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The Wrestler

The Wrestler

  • Status: Released
  • 07-09-2008
  • Runtime: 109 min
  • Score: 7.529
  • Vote count: 3763

Aging wrestler Randy "The Ram" Robinson is long past his prime but still ready and rarin' to go on the pro-wrestling circuit. After a particularly brutal beating, however, Randy hangs up his tights, pursues a serious relationship with a long-in-the-tooth stripper, and tries to reconnect with his estranged daughter. But he can't resist the lure of the ring and readies himself for a comeback.

Mickey Rourke

Randy

Marisa Tomei

Cassidy

Evan Rachel Wood

Stephanie

Mark Margolis

Lenny

Todd Barry

Wayne

Wass Stevens

Nick Volpe

Judah Friedlander

Scott Brumberg

Ernest Miller

The Ayatollah

Dylan Keith Summers

Necro Butcher

Tommy Farra

Tommy Rotten

Mike Miller

Lex Lethal

Marcia Jean Kurtz

Admissions Desk Woman

John D'Leo

Adam

Ajay Naidu

Medic

Gregg Bello

JAPW Promoter Larry Cohen

Scott Siegel

Greg

Maurizio Ferrigno

Spotter

Donnetta Lavinia Grays

Jen

Andrea Langi

Alyssa

Armin Amiri

Dr. Moayedizadeh

Lynn Tovale Anoa'i

Pharmacist

Ryan Lynn

Strip Club Best Man

Michael Drayer

Strip Club Bachelor

Alyssa Bresnahan

Cheeques Bartender

Jeff Chena

Hotel Bartender

Vernon Campbell

Big Chris

Felice Choi

Beautician

Bernadette Penotti

Tanning Salon Owner

John L. Sullivan

The Legend Johnny Valiant

Ron Killings

Ron "The Truth" Killings

Giovanni Roselli

Romeo Roselli

Robert D. Siegel

Autograph Fan #1

Scott Franklin

Autograph Fan #2

Sylvia Kauders

Hudson Acres Lady at Deli Counter

Alissa Reisler

Young Housewife at Deli Counter

Willy Rosner

Touchdown Man at Deli Counter

Rebecca Darke

German Potato Salad Lady at Deli Counter

E.J. Carroll

Teamster at Deli Counter

Abraham Aronofsky

Annoyed Man at Deli Counter

Charlotte Aronofsky

Annoyed Woman at Deli Counter

TJ Kedzieerski

Jameson

Jen Cohn

Get a Room Lady

Tyrone Scott

WXW Announcer

Douglas Crosby

WXW Referee

Larry Mercer

CZW Announcer

Nick Papagerio

CZW Referee

Kevin Foote

ROH Announcer

Jon Trosky

ROH Referee

Andrew Anderson

Wrestler

Daniel Solwold Jr.

Wrestler

Brian Heffron

Wrestler

Nicholas K. Berk

Wrestler

Brolly

Wrestler

Lamar Braxton Porter

Wrestler

Claudio Castagnoli

Wrestler

Cobian

Wrestler

Doc Daniels

Wrestler

Bobby Dempsey

Wrestler

Billy Dream

Wrestler

Rob Strauss

Wrestler

Nate Hatred

Wrestler

Kristopher Cope

Wrestler

David John Markland

Wrestler

Inferno

Wrestler

Jess Liaudin

Wrestler

Judas

Wrestler

Kid U.S.A.

Wrestler

Lloyd Anoa'i

Wrestler

Toa Mairie

Wrestler

Kevin Matthews

Wrestler

Charles Renner

Wrestler

Pete Nixon

Wrestler

Paul E. Normous

Wrestler

Papadon

Wrestler

Darnell Kittrell

Wrestler

Jay Santana

Wrestler

Sugga

Wrestler

Alex Whybrow

Wrestler

Whacks

Wrestler

Ryan Tygh

Fan (uncredited)

Olivia Baseman

Alyssa's Roommate (uncredited)

Brandon DiCamillo

Audience Member (uncredited)

Sakinah Bingham

Ring Girl (uncredited)

Matt Cannon

Crazy Fan (uncredited)

Peter Conboy

Fans at Table (uncredited)

Evan Ginzburg

Fan at Convention (uncredited)

Anna-Karin Eskilsson

Girl in Supermarket (uncredited)

Cory Kastle

Wrestler (uncredited)

Robert Oppel

Wrestler (uncredited)

Piper Kenny

DJ (uncredited)

Mike Marino

Medic #2 (uncredited)

Rafaela Ochoa

Wrestling Fan (uncredited)

Bill Walters

Wrestling Fan (uncredited)

Eric Santamaria

Vendor (uncredited)

Erika Smith

Dancer (uncredited)

Henry Kwan

Strip Club Patron (uncredited)

Ben Van Bergen

Deli Customer (uncredited)

Emmanuel Yarborough

Sumo Wrestler (uncredited)

John Corson

Wrestler (uncredited)

Wuchak

“The Wrestler” (2008) Twenty years past his glory days in the mid/late 80s, a wrestler (Mickey Rourke) struggles to make ends meet in New Jersey while wrestling on the weekends, taking illegal pain-meds, pursuing a dancer at the local strip club (Marisa Tomei) and trying to reestablish a relationship with his estranged daughter (Evan Rachel Wood). This is an engrossing, but gloomy drama about the grim reality of celebrities from practically any field who are long past their prime; it just happens to be a wrestler in this case. People mock how fake wrestling is, but those talented guys bend over backwards to entertain the audience with incredibly painful stunts. The film was shot in the winter in New Jersey and this augments the bleak pall. On the female front, Marisa is absolutely stunning as Cassidy (aka Pam) and Wood is convincing as the embittered daughter. Their relationships with the protagonist are a mixture of sweet, agonizing and moving. The soundtrack features several quality songs from the 80s: "Bang Your Head," "Round and Round," "Balls to the Wall," "Animal Magnetism," "Dangerous," "Don't Know What You Got (Till It's Gone)," "Sweet Child o' Mine" and more. The movie reminded me of 80’s metal star Jon Mikl Thor and the excellent documentary “I Am Thor” (2015) and, to a lesser extent, “Anvil: The Story of Anvil” (2008). While neither of these is as melancholic as “The Wrestler,” and “I Am Thor” is sometimes laugh-out-loud amusing, they both effectively show the grey reality of former real-life celebs well past their halcyon days. The film runs 1 hour, 49 minutes. GRADE: A-

CinemaSerf

Mickey Rourke is on top-form in this depiction of fading wrestling star "Randy". Once the talk of the tour, he has fallen on hard times. His body hasn't the strength or stamina it once had and after one fairly convincing pasting in the ring he decides it is time to hang up his loincloth. Whilst his professional life was full of glamour, testosterone and showbiz, his retirement is much less so. Still needing to work, he takes a job in a supermarket and all so he can eek out a living and hopefully establish a relationship with his long estranged daughter "Stephanie" (Evan Rachel Wood). When we are in the ring, this is an action-packed and entertaining film that illustrates well just how brief these folks' moment's in the sun can be, at how fickle the audiences can be and at just how little a dilapidated body (and soul) can be left with when injury and age impose themselves. I was much less interested in the slightly contrived, and predictable, familial melodrama into which this sinks in the middle, though. I found myself really disinterested in his love life - with the unconvinced "Cassidy" (Marisa Tomei), or in his attempts to repair his torrid relationship with "Stephanie". Luckily, that is but an intermission before the grand denouement that sees him in the ultimate grudge match against his equally aged foe "the Ayatollah" (Ernest Miller). The script is lively and frequently quite witty, the direction of the fight scenes captures well the physical endurance required by these athletes, but it also shows us that their job is to entertain us - not to actually kill each other! Rourke flips from the wrestler to the tortured father well here, and the film is well worth a watch.

griggs79

What a film. It’s raw, heartfelt, and unexpectedly tender. Mickey Rourke's character, all battered pride and broken dreams, is a reflection of our own struggles, clinging to past glory while life keeps kicking him in the ribs. The themes of faded stardom, loneliness, and defiance really hit home. It’s not flashy, but it’s utterly gripping. Quietly devastating. I loved it.