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14 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
Powerful Piece Based on an Excellent Book, 19 June 2003
Author:
jdnbonneau from Michigan
John Cassavettes, Tom Berenger, and Suzanne Pleshette give fine
performances
in this made-for-television production. Given the other IMDB comments, I
suspect the version of Flesh & Blood I saw must have been edited severely
to
remove the more explicit scenes depicting the incestuous mother/son
relationship between Kate and Bobby Fallon (Pleshette and
Berenger).
Based on the gripping novel of the same name by Pete Hamill, Flesh &
Blood
describes the developing career of a talented heavyweight - Bobby Fallon
(Berenger), who begins training as a boxer in prison, where he's doing a
two-year stint for assaulting a cop. While in the prison boxing program,
he's discovered by Gus Caputo (Cassavettes), a trainer at a gym on the
outside, who sees the makings of a champion in Fallon. Cassavettes is
marvelous in this role as the devoted teacher who appreciates the beauty
of
boxing as opposed to the dollar signs associated with managing a world
champion. When Bobby is released from prison, Gus is waiting to turn him
into a world-class fighter.
Boxing and his Mom are really all that Bobby's got, his father, Jack,
having
abandoned the family when Bobby was just five years old. But Kate never
divorced Jack, never entirely let him go, and seeks him out sporadically,
a
fact Bobby didn't learn until he was 11. Bobby is obsessed with both Jack
and Kate. He loves Kate to the point of wanting to takes Jack's place in
her
life, but at some level hungers to know Jack, too, or at least the part
of
Jack that is also part of him. Kate, who sees her husband in her son, is
torn between her own compulsions to substitute her son for the
usually-absent Jack and the knowledge that fulfilling her desires will
ultimately devastate her son.
It is Kate who controls what happens in the relationship, and Bobby who
struggles mightily and silently with everything that happens - both in
his
boxing career and in his personal life. Particularly in the book,
Bobby's
character is almost child-like; he's trying to find his way back into a
world in which Gus and boxing are the only stabilizing influences. When
parent Jack finally re-enters the picture in a big way, you find yourself
wanting to pummel both Jack and Kate for the damage they've done to their
son. When all is said and done, you wonder if Bobby will ever
recover.
In both the book and the movie, little exists beyond the boxing and the
psychological lives of the lead characters. They exist in an emotional
world
that is, on some level, apart from everyone else. If the film has a flaw,
it
is that Berenger is too handsome (and too likeable) to be the isolated
Bobby
who has never had an intensely loving relationship with any woman other
than
his mother. In the book, Bobby has, at least, encounters with
prostitutes;
in the movie, there's no one else but Kate.
This film is very, very hard to find, but well worth seeing. If you can't
find it, though, the book is an excellent read.
2 out of 17 people found the following review useful:
Incest Of the Worst Kind, 30 August 2000
Author:
Dianna Trent from NJ
I 1st saw Tom Berenger in this TV film & really liked him. I also really like Suzanne Pleshette. But I was appalled at the content of this film. Suzanne is his mother & she seduces him plenty. He refuses many times but ultimately gives in many times. Don't know what happened to his father. I gather she's a widow. SO why not find a new husband?? Leave your son alone! With things like this happening in real life & the sick outcome of it all, we don't need to see it in REEL life to get the picture! And this was made YRS ago!
2 out of 30 people found the following review useful:
The 25 Year Old Denzel Washington, 3 April 2002
Author:
The Black Englishman from London, England
Having made his screen debut at the age of 23, the 25 year old Denzel Washington made this diabolical television film titled 'Flesh and Blood'. I don't know how this passed the development executives or even the script editors, but it should have been relocated to the dustbin as soon as the first reader read it.
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