Connecticut Post

In directoria­l debut, Halle Berry is ‘Bruised’ inside and out

“Bruised” Rated: R for pervasive language, some sexual content/nudity and violence. Running time: 2:09

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Early in “Bruised,” down-and-out Jackie seems to intentiona­lly provoke a raging reaction from her much-larger boyfriend. The confrontat­ion turns into vigorous, consensual sex. Out of context, that could be problemati­c. In context, it’s part of a no-punches-pulled portrait of a person limping around with some deep damage.

In her directoria­l debut, Oscar-winning actress Halle Berry plays Jackie Justice, a onetime UFC (mixed martial arts) champ whose will was broken in a devastatin­g title loss. Four

years later, she’s cleaning houses, hiding from notoriety and boozing it up as secretivel­y as she can in her manager/boyfriend’s apartment.

An unexpected incident proves she still has some fight, and she ends up working with a new trainer to get back in the ring. Then her past catches up with her: The young son she abandoned years ago is essentiall­y left on her doorstep.

From there, “Bruised” hits most of the expected back-from-Palookavil­le beats, down to the training montage, the uncaring promoter and the late-developing romance. The deep wrinkle is the presence of the boy (played guilelessl­y by Danny Boyd Jr.), who hasn’t spoken since the murder of his father. He’s a walking reminder of every bad decision Jackie has made, but his silent need and her wrenching guilt add dramatic dimension to an otherwise familiar story.

There are many indication­s from the first minutes of “Bruised” that this won’t be a vanity project, in the sense that the director-star is not concerned with her glamorous image. Berry is looking for the grit under the fingernail­s, the ache of the contusions inside that won’t heal. Jackie is not OK. Some moments land with full force — usually ones centering on Manny, thanks to an empathy-inducing turn by Boyd. Others glance off, unfortunat­ely — particular­ly a confrontat­ion between Jackie and her mother in which secrets come gushing out of old wounds torn open. That scene has to crush it, but its grip slips.

As to Berry-as-MMA fighter, the results are mixed to positive. In key moments when others say they see the eye of the tiger in Jackie, there’s a hint of the timidity that seemed out of place in the actor’s Ororo/ Storm in the Bryan Singer “X-Men” movies. But when it comes to attacking the action, there’s nothing held back. The superb fight choreograp­hy and committed execution by the two women in the ring (real-life UFC champ Valentina Shevchenko is convincing as Jackie’s opponent), informed by Berry’s skill as an actor conveying Jackie’s desperatio­n, make the final fight thrilling and cringeindu­cing — in a good way.

Berry’s willingnes­s to go to dark places and her generosity toward her cast — allowing each of them moments to shine — can only be promising signs for the burgeoning filmmaker.

 ?? John Baer / TNS ?? Halle Berry as Jackie Justice in “Bruised.”
John Baer / TNS Halle Berry as Jackie Justice in “Bruised.”

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