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Million
Dollar Baby
Warner
Brothers
Lakeshore Entertainment
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Theme:
Beauty and Affliction
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Insights:
Every once in awhile a movie
comes along that haunts you. You don't simply watch it
and forget it; no, something about it stays with you
lingering like smoke in a room. You'll be going about
your daily affairs, and suddenly you catch a "whiff", and
there it is filling your conscious thoughts. Clint
Eastwood's Million Dollar Baby is one of those films,
and there are reasons why this movie is so powerful and so
haunting. Simone Weil says that there are two things
that pierce the human heart...Beauty and Affliction.
This movie is a double-edged sword.
Beauty
The beauty of this film is
not the external visual world it presents, actually that
is quite ugly and dull. No, the beauty is found in
a person, Maggie Fitzgerald, and the relationship that
Maggie develops with her trainer, Frankie Dunn.
For two-thirds of the movie, beauty triumphs over evil.
It does so with four powerful weapons - sacrifice,
humility, friendship, and words.1
The beauty of Maggie is her
childlike heart and her innocent belief that Frankie
Dunn can make her into something more than "trailer
trash". For this she is willing to make any
sacrifice, pay any price. The sign that she
practices under, "Winners are simply willing to do what
losers won't", is there for Maggie. She is a winner.
Her humility is not meekness or weakness, as some would
define humility. Indeed, her physical strength is
a sign of what humility really is - great strength under
great control.
The devotion and love she
shows to Frankie Dunn are what change his heart and
release him from the crusty ill-tempered man we see at
the beginning to become the tender-hearted poet we see
at the end. Their friendship is so powerful
because it is a redemptive friendship. Maggie
becomes Frankie's long lost Katie, and Frankie becomes
Maggie's deceased daddy. The broken places in each heart
caused by a lost love are now restored in a new
relationship. Nothing could signify this more than
the powerful new name (words) Frankie gives to Maggie -
Mo Cuisle.
Like a boxer dancing around
an opponent, the movie dances with our hearts touching
us deeply with scene after scene of sacrifice, humility,
friendship, and powerful words. The winners do
things the losers simply won't do. Maggie buys a
house for her despicable mother. Frankie writes
letters to a daughter who won't read them.
One-eyed Scrap puts on a single glove and beats a young
punk, and Danger returns to the gym. We really
want the winners to win and the losers to lose. We are
ringside, so to speak, yelling and cheering when the
movie takes a fatal turn.
Affliction
Note:
If you do not want to know how this movie ends, stop
reading.
The bad part of the film's
ending is not the dirty punch that The Blue Bear gives
to Maggie, that should be expected from the one who is
obviously the devil figure in this film. The bad
part is where the movie goes after Maggie is hit and
paralyzed. The scenes of Maggie's attempted
suicide and Frankie's "mercy killing" are so jarring
because they communicate powerful lies that the modern
world has come to accept as truth.
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A human being is no
different than an animal, just more evolved.
Maggie wants to be shot like Axel.
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All of "life" is here in
this world. Maggie says, "I've had it all."
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Heaven is a gray place like
Ira's Roadside Diner where they serve real lemon
meringue pie, Frankie sits there all alone.
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The reason this movie is so
haunting is because it leaves us in the affliction;
there is no redemption, no grand restoration, no happily
ever after. The Book of Ecclesiastes says that God
has set eternity in our hearts (Ecclesiastes
3:11). Deep within every human being is the
knowledge of a much Larger Story2.
One that begins in Beauty (Creation), descends into
Affliction (The Fall), yet does not abandon us there.
It is the Story of God's redeeming love. A love
that always triumphs over evil because of sacrifice,
humility, friendship, and the The Word. (Philippians
2:5-11).
Notes:
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Four weapons against evil
originate with Peter Kreeft.
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For a short, but
excellent treatment of the Larger
Story read Epic by John Eldredge.
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