Movie Reviews by Michael Phillips

42 Movie Review & Trailer
Chadwick Boseman in "42"

"42," writer-director Brian Helgeland's carefully tended portrait of Jackie Robinson, treats its now-mythic Brooklyn Dodger with respect, reverence and love. But who's in there, underneath the mythology? Has the movie made Robinson, a man who endured so much in the name of breaking Major League Baseball's color barrier and then died before his 54th birthday, something less than three-dimensionally human?

I'm afraid so. This is a smooth-edged treatment of a life full of sharp, painful, inspiring edges. Helgeland tips the narrative balance in the direction of Dodgers general manager Branch Rickey, played here in a sustained grumble by Harrison Ford, opposite Chadwick Boseman's implacable Robinson. The latter's story cannot be brought to life without Rickey's, and vice versa; their fates and their places in history belonged to one another. But "42" settles for too little, for being an attractive primer, an introduction to the legend of Robinson and the faith that saw him through. The movie doesn't condescend. Rather, it protects and enshrines.

Helgeland focuses on 1945, '46 and '47, the years in which Robinson married, got signed by the Dodgers for their minor league affiliate in Montreal and then, momentously, swung his way into 20th-century heroism as the first African-American in pro baseball. Boseman has the right stuff to take on Robinson. The movie allows him scant opportunity to prove as much. After each new encounter with prejudice and racism, Helgeland shows us the man who soldiered on without losing his composure, certainly not to the degree so many were hoping he'd lose it.

Yet we spend so little private time with this private man. We see on screen, with Nichole Beharie as Robinson's adoring wife, Rachel, a dream of a marriage. Some of the stresses are acknowledged, in passing. Some of them.

As for Ford, he's fun. He gets all the good zingers while everyone else stands around looking either impressed, or aghast, or discreetly angry. Rickey may well have once said, "You practically nursed race prejudice at your mother's breast!" to a racist team manager, or something like it. The way the line drops itself in the scene in question, however, feels screenwriterly in the extreme. Helgeland has talent ("L.A. Confidential"), but the "42" script has the tentative air of a project watched very, very closely by Robinson's survivors.

For better or worse, a couple of supporting players steal the movie. As Leo Durocher, Dodgers coach and controversial horn dog, Christopher Meloni injects a jolt of energy. And as announcer Red Barber, John C. McGinley curbs his usual outsized exuberance to nail, with perfect period inflections, the play-by-play commentary featuring such phrasing delicacies as "chin-wag."

"Like our savior," growls Ford's Rickey at one point, after Boseman's tightly wrapped Robinson has eaten his latest load of racial epithets, "you gotta have the guts to turn the other cheek." I don't recall Robinson's rejoinder, but it's likely he didn't have one; there are times in "42" when Robinson appears confined to the dugout of his own biopic. Maybe this approach is justified: In Robinson's 1972 autobiography, as quoted recently in a New York Times piece, Robinson wrote: "Today as I look back on that opening game of my first World Series, I must tell you that it was Mr. Rickey's drama, and that I was only a principal actor. As I write this 20 years later, I cannot stand and sing the anthem. I cannot salute the flag; I know that I am a black man in a white world. In 1972, in 1947, at my birth in 1919, I know that I never had it made."

Hints of that man, that complicated hero, can be detected in "42." But only hints.

42

Film Critic Rating: 2.5 out of 4 Stars

MPAA rating: PG-13 (for thematic elements including language).

Running time: 2:08.

Cast: Chadwick Boseman (Jackie Robinson); Harrison Ford (Branch Rickey); Nichole Beharie (Rachel); Lucas Black (Pee Wee Reese); Alan Tudyk (Ben Chapman); Andre Holland (Wendell Smith).

Credits: Written and directed by Brian Helgeland; produced by Thomas Tull. A Warner Bros. Pictures release.

42 Movie Trailer

 

About "42" the Movie

"42" -- an American biographical sports film written and directed by Brian Helgeland -- is the life story of Jackie Robinson and his history-making signing with the Brooklyn Dodgers under the guidance of team executive Branch Rickey.

The film "42" stars an ensemble cast that was led by Chadwick Boseman as Robinson, and Harrison Ford as Branch Rickey, with Alan Tudyk, Nicole Beharie, Christopher Meloni, André Holland, Lucas Black, Hamish Linklater, and Ryan Merriman appearing in supporting roles.

In 1946, Branch Rickey (Harrison Ford) put himself at the forefront of history when he signed Jackie Robinson (Chadwick Boseman) to the Dodgers, breaking Major League Baseball's infamous color barrier. Facing unabashed racism from every side, Robinson was forced to demonstrate tremendous courage and restraint by not reacting, instead letting his talent on the field do the talking -- ultimately winning over fans and his teammates, silencing his critics, and paving the way for others to follow.

In 1997, Major League Baseball retired the number 42 for all teams, making it the first number in sports to be universally retired.

"42" Movie Review - Stars Chadwick Boseman & Harrison Ford