Ali
review by Cynthia Fuchs, 28 December 2001
Rumble
young man rumble
Most
likely, you've heard everything you need to hear about Muhammad Ali,
especially recently, what with all the publicity for Michael Mann's Ali.
Outrageous and outsized, he's one of the most famous figures of the
20th century, and surely one of the most incessantly documented and
represented. As if to increase the noise level, over the Christmas
holiday, ESPN found footage to make up 25 hours of programming, and
then played it a few times, to form an incessant loop of Ali-ness.
There you see him again and again -- in stills and archival fight
footage -- mouthing off with Howard Cosell, boxing with Joe Frazier,
George Foreman, and Sonny Liston, watching Billy Crystal do a
decidedly strange compression of his life by acting out Ali and
various contenders. It was a weird and wild (and lengthy) array of
moments, yet somehow it was hard to look away. Ali embodies a kind
of car-wreck charisma -- arrogant and self-conscious, beautiful and
fierce, even on twenty-year-old tape, he can take your breath away.
This
ability to mesmerize makes Ali who he is, or more accurately, who
everyone wants him to be. He's a cipher and a screen onto which
viewers might project themselves. Even now that he's been embraced
by the mainstream, Ali's story is a rife with as much controversy as
deference, and plenty of people still hold him in contempt for his
loud resistance to the Vietnam war and his sometimes compromised
allegiance to the Nation of Islam. So, the fact that Mann and
Fresh-Prince-turned-mega-movie-star Will Smith even imagined
bringing this story to the screen made headlines. How could they
pretend to convey Ali's brilliance? How could a movie do justice to
the complexity or the hugeness of the man?
For
all the hype and all the expectations, Ali is unexpected.
Knowledgeable, evocative, and occasionally excessive, the film jumps
right into its big subject and bold concept and never looks back. It
begins with a breathtaking sequence. Muhammad Ali, then Cassius
Clay, jogs in a hooded sweatshirt along a snowy city street,
followed briefly by a cop car, from which a white officer asks,
"What you runnin' from, son?" Clay keeps jogging,
unbothered because he's so used to such careless cruelty, but you
can't help but realize the pervasive whiteness of his world -- it
begins t explain his drive. Intercut with this scene, dated 24
February 1964, are repeated shots of Sam Cooke on stage, singing an
incredible medley over the cuts -- "Somebody Have Mercy,"
"It's All Right," "Bring It on Home to Me," and
more -- the camera barely keeping up with him as fans swoon. Cut
again, to lay on the speed bag, his face close, his punches rhythmic
and rapid; cut to Sonny Liston beating Floyd Patterson; to the child
Ali, watching his father, Cassius Clay, Sr. (Giancarlo Esposito),
paint a white Jesus for a white church; to young Cassius stepping to
the back of a bus, past a newspaper with a headline on the lynching
of Emmett Till; to Clay grown, standing in the back of a Muslim
meeting room, as Malcolm X (Mario Van Peebles) declares, "We
don't teach you to turn the other cheek."
With
these deft strokes, Ali begins to lay out (and admittedly,
reduce) the many complex factors that made Muhammad Ali "the
greatest" -- champion boxer, commercial goldmine, and man of
conscience -- however troubled and erratic he was in any of these
roles. Cooke continues to sing over shots of the young, magnificent
Clay in the gym, watched over by his fast-talking cornerman Bundini
Brown (Jamie Foxx), friend and photographer Howard Bingham (Jeffrey
Wright), and trainer Angelo Dundee (Ron Silver), all intent on
getting this kid, already an Olympic gold medallist, ready to take
on Liston. Cut once more, as the song closes, to the Clay-Liston
weigh-in, as Ali advises the champ that he is going to "fly
like a butterfly, sting like a bee." So insistent, so
confident, so fantastic, Clay was already a self-aggrandizing
loudmouth, offending old-school sportswriters with his lack of
"respect." Rumble young man rumble.
Exciting
and nervy, this first set of images, at once urgent and
impressionistic, stands as a kind of fair warning. This movie will
be no standard biopic. It won't give you a series of facts, it won't
show you how Ali came to be, it won't explain or even
"represent" him in any usual way. Selecting a particular
time period -- the tumultuous ten years between Clay/Ali's first
heavyweight title triumph in '65 and his amazing
"rope-a-dope" performance to recover that title in Zaire,
during 1974's "Rumble in the Jungle" (thrillingly
documented in Leon Gast's When We Were Kings) -- the film
doesn't pretend to tell the "whole" story of the man or
his times. Instead, it throws moments at you, a lot of them, almost
all scored with period music (though the "inspired-by"
soundtrack cd features popular new acts, including R. Kelly, Alicia
Keys, and Moby) and all coming with a speed that makes them
imprecise. It presumes you can fill in blanks.
Just
so, Ali doesn't so much introduce characters as it lets them
loose in mid-action: trainers, friends, and family members (Ali had
five or six kids during this decade -- out of 9 total -- but the
film barely acknowledges them) are more illustrative background
elements than developed characters. Sometimes, this is a
surprisingly effective strategy: Foxx as Bundini is especially
scrappy and alive in the role, so that the smidgen of screen time he
has turns electric. In other cases, as with Paul Rodriguez playing
Ali's doctor, Ferdie Pacheco, there's nothing to be done but show up
in the frame (perhaps, you think, his dialogue was lost in
cutting).
Occasionally,
the movie lapses into a more ordinary, episodic cadence, as it
"reports" on events. He wins the title; he receives his
Muslim name from Elijah Muhammad (Albert Hall); he seduces and
marries first wife Sonji (Jada Pinkett Smith); Malcolm (Mario Van
Peebles, in an underdeveloped role) and Martin (LeVar Burton, in
this single moment, that is, no role) shake hands on a TV in the
background of a shot where Ali is doing sit-ups in the foreground;
Malcolm is assassinated; Ali is convicted of "refusing
induction" ("Ain't no VC ever called me nigger"); his
lawyer, Chauncy Eskridge (solid Joe Morton), represents him all the
way to the Supreme Court, which overturns his conviction and grants
him conscientious objector status; etc.
Still,
despite this storytelling (call it "cramming") impulse,
the film maintains a kind of audacious subjectivity. It's not that
it takes Ali's point of view, exactly (though it's his more than
anyone else's); it's more that it filters all this history, so
well-known and yet so abstract, though a haze of riotous conscience.
The movie makes clear that he adores himself, and also that he
tramples all over many hearts, including the women he loves and
leaves, including Sonji, Belinda (Nona Gaye), and Veronica (Michael
Michele), and the friendship with Malcolm that he forsakes in order
to keep tight with Elijah Muhammad (bad choice, the movie argues, as
the Nation goes on to exploit Ali).
Of
course, the boxing scenes -- brutal, up-close, and metaphorical too
-- expose much of this internal turmoil as externalized and
choreographed professional battling. Mann and DP Emmanuel Lubezki
concoct a dazzling arrangement of wide and extremely tight shots,
and used a mini handheld camera that allowed them to get in between
fighters and create a grainy whoosh in the image. Also of course,
the film doesn't really challenge boxing, as ideology, sport, or
commercial/exploitative business, it also never lets you forget that
Ali came to his greatness amidst entrenched racism. And this is the
film's own bit of greatness, that it presents U.S. racism without
apologizing, explaining, or looking away from this legacy. It's
ugly.
As
for the seeming Ali-ness attained by Ali -- it's a mixed bag.
Smith really trained, boxed, and studied Islam, yes yes, and he
abstained from sex with Jada. All that, no matter how true, has long
since turned into marketing strategy, repeated for ESPN, GQ
and Jay Leno, playing the game much as Ali himself might have played
it (though certainly not so vividly as he has). In the film, Smith
is working hard in the role -- and god knows he owes us all for
making The Legend of Bagger Vance. And if he never transforms
himself into Ali, or what viewers want him to be, he achieves a
poetically licensed otherness, and a truly strong performance.
Perhaps most strikingly, Smith's most effective scenes, despite
Ali's notorious verbal dexterity, involve no dialogue, just the
camera (sometimes way too tight for regular comfort levels) on his
face and utterly expressive body.
Though
the film obviously reveres Ali, and omits many details, it also
offers enough shading to allow you to imagine his emotional and
ethical struggles (as well as his enormous ego). It probably helps
if you know a little something about Muhammad Ali before you walk
into the theater, for instance, that he is a devoted member of the
Nation, that he knew and quarreled with Elijah Muhammad as well as
Malcolm; struggled with the rush and privilege accompanying his
celebrity; cheated on three of his four wives; felt exploited by
managers and promoters, including Elijah's son Herbert Muhammad
(Barry Shabaka Henley) and Don King (Mykelti Williamson); venerated
his longtime friend Howard Cosell (well played by Jon Voight under a
heap of makeup); and resisted the draft when he was reclassified 1-A
in 1966, after he failed the aptitude test in 1964 and was declared
by the government to have an IQ of 78.
Running
about two and forty minutes, the movie makes room for these many
parts of Ali's life by not dwelling on any of them. Instead, it
grants glimpses, as in a brief hotel room scene, when second wife
Belinda confronts him about his rather public affair with
about-to-be-third wife, Veronica. Or as when Ali goes running in
Kinshasa, Zaire, accompanied by passionate well-wishers. He comes
upon a mural depicting his crazily superhuman stature, his
reputation and his value for them, in that it envisions him fighting
off Mubutu's oppressive regime much as he fights off George Foreman
or giant bees with stingers.
So
much of the movie is most focused on Ali's early, U.S.-based career,
so this moment, as he suddenly sees outside himself, to how others
might see him, galvanizes him, and not so indirectly, comments on
the costs of U.S. self-importance. While the film ends, literally
freezes, on his victorious Rumble, it never backs off its
consideration of the era's politics -- the racism and jingoism, the
classism and misogyny -- which are everywhere visible, in Ali's
detractors but also in his own behaviors. Mann is a famously earnest
filmmaker, and here again he leans on a few signature techniques to
make his principled points, hugely foregrounded faces to denote
contemplation or revelation, handheld camerawork to indicate chaos.
But the film is finally larger than such devices and the emotional
manipulations they might attempt. But more importantly, it is
premised on its inability to contain Ali. The bravest thing Ali
does is to gesture toward, wonder at, and celebrate Muhammad Ali,
and then let go of him.
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Directed by:
Michael Mann
Starring:
Will Smith
Jamie Foxx
Jon Voight
Mario Van Peebles
Ron Silver
Jeffrey Wright
Mykelti Williamson
Nona Gaye
Jada Pinkett Smith
Written
by:
Gregory Allen Howard
Rated:
R - Restricted.
Under 17 requires
accompanying
parent or adult
guardian.
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