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Venice hails cinema’s comeback king Mickey Rourke

Eleven days of red carpet galas, 21 films in competition and countless interviews, photo calls and parties at the Venice film festival boiled down to just one man in the end — Mickey Rourke.

The festival, which unofficially kick-starts the awards season leading to the Oscars, will be remembered chiefly for Rourke’s performance in Darren Aronofsky’s “The Wrestler”, which the actor and critics agree is his best yet.

“The roar of Rourke” read the headline in the Corriere della Sera newspaper on Sunday.

The movie about an ageing wrestler who despairs as his body gives up on him and friends and family turn their backs, won the coveted Golden Lion award for best movie on Saturday.

The award seals his comeback from the Hollywood wilderness, and comments that Rourke is ready to ditch his bad-boy image and cooperate with directors suggest there is more to come.

“A guy like me changes hard, I didn’t want to change, but I had to change,” the star of 1980s hits “9-1/2 Weeks” and “Angel Heart” told Reuters in an interview in Venice.

“It’s OK for me now at this point in my life to play ball, to be a team player,” added the 51-year-old, his face marked by surgery for various boxing injuries.

- from Reuters


‘Wrestler’ takes top honors at Venice

Darren Aronofksy’s drama “The Wrestler,” starring Mickey Rourke as Randy (the Ram) Robinson, a washed out pro-wrestler in comeback mode — both on and off the screen, it turns out — has pinned down the Venice Film Festival’s Golden Lion, providing the Lido with a grand finale.
“I think the reason people are reacting to this film is that there is a great talent revealing his soul,” said Aronofsky.

“Darren Aronofsky came here a couple of years ago and fell on his ass,” Rourke recounted in the Lido’s packed Sala Grande theatre, referring to the helmer’s “The Fountain,” which premiered in Venice in 2006 and subsequently flopped.

“I am glad he had the balls to come back,” Rourke added.

- from Variety