Metacritic Film

Million Dollar Baby

Starring Clint Eastwood, Hilary Swank, Morgan Freeman, Jay Baruchel, Mike Colter, Lucia Rijker, Brian F. O'Byrne, Anthony Mackie, and Margo Martindale

MPAA RATING: PG-13 for violence, some disturbing images, thematic material and language

Warner Bros.
Drama
132 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters December 15, 2004

Two retired boxers who run a Los Angeles gym are caught off guard when a woman approaches them with her dream of stepping into the ring.

WRITTEN BY
Paul Haggis
F.X. Toole (stories)

DIRECTED BY
Clint Eastwood

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

86 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 The Hollywood Reporter
Under Eastwood's painstakingly stripped-down direction -- his filmmaking has become the cinematic equivalent of Hemingway's spare though precise prose -- the story emerges as that rarest of birds, an uplifting tragedy.
100 Variety
Staying at the top of his game when most of his contemporaries have long since hung up their gloves, Clint Eastwood delivers another knockout punch with Million Dollar Baby.
100 Newsweek
Eastwood takes the audience to raw, profoundly moving places. If you fear strong emotions, this is not for you. But if you want to see Hollywood filmmaking at its most potent, Eastwood has delivered the real deal.
100 Chicago Tribune
Achieves a mellowness and melancholy that recalls the jazzy dissonance of director (and here, composer) Eastwood's best work: "The Outlaw Josey Wales," "Bird," "Unforgiven" and "Mystic River."
100 Los Angeles Times
Perhaps the director's most touching, most elegiac work yet, Million Dollar Baby is a film that does both the expected and the unexpected, that has the nerve and the will to be as pitiless as it is sentimental.
100 The New York Times
With its careful, unassuming naturalism, its visual thrift and its emotional directness, Million Dollar Baby feels at once contemporary and classical, a work of utter mastery that at the same time has nothing in particular to prove.
100 The New Yorker
Has a beautifully modulated sadness that's almost musical. Eastwood once made a movie about Charlie Parker ("Bird"), but this picture has the smoothly melancholic tones of Coleman Hawkins at his greatest.
100 New York Post
A spare, exquisitely realized masterpiece about faith, redemption and boxing that beautifully illustrates his longtime philosophy that "less is more."
100 USA Today
As good as "Unforgiven." Or, to put it another way, as good as any movie Eastwood has ever directed.
100 Premiere
A remarkably appealing success story full of heart and humor and poignancy, with Swank as winning as she’s ever been.
100 Chicago Sun-Times
A masterpiece, pure and simple, deep and true...The best film of the year.
100 Christian Science Monitor
It's an ideal match, and Eastwood deserves accolades as both director and star of this powerfully made picture.
100 Chicago Reader
Haggis's dialogue is worthy of Hemingway, and the three leads border on perfection.
100 San Francisco Chronicle
Ages well in memory because it gradually seems to mean more. Its meaning can't be summed up in a sentence, but it has to do with a view of life as inexpressibly sad and yet always right.
100 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
It's an emotionally gripping, daringly genre-twisting, consummately crafted piece of filmmaking.
100 Boston Globe
More than "Unforgiven," more than "Mystic River," it is Clint Eastwood's autumnal masterpiece.
100 Miami Herald
One of the many pleasures of this beautifully composed, measured movie is how it reminds you of the power of pure storytelling -- an art that's too often overlooked in contemporary films in the rush for sensation and excitement.
100 Philadelphia Inquirer
This heartbreaking film, with its rich performances and simple eloquence, lays claim to greatness.
100 Austin Chronicle
Unlike other filmmakers in the autumn or winter of their careers, Eastwood doesn't seem content to rest on his laurels and give his audiences the tried and the true. For that reason, among many others, he and Million Dollar Baby are true champions.
100 Charlotte Observer
Reveals the drama and degredation so powerfully that it ranks among the all-time heavyweights of sports movies.
100 Portland Oregonian
A truly powerful, masterful work.
100 Film Threat
Eastwood tells the story at a pace well under the Hollywood speed limit, tosses in details so beguiling they seem about to sprout into motion pictures of their own and bathes his subjects in shadows as lovely as those in any Rembrandt.
91 Entertainment Weekly
A movie of tough excitement and surprise, even grace.
90 Washington Post
So wonderfully antiquated, so blissfully free of postmodern cleverness.
90 Washington Post
The heart of Million Dollar Baby lies in the core relationships among Frankie, Maggie and Scrap, friendships so pure, so genuine, so authentic that it takes actors of Eastwood's, Swank's and Freeman's caliber to sell them in this otherwise cynical world.
90 Dallas Observer
Baby may not be quite as compelling as Mystic River or Unforgiven, but there's something so stirring, and disquieting, too, in his quest that we cannot help but pay close attention to him. In the middle of his long career's third act, he's still searching for the secrets in things with striking resolve. You certainly can't ask more than that of any 75-year-old ex-gunslinger.
88 New York Daily News
Million Dollar Baby is a knockout. It is Clint Eastwood's baby in every respect — a movie that approaches the level of great boxing films, like "Raging Bull," by using sport as a metaphor for human nature.
88 ReelViews
It is a rich and challenging motion picture that both affirms life and emphasizes its fragility. Eastwood touches our hearts and energizes our minds without resorting to overt manipulation.
88 Rolling Stone
The knockout punch comes from Eastwood. His stripped-down performance -- as powerful as anything he's ever done -- has a rugged, haunting beauty. The same goes for the movie.
80 The Onion (A.V. Club)
Though conventional in many respects, it feels like no other boxing film ever made, due largely to Eastwood's unmistakable presence on both sides of the camera.
80 Village Voice
All the same, Eastwood's point of view has been seasoned enough to locate poignancy and respect for his protagonists where you least expect -- saying it's an old man's movie is a serious compliment.
80 Empire Colin Kennedy
To steal from Ali, this one floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee.
75 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
With his trademark spare, unfussy direction and jumping into the story approach, Eastwood subtly establishes the themes of faith, loss and love and then he raises the drama to a different level.
70 Wall Street Journal
It is thoughtful, unfashionable, measured, mostly honest, sometimes clumsy or remote, often exciting, occasionally moving and eventually surprising. It's correct.
70 TV Guide
Eastwood's slow-building story of loss and deliverance is a fine, understated piece of storytelling that earns every emotional body blow it lands.
60 The New Republic
If we can watch this picture at all, it is because this universally admired person (Eastwood) is in it.
50 Baltimore Sun
In a boxing soap-opera way, Eastwood is trying to do for himself as a performer what Sergio Leone did for him in a spaghetti-western way: douse his rough-hewn banality with reflected emotional coloration.
20 Slate
It's impressive, in the sense that a sucker-punch impresses itself on your skull.
20 Salon.com
A compendium of every cliché from every bad boxing melodrama ever made, Million Dollar Baby tries to transcend its cornball overfamiliarity with the qualities that have long characterized Eastwood's direction -- it's solemn, inflated and dull.

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