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Clint's world: the trouble with 'Million Dollar Baby'.


Clint Eastwood's Million Dollar Baby, which won the Academy Award for best picture The Academy Award for Best Motion Picture is one of the Academy Awards, awards given to people working in the motion picture industry by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which are voted on by others within the industry.  this year, has also been praised by the nation's film critics. A. O. Scott of the New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times called it a "work of utter mastery" and Roger Ebert dubbed it the best movie of the year long before Oscar did. Some viewers, however, have found the film quite troubling. They objected to the ending, in which (spoiler spoiler: see airplane.

1. spoiler - A remark which reveals important plot elements from books or movies, thus denying the reader (of the article) the proper suspense when reading the book or watching the movie.
2.
 alert) the boxing trainer played by Clint Eastwood, who also directed the picture, helps a young female boxer die after she suffers a damaging spinal-cord injury. Unfortunately, much of this criticism has been shrill. Rush Limbaugh, not one of our most subtle and nuanced commentators, called it a "million dollar euthanasia movie." The disability rights group Not Dead Yet claimed that the film conveys the message, "better dead than disabled."

I also found the ending of the film disturbing, though I think it deserves more sober scrutiny than it has received thus far. Million Dollar Baby is not a "euthanasia film" in the way that, say, The Cider House Rules is an apologia ap·o·lo·gi·a  
n.
A formal defense or justification. See Synonyms at apology.



[Latin, apology; see apology.
 for abortion rights. Two-thirds of the film, which is really an old-fashioned boxing drama, doesn't deal with euthanasia at all. That said, when I left the theater all I could think about was the ending, which I found manipulative and depressingly bleak.

Maggie Fitzgerald, the female fighter played by Hilary Swank, suffers her injury during a fight with the reigning women's champ. Frankie Dunn (Eastwood), who has come to regard Maggie as a daughter, is devastated dev·as·tate  
tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates
1. To lay waste; destroy.

2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark.
 by the injury. Yet Maggie is resilient, and at first it seems that she's going to deal with her paralysis in the same determined way she fought for her chance at the title. But over time--we're not told how long--she grows more despondent de·spon·dent  
adj.
Feeling or expressing despondency; dejected.



de·spondent·ly adv.
 and finally asks Frankie to help her die. Frankie refuses at first, in part because he is a Catholic, but eventually agrees to carry out her wishes. Late one night he sneaks into the hospital, removes her from the respirator respirator /res·pi·ra·tor/ (res´pi-ra?ter) ventilator (2).

cuirass respirator  see under ventilator.
, and administers a lethal dose lethal dose
n. Abbr. LD
The dose of a chemical or biological preparation that is likely to cause death.
 of adrenaline.

Is the film a thinly veiled argument for assisted suicide assisted suicide: see euthanasia. ? Eastwood has denied the charge. I doubt that he made the film solely to make a political point about the right to die, but I think he was trying to pick an argument near the end of the film. For example, Frankie does not simply remove Maggie from the respirator--an action that under certain circumstances, namely when such treatment is useless and burdensome, can be morally justified. He euthanizes her by injecting her with adrenaline. (Those familiar with the Karen Ann Quinlan Karen Ann Quinlan (March 29 1954 – June 11 1985) was an important figure in the history of the right to die debate in United States. When she was 21, Quinlan fell unconscious after coming home from a party, and lapsed into a persistent vegetative state.  case know that taking a critically ill patient off a respirator doesn't necessarily lead to death.)

Eastwood also presents a misleading picture of the situation faced by patients in Maggie's condition. As several critics have noted, Maggie did not need Frankie to take her off the respirator. For over a decade conscious patients have been able to make that determination themselves. The story line seems to suggest that if Maggie wants to die, she has the right to assistance from others, whether they are friends or doctors.

Does the film convey a "better dead than disabled message"? I wouldn't put it so crudely, but Maggie does say that life on a respirator is not worth living. Several critics have argued that she makes her decision for the wrong reason. ("I can't be like this, boss, not after what I've done," she tells Frankie, referring to her victories in the ring.) Judging a sick person's moral competency is risky business, but it does seem clear that Maggie is not psychologically prepared to make such a decision. In her attempts to die, she bites her tongue repeatedly in hopes of bleeding to death. Clearly she needs counseling. Many seriously ill people who want to die change their minds after they receive the right kind of psychiatric help (see "Alternative Sentence," Slate.com, March 3).

What bothered me most about Million Dollar Baby, however, wasn't these missing details. I was most perturbed per·turb  
tr.v. per·turbed, per·turb·ing, per·turbs
1. To disturb greatly; make uneasy or anxious.

2. To throw into great confusion.

3.
 by the rigid individualism that drives the film, one that places personal rights above all familial and religious obligations. Frankie loves Maggie, and he knows that by helping her die, he will be committing a kind of spiritual suicide. Yet he goes ahead anyway. Of course, viewers of Eastwood's films won't be surprised by this kind of gloomy stoicism Stoicism (stō`ĭsĭzəm), school of philosophy founded by Zeno of Citium (in Cyprus) c.300 B.C. The first Stoics were so called because they met in the Stoa Poecile [Gr. . A similar bleak vision is at the heart of Eastwood's Mystic River and Unforgiven. What makes the individualism in this film so stark is that it is set against a Catholic backdrop. Frankie is a daily churchgoer who prays each night. When Maggie first makes her wishes known to him, he seeks the counsel of his priest, who tells him he cannot help her die. Frankie's final action is all the more shocking in light of what he clearly understands to be the teaching of his faith.

Some Christian critics have praised the film, noting that if you watch carefully Frankie is punished for his actions. I don't agree. Yes, at the end of the film Frankie cuts off contact with all friends and goes off to live on his own. But if anything, Frankie is portrayed as beyond hope, beyond redemption. This is not a Christian world. This is Clint's world.

Maurice Timothy Reidy is an associate editor of Commonweal com·mon·weal  
n.
1. The public good or welfare.

2. Archaic A commonwealth or republic.

Noun 1.
.
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Author:Reidy, Maurice Timothy
Publication:Commonweal
Article Type:Editorial
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 8, 2005
Words:901
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