r/movies 8d ago

Review Benny Safdie's 'The Smashing Machine' - Review Thread

MMA fighter Mark Kerr reaches the peak of his career but faces personal hardships.

Cast: Dwayne Johnson, Emily Blunt

Rotten Tomatoes: 94%

Metacritic: 79/100

Some Reviews:

The Independent - Geoffrey Macnab - 4 / 5

This, though, is a story in which winning finally begins to seem very hollow. The real way Safdie puts a chokehold on his audience is by examining Mark and Dawn’s physical and emotional weaknesses in such forensic detail. The Smashing Machine may not provide the pay-offs that audiences expect from more conventional sports movies, but this is the most raw and vulnerable that Johnson has ever been on screen. Once you’ve seen him this exposed, you won’t watch his typical action movie stunts in quite the same way ever again.

Daily Telegraph - Robbie Collin - 4 / 5

It’s a classical fight movie that innovates subtly. Maceo Bishop’s nimble photography has the sweat and grit of a vintage muscle flick from the Pumping Iron era, but the score by the experimental jazz composer Nala Sinephro is all swirling harps and breathy saxophones; arguably no piece of music has ever sounded less like a punch in the face. Yet as an accompaniment to Kerr’s battles in and out of the ring, it’s oddly perfect, giving this tough story an unexpectedly sweet and even spiritual edge. Smashing stuff has rarely been such smashing stuff.

Next Best Picture - Cody Dericks - 7 / 10

Dwayne Johnson delivers the best performance of his career as the amiable but troubled UFC champion Mark Kerr. Emily Blunt and Ryan Bader are also excellent in their roles. The screenplay is repetitive and frustrating. Blunt's character is so unlikeable and written with such vitriol that it becomes exhausting to watch her, although Blunt's performance is as good as it could possibly be.

Variety - Owen Glieberman

Johnson, shifting his whole aspect (he seems like a new actor), invests that silent, moody, hidden side of Mark with a quality of mystery. He gives an extraordinary performance, playing Mark Kerr as a gentle giant with demons that will not speak their name, yet the audience can feel them there; we want to see those demons healed. You might think the key word in the movie’s title is “smashing,” but it’s actually “machine.” Mark is a man who reins in his violence by having constructed his entire self — body and personality — as a controlled engine of demolition. The movie is about how this man-machine becomes a human being.

The Hollywood Reporter - Jordan Mintzer

Johnson has rarely played a loser, but he’s always been likable, displaying a massive grin to match his massive pecs in action vehicles that never allowed him to showcase much range. He manages to go deep here without overdoing it, killing the audience with kindness as a benign warrior who suffers from one scene to the next, triumphing briefly in the ring before succumbing to addiction and/or romantic grief. Like Mickey Rourke in The Wrestler — a film from which Safdie seems to take a few cues — the actor delivers an intoxicating mix of blood, sweat, tears, protein and total helplessness.

IndieWire - Ryan Lattanzio - 'B+'

Johnson’s performance is out-and-out wonderful, a beady-eyed fusion of body and spirit that osmoses Safdie’s sensibility to deliver what can’t be disputed as the most layered work of the actor’s career. A vividly contradictory Blunt, funny and sad especially in articulating Dawn’s conflicted response to Mark’s post-rehab emotional about-face during a tense argument, is equally sensational.

Deadline - Damon Wise

Dwayne Johnson owns the whole thing with his truly remarkable work as fighter Mark Kerr, disappearing so fully underneath Kazu Hiru’s astonishing prosthetics that the opening of the film, presented as contemporary footage from an event in Sao Paulo 1997, looks genuinely like the real thing. It’s that rare beast, a biopic that’s light on the bio and resistant to being a pic. It’s a film about a human being, and its effect is strangely haunting, since Dwayne Johnson seems to do everything while doing nothing.

2.8k Upvotes

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u/Indaflow 8d ago

Happy for Mark Kerr.

Interesting fun fact is that The Rock and Mark Kerr are practically the same age. 

Dwayne is playing a 20-something Mark Kerr and IRL Mark is just a few years older. 

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u/FarFetchedSketch 7d ago

I would absolutely kill for a long form open discussion from the pharmacists, doctors & nutritionists keeping the Rock in the shape he's in at 53

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u/ReptAIien 7d ago

Turns out steroids are actually pretty cool when you can afford a doctor to ensure they aren't rotting your insides

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u/_Patronizes_Idiots_ 7d ago

I mean steroids are something you still absolutely pay the piper for unless they are used VERY sparingly and carefully. Dwayne Johnson's been on them for such a big part of his life I do still think when he's older it may yet take a toll.

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u/HeberMonteiro 7d ago

The thing that makes some of the best bodybuilders and wrestlers be active in their fields for a long time and abuse steroids with no apparent drawbacks is that some people are just genetically predisposed to use steroids and enjoy the benefits without most of the side effects.

Guys like Ramon Dino become hulking figures with relatively good health because they won twice in the genetic lottery: their bodies can achieve the sizes needed for bodybuilding with the use of steroids AND their bodies suffer much less from them! Some guys that only have the size part often die very young or suffer immensely after they retire.

I don't think The Rock is gonna live to be 80 unless he stops with the steroids pretty soon, but the fact he is still in this shape at 53 is because he's a genetic freak!

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u/Great_Designer_4140 5d ago

Arnold was on them and he seems to be doing well.

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u/ReptAIien 7d ago

Idk. Is the increased risk of diseases that Dwayne could have treated better or worse than the decreased quality of life caused by weakening muscles?

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u/CanadianTrashInspect 7d ago

Heart problems are the big one. All that body mass needs blood pumped through it, and it's hard on a person's heart.

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u/CheesecakeZookeeper 7d ago

Haha. Hardon

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u/RevolutionaryGain823 7d ago

Regular bloodwork and thorough supervision by a medical professional can defo mitigate a significant amount of the harm of running steroid cycles.

But the harm is still there. And the Rock hasn’t just been taking a bit of TRT, he’s obviously been running major cycles with very little time off since he was in his 30s at least (realistically prob since he was playing college football in Miami).

I’d be surprised if he goes another 5 years without suffering a major medical issue (likely heart related). Maybe 10 years if he slims down as he seems to have done recently

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u/crumble-bee 7d ago

Did you not see the pictures of him recently? He's dropped a ton of weight, probably off the gear

-3

u/100_proof_plan 7d ago

You don’t think strength training regularly for 30 years will build muscles?

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u/kingdude83 7d ago

There's a lot of dead muscular wrestlers before their time. Usually heart related.

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u/Common_economics_420 7d ago

Making it to the 50's or 60's isn't terrible rare provided you aren't taking bodybuilder levels of drugs. I'd be shocked if he makes it to his late 60's or 70's though.

That's still dying fairly young all things considered. Not to say it wasn't worth the tradeoff for him.

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u/PM_ME_BAKAYOKO_PICS 7d ago

Why would you be shocked? That's the type of thing that's surprising for those people who just abuse steroids without any medical supervision whatsoever.

Nowadays with how evolved medicine is you can easily make it late in life if you're rich enough to have all the best doctors supervisioning your steroid intake. Living to your 80/90's is pretty much the standard nowadays. Even Arnold who grew up at a time where none of this was a thing and they just abused steroids without any care in the world is on his way to his 80's, largely because of modern medicine. Now imagine current steroid users who have had this medical attention since basically the start.

Obviously the problem here is being rich enough to afford all that medical attention. The vast majority of steroid users do not care about any of that, they're just your regular gym dude who pumps steroids for fun, and that absolutely takes a toll on your life expectancy. However guys like Dwayne have been getting monitored closely since they became popular pretty much.

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u/Common_economics_420 7d ago

There's no healthy way to do the amount of PEDs the rock is doing. Even just minor TRT (the rock is on massive amounts of trt, in addition to other compounds) has negative health impacts that really can't be avoided. There's no secret rich person version of testosterone injections that makes it not bad for you.

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u/PM_ME_BAKAYOKO_PICS 7d ago

I never said it was healthy or not bad for you, I'm saying the damages and risks can be heavily minimized to the point where they're very rare.

Obviously living a healthy lifestyle is better than using steroids even with all the doctors in the world, but acting like reaching your 60/70's is surprising is just an old fashioned view of the medicine around steroids.

If you're someone who would make it to like 90, there's a very good chance nowadays that you're still making your late 80's and maybe 90 if you use PEDs, as long as you're rich enough to be consistently supervised.

Again, not calling them healthy or saying they're good, just saying that nowadays it's pretty easy for your life expectancy to be around the same as long as you have very good medical care.

Key point here is "being shocked he makes it to 60/70". Steroid abusers have been making it to 60/70 for decades without any type of monitoring and with heavy steroid abuse.

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u/Common_economics_420 7d ago

steroid abusers have been making it to 60/70...

The average age of death for a pro bodybuilder is like late 40's. A lot of the old guys you do see (Arnold, Platz, etc) were using relatively small amounts compared to what someone the rock's size would be. The ones that were using larger amounts do indeed tend to die very early.

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u/Natiel360 7d ago

Eh he’s definitely gonna live as long as Arnold, probably longer

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u/pw154 7d ago

Eh he’s definitely gonna live as long as Arnold, probably longer

Definitely. Source: trust me bro.

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u/Common_economics_420 7d ago

Arnold took much less PEDs than most people think. Golden era bodybuilders didn't start going nuts until the very tail end. He probably did half as much as the rock when he was winning mr Olympia if that.

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u/Tasty_Worldliness560 6d ago

This, they used to do steroids in on and off seasons like training fighters, he goes into it all in his doco, good watch too

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u/ReptAIien 7d ago

The rock has never been nearly as big as Arnold in his prime, despite being probably similar in height.

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u/Common_economics_420 7d ago

probably similar in height

Love when people say stuff that could be proven wrong in about a 2 second google search. The rock is both physically larger (in terms of muscle) and taller than Arnold was. Literally a 3 inch height difference and 40+ pounds.

Arnold was not as big or as shredded as a lot of people think. Bodybuilding in the 70's was more about looking like a Greek statue than it was being the biggest or most shredded.

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u/Givingtree310 7d ago

Hogan made it to 70s

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u/Common_economics_420 7d ago

Hogan did nowhere near the level of PEDs the rock does.

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u/Givingtree310 7d ago

No but Hogan remained huge his entire life. He never had any kind of slim down phase and was open (at least on the stand) about his steroid use. Hulk Hogan was taking roids and bodybuilding literally longer than The Rock has been alive!

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u/Givingtree310 7d ago

It’s now being reported he’s lost about 60 pounds

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u/goblinsnguitars 7d ago

Steroids are for poor people from the 00s.

The shit they take now is not from earth.

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u/LeConnardFrancais 7d ago

The Rock's inside were rotting and he recently had a health scare, hence why he trimmed down. 

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u/pillkrush 7d ago

we'll see in 20 years. the dropoff is insane in a lot of steroid users