Dec 4, 2013
In the new modern film noir thriller “Out of the Furnace,” Christian Bale plays a man who just can’t seem to catch a break. As Russell Baze, a good-hearted Everyman who works hard in the same mill in which his father toiled, he lives a life that feels stuck in neutral as he now cares for his dad, who’s waiting to die while lying on a couch at home with an IV drip in his arm.
Russell also cares deeply about his brother named Rodney (Casey Affleck), a war vet traumatized by four tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan. Rodney can’t stop drinking, fighting and gambling due to his post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). And one night, after a few too many beers himself, Russell gets behind the wheel for his trip home and winds up sideswiping a car and killing a mother and child, landing in prison as a result.
When he gets back out from behind bars after four years, he finds that his longtime girlfriend (Zoe Saldana) has given up, moved in with and had a baby with the town police chief (Forest Whitaker). And just when Russell doesn’t think things can get any worse, he finds that Rodney has racked up a gambling debt that’s too big to handle and is proposing desperate measures to settle up with local crime boss John Petty (Willem Dafoe).
Rodney offers to be a human punching bag in an underground fight club run by a vicious backwoods criminal named Harlan DeGroat (Woody Harrelson), but even Petty thinks that Rodney is going too far. With this confluence of disastrous circumstances coming to a head, Russell digs deep into his Catholic faith for the strength to save the day.