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Redbelt (Movie 2008): Exemplary Box Office Dud

Redbelt movie Chiwetel Ejiofor Emily MortimerRedbelt movie with Chiwetel Ejiofor and Emily Mortimer.
  • Redbelt (movie 2008) review: Set in the world of mixed martial arts, David Mamet’s commercially unsuccessful morality tale is possibly his most impressive to date. Chiwetel Ejiofor leads the capable cast.

Redbelt (movie 2008) review: Why did David Mamet’s most profound and most well-acted movie turn out to be a total box office flop?

Ramon Novarro biography Beyond Paradise

The premiere of David Mamet’s Redbelt took place on April 7 in Los Angeles. Since then, the film – which reportedly cost $7 million – has grossed around $2.3 million in the domestic market.

And yet Redbelt is a much tighter effort than the more commercially successful The Spanish Prisoner (1997), while it features a cast – led by Chiwetel Ejiofor – that can handle the screenwriter-director’s particular flair for dialogue much more capably than the actors in his previous films.

One wonders: Why wasn’t there an audience for this latest David Mamet achievement?

Tough sell

Redbelt is a tough film to market, that’s a given. Its audience may be limited to mixed martial arts (MMA) fans and to the more cerebral theatre connoisseurs – who are likely to be found instead in the audience for Mamet’s new stage comedy November.

So, how did Sony Pictures Classics handle the movie’s marketing? They split their concerns between Spike TV and New York’s Lincoln Center.

With the growing interest in MMA and the growing pockets of upper-class theatre types, Redbelt should have been a guaranteed financial success. Yet, despite a number of positive reviews, it wasn’t.

Perhaps neither demographic was willing to compromise their tastes. And that’s their loss.

Moral man

Redbelt follows economically strapped Brazilian jiu-jitsu academy owner and teacher Mike Terry (Chiwetel Ejiofor) who, above anything else, upholds his morals.

It’s no coincidence that Mamet himself has been training in jiu-jitsu for five years, and believes that his teachers offer him and other students “a vision of the possibility of correct, moral behavior in all circumstances.”

In fact, Redbelt appears to be the filmmaker’s presentation of the moral character that he has been aiming (or training) for in his jiu-jitsu lessons: The independent spirit of the true hero; one with a rock-solid moral fiber that is continually tested, but who remains compassionate and honorable while struggling to make the right decisions.

That approach makes Redbelt feel more “positive” than many of Mamet’s other “man struggling against man” efforts.

Quality work all around

Unlike other David Mamet films that have large plot holes or too quickly tied-up endings, Redbelt is bolstered by a concise script whose only flaws are a few tiny oversights – possibly because the momentum of this tightly edited drama would have been destroyed with the addition of more explanatory scenes.

Besides, the dialogue is superb, as always, and this time around the actors – all suited for their roles – deliver each stutter and colloquial verse with ease. Mamet alumnus Ricky Jay is great, while Chiwetel Ejiofor, who reportedly trained 12 hours a day for the fight scenes, gives one of the strongest performances of his career.

The fighting itself – there isn’t too much of it – is realistically intense, with a fantastic final sequence that made me believe that Ejiofor did indeed train as often as reported.

As a plus, this fight movie looks beautiful – and why shouldn’t it?

After all, Paul Thomas Anderson’s regular director of photography, Robert Elswit – who won an Oscar for There Will Be Blood and who had previously worked on Mamet’s Heist – rejoined the team for Redbelt.

Mature storytelling

In sum, Redbelt is a first-rate addition to David Mamet’s canon. It shows growth and maturity in his writing and directing style, especially in his ability to handle actors. Admittedly, things may seem a bit too neat at times, but most morality tales are like that.

And perhaps the movie offers too much to think about for the MMA audience and too much blood and choreographed fighting for the cerebral crowd. But whatever the reason for the rough box office of his latest big-screen endeavor, Mamet will not be hurting for work.

It’s fortunate that in a sense his career has been similar to that of John Cassavetes: Mamet can work within Hollywood, writing “manufactured” films like The Untouchables and Hannibal, while being able to produce his own close-to-heart projects like American Buffalo and the must-see Redbelt.

Redbelt (movie 2008) cast & crew

Direction & Screenplay: David Mamet.

Cast: Chiwetel Ejiofor, Emily Mortimer, Tim Allen, Alice Braga, Ricky Jay, Joe Mantegna, Rodrigo Santoro, David Paymer, Rebecca Pidgeon, Jose Pablo Cantillo, Max Martini, Jake Johnson, Jennifer Grey, Ed O’Neill, Josh Rafferty, Randy Couture.

Cinematography: Robert Elswit.

Film Editing: Barbara Tulliver.

Music: Stephen Endelman.

Production Design: David Wasco.

Producer: Chrisann Verges.

Production Company: The Redbelt Co.

Distributor: Sony Pictures Classics.

Running Time: 99 min.

Country: United States.

Redbelt (Movie 2008): Exemplary Box Office Dud” review text © Keith Waterfield; excerpt, image captions, bullet point introduction, and notes © Alt Film Guide.


Redbelt (Movie 2008): Exemplary Box Office Dud” notes

Redbelt movie credits via the American Film Institute (AFI) Catalog website.

See also: Ong-Back: Muay Thai Warrior review.

Emily Mortimer and Chiwetel Ejiofor Redbelt movie image: Sony Pictures Classics.

Redbelt (Movie 2008): Exemplary Box Office Dud” last updated in April 2023.

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1 comment

Uplift -

Keith – this is quite a long time after you wrote the post, but I hope you’ll respond.

–> “with only a few tiny oversights” <–

Really? I mean it – I’m not trolling here. Here are the two main oversights that are really not tiny.

(1) The idea that the cop could have arrested Emily Mortimer for “attempted murder” – that’s just idiotic. First, as a cop he left a loaded gun out on a countertop – you think he’s not getting in trouble if he reports that? YOu think he doesn’t risk a suspension? Second, it was obvious to everyone – including Ejiofor’s character, who was not about to lie under oath about it – that she was not trying to kill the cop – that she picked up the gun because she was panicked, and it went off, scaring her as much as everyone else. Third, she’s a recent rape victim, which makes her hugely sympathetic and gives her panic a reason, making it likely that she wouldn’t be prosecuted, and if prosecuted wouldn’t be convicted. This whole plot point falls apart entirely.

(2) When the cop commits suicide, the blackmail threat against Mortimer and Ejiofor – that they’ll be charged with bribery and attempted murder and whatever – evaporates. You can’t prosecute them if the main prosecution witness is dead. So the premise of the latter half of the movie – that Ejiofor must fight because there’s no alternative – is ridiculous and empty. Mortimer would certainly know this.

So I’m not sure why you think the plot was so tight. Thanks.

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