Taranaki Daily News

Mark Wahlberg’s Oscar-baiting bid for glory falls flat

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Father Stu (M, 124 mins) Directed by Rosalind Ross Reviewed by James Croot ★★ 1⁄

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Mark Wahlberg’s latest attempt at acting legitimacy and potential awards glory certainly demonstrat­es a commitment to his craft.

The 51-year-old apparently piled on 14kg to play the complicate­d and equally passionate Stuart Long, as well as pretty much funding this project himself, after multiple studios turned him down.

This true-life tale practicall­y screams Oscar-bait: a radical change in career, spiritual redemption, a love story and a potentiall­y fatal illness are all rolled into one.

It has echoes of his most lauded performanc­es in The Fighter and Boogie Nights but the result is a fitfully entertaini­ng, patchy biopic that sticks pretty close to the wellworn template, right down to footage of the real Stuart Long over the end credits.

And like Wahlberg’s last ‘‘serious’’ effort – 2020’s Joe Bell – a promising start eventually succumbs to over-earnestnes­s, although at least here there’s no big telegraphe­d twist.

What you see is pretty much what you’d expect from the outset.

Despite still being ranked as Montana’s No 2 heavyweigh­t boxer, when we first meet Stuart, he’s getting past his prime.

Having developed fevers and infections after his last three fights, his doctor and his mother Kathleen (Jacki Weaver) urge him to pack it in.

‘‘If you put half the same effort into a regular job, you’d be a manager,’’ she chides, before adding, ‘‘damn you for being so careless with your life.’’

Like Stuart and her estranged husband Bill (Mel Gibson), she is still haunted by the death of her other son Stephen, when aged just 6.

After a drunken night where he punches a stone statue of Jesus and ‘‘challenges an officer’s judgment’’, Stuart has an epiphany – he was born to perform, he just hasn’t found the right stage.

To the strains of Glen Campbell’s Rhinestone Cowboy, he heads to Hollywood, taking a job in a supermarke­t, figuring it’s most likely where he’ll meet those in the movie business.

While that’s not exactly a roaring success, it does lead to an encounter with the enchanting Carmen (Teresa Ruiz).

Despite rebuffing his initial overtures, he tracks her down to a local Catholic Church and, determined to win her over, not only helps out with her Sunday School classes, but agrees to be baptised.

‘‘I’m not what you’re used to – or what you deserve – but I’ll be better than both,’’ he promises.

However, a bike accident changes everything.

Left in a coma and with significan­t trauma to his head and vital organs, Stuart is not expected to live long.

So when he comes to and slowly recovers, he is certain that somebody thought he was worth saving – and now it’s up to him to show what he has to offer.

Neither his parents nor the local seminary though are exactly convinced of his prospectiv­e priestly credential­s.

While Australian Weaver delivers fraught-matriarch to her usual high standard, Gibson is the surprise revelation here.

Now pretty much reduced to one-note villains and fatally flawed heroes, the former Oscar-winner’s initially by-the-book belligeren­t and bellicose Bill develops into a far more nuanced character, perhaps even more so than Stuart himself.

He also gets many of the pithiest lines, offering a welcome succinctne­ss in a movie in which Wahlberg pontificat­es, proselytis­es and spouts profanitie­s in equal measure.

While not without its moments, it’s one really only for true Wahlberg believers.

Father Stu is now available to rent from iTunes, GooglePlay and Neon.

 ?? ?? Like Mark Wahlberg’s last ‘‘serious’’ effort – 2020’s Joe Bell – a promising start eventually succumbs to over-earnestnes­s.
Like Mark Wahlberg’s last ‘‘serious’’ effort – 2020’s Joe Bell – a promising start eventually succumbs to over-earnestnes­s.

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