOLLAR BABY (2004)
Source Writer
F.X. Toole: Sourcewriter, MILLION DOLLAR BABY (2004)
Costume Designer
Deborah Hopper: Costume Designer, MILLION DOLLAR BABY (2004)
Review 1:
"[T]he best movie released by a major Hollywood studio this year....It is a quiet, intimately scaled three-person drama directed in a patient, easygoing style..."
Source: New York Times
p.E1 12/15/2004
Review 2:
"[T]he director's most touching, most elegiac work yet....It's got some of the emotional daring of the great melodramas of Hollywood's golden age..."
Source: Los Angeles Times
p.E1 12/15/2004
Review 3:
"[A] grim knockout of a boxing movie with multiple jolts....Eastwood directs and stars in one of his top performances..."
Source: USA Today
p.1D 12/15/2004
Review 4:
"The chemistry between Eastwood and Swank is touching and spiky and true. It is also gently, unstatedly romantic."
Source: Entertainment Weekly
p.50-1 12/24/2004
Review 5:
"[A] stunningly drawn map of the human heart disguised as a boxing yarn....[Eastwood's] stripped -down performance -- as powerful as anything he's ever done -- has a rugged, haunting beauty. The same goes for the movie."
Source: Rolling Stone
p.170-1 12/30/2004
Review 6:
"[A] remarkably appealing success story full of heart and humor and poignancy, with Swank as winning as she's ever been."
Source: Premiere
p.46-8 02/01/2005
Review 7:
"When this heroic underdog fable turns really dark, its grip strengthens yet further, Noble, savage and brave."
Source: Uncut
p.103 02/01/2005
Review 8:
"The washed-out colour photography, the seedy urban locations, the peripheral low-life characters all give the film a pleasingly noir feel."
Source: Sight and Sound
p.67-8 03/01/2005
Review 9:
Ranked #4 in Uncut's Best Films Of 2005 -- "[A] powerful and provocative boxing movie which deservedly won the main prizes at this year's Oscars."
Source: Uncut
p.82-83 01/01/2006
Review 10:
"The Tom Stern cinematography captures striking shots, some of which are highly contrasted or in silhouette, and heighten the emotion during pivotal moments throughout the film."
Source: Widescreen Review
p.64 06/01/2006