The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

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

- By Michael Ordoña

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” this won’t be a vanity project, in the sense 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 (reallife 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 cringe-inducing — 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.

 ?? NETFLIX ?? Halle Berry (right) stars as Jackie Justice and Valentina Shevchenko as Lady Killer in “Bruised.”
NETFLIX Halle Berry (right) stars as Jackie Justice and Valentina Shevchenko as Lady Killer in “Bruised.”

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