Jake Gyllenhaal (Life, Everest) continues to take on roles that, seemingly, are each more challenging than his previous. I don’t know if another actor under 50 has been snubbed as frequently as Gyllenhaal regarding Academy Award nominations for acting. To date, his only nomination is for 2005’s Brokeback Mountain. However, he has been the odd man out with several other roles, most notably in Southpaw and, particularly, Nightcrawler. While I would put his performance in David Gordon Green’s (All the Real Girls, Undertow) Stronger as one of his top six performances of all time, it may not be in his top three or four. While he was terrific, this movie did not captivate me in the same way that films like Nightcrawler, Southpaw, Nocturnal Animals, Life, Love and Other Drugs, or Brothers did. But it should have. This was based on a true story. It had the sentimentality of an average person overcoming the odds and becoming a symbol of patriotism all wrapped into one. And while this movie was very good, it wasn’t even Gyllenhaal’s best performance about a character overcoming adversity. That belongs to Southpaw. But just because the movie wasn’t amazing doesn’t mean it was not very good. It was.
While not all will agree, this is a relationship movie more than a movie about a character overcoming a life-altering event. That is what separates this movie from many others of its ilk. Stronger was the second movie in nine months related to the bombing at the 2013 Boston Marathon. 2016’s Patriots Day had many fabricated elements around the days surrounding this horrific event. Even the main character was a fictionalized version of various real-life people who emerged as heroes. Although patriots Day was very good, and I probably enjoyed it better as a movie more than I did Stronger, there is something to be said for movies that follow actual events closer to a T than another movie does. And while Mark Wahlberg gave one of his best performances as the lead in Patriots Day, Gyllenhaal portrayed an actual person.
Suppose you don’t know the story of Jeff Bauman (Gyllenhaal), a man who had his legs amputated after being hit by the first bomb at the finish line of the 2013 Boston Marathon, where he was cheering on his on-again/off-again girlfriend Erin Hurley (Tatiana Maslany – The Vow, The Other Half). What made Jeff a national hero was that he was able to identify the bomber and convey this message right when he woke up from his double, above-the-knee leg amputations. His description of the bomber led to the eventual capture of the terrorist and made Jeff not only a nationally recognized name but also associated with the phrase “Boston Proud.” A reluctant hero who believed he was nothing more than a guy who was in the wrong place at the wrong time but happened to see something that others didn’t see, Jeff had to not only deal with the depression and reality that comes with losing two of your limbs but also a national media wanting to interview him at every turn.
Unable to deal with this situation alone, Jeff enlists the help of Erin, a woman who loves him (and he of her) but has broken up with Jeff on multiple occasions because of his inability to follow through on promises made to her. In his effort to win her back, Jeff attempts to rectify why Erin has repeatedly broken up with her in the past (mainly because he fails to live up to his commitments) by making a sign and cheering her on at the finish line. Unfortunately, Erin does not believe Jeff will honor this promise and only learns he has when he sees him being wheeled off without his legs while watching him on the news from a local tavern phone, where she is trying to find a way to get back home.
The two rekindle their relationship, which is really what the story is about. Jeff has to learn how to deal with this life-changing condition, as does Erin. Erin moves into the apartment with Jeff and his mother. They live on the second floor, so that you can imagine the difficulty. And, of course, Jeff drifts into depression, and Erin isn’t automatically built-in with the necessary skills to help him. He’s messy. She’s messy. Their relationship is messy. And it’s hard sometimes to see if they are committed to each other or if she needs him and doesn’t know how to say no to him. Stronger is a relationship story, but it is not a love story, at least in the traditional sense. What is apparent is that the two leads are excellent at bringing out the wounded emotions that each of their real-life characters plays.
Also involved in Jeff’s recovery are his mother, Patty (Miranda Richardson – Damage, Tom and Viv), and father, Jeff Sr. (Clancy Brown –Thor: Ragnarok, The Express), as our other family members and friends. But living through something so traumatic can be just as difficult for the parents and the person who suffered the ordeal. And, honestly, sometimes the only love that I think you can accept from someone who isn’t required to give it to you. The situation hasn’t even to be drastic for that to be true. By that, I mean sometimes it can be hard to accept love from your mother or father because they are, for lack of a better term, “required” to love you. It is a lifelong duty of theirs to bring you into this world. Now, I understand that someone would be lucky to have a mother and father to love them until old age through circumstances large and small. And I’m not taking that for granted at all. I do feel lucky that I have this much-needed support in my life. But sometimes, you need more. Sometimes, you need someone who doesn’t “have” to be there. That could be a great friend or maybe a romantic partner in Jeff’s case. You sometimes need that other person you can trust fully and who will be there for you. Whoever it is can help make life manageable when it seems like it is entirely unmanageable.
What’s great about Jeff’s story, at least from the perspective of Stronger, is that it’s not all glitz, glamour, and over-dramatization. While a national story, we still get the behind-the-scenes story we need and crave. In a small way, it’s as if we are in the hospital with him when his dressings are taken off for the first time. Through Gyllenhaal, we squirm in our seats while looking away from the scars just as he does. We see the casts that are made for each leg. We see how hard it is to go from his wheelchair to his bathtub or from one flight of steps to another. Yet, it all feels genuine, human, and tempered.
Gyllenhaal still only has one Oscar nomination (2005’s Brokeback Mountain), which was in a supporting role. If there were seven nominations each year rather than five, Gyllenhaal would now have at least five nominations. Being selected as one of just five finalists is a huge deal, and his performance in Stronger earns him a nomination. Unfortunately, it’ll be the only Oscar nomination that this movie receives. It’s a good movie, but it could be a better one.
Plot 8.5/10
Character Development 8.5/10
Character Chemistry 8.5/10
Acting 8.5/10
Screenplay 8.5/10
Directing 9/10
Cinematography 9/10
Sound 8/10
Hook and Reel 9/10
Universal Relevance 9/10
86.5%
B
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