December II, 20,3 Fortiani» (Obserucr Page 9 nm Alberta North Portland > Vancouver East County Beaverton ¿ .'T i , photo courtesy R elativity M edia Christian Bale and Zoe Saldana star in ‘Out of the Furnace, ’ the new feature film about working class characters chafing against the failure of the American Dream. Rust Belt Dignity O pinionated J udge Stellar cast gives ‘Out of the Furnace' much to savor here is no shortage of films featuring stories of working class characters chaf­ ing against the failure of the American dream. The elements of such stories are familiar — there will be violence, male characters will outnumber female char­ acters (six to one is not unusual), and someone is sure to spend time in the military or in prison. "Out of the Fur­ nace" contains these familiar elements, and its plot and themes aren't particu­ larly original or insightful. Where this film rises above similar fare is in the particularity of its characters; director Scott Cooper ("Crazy Heart") evidently knows how to elicit the most specific performances from his stellar cast, and the film's pleasures lie in experiencing a familiar story told with dignity and reso­ nance. The film is set in the actual town of Braddock, Pennsylvania, a fitting ex­ ample of a rust belt city hit hard by the decline of American industry. The streets and houses look gray and worn; neither energy nor resources have been invested in their upkeep for some time. Russell Baze (Christian Bale, never better), has in Ji D \ ki followed in his father's footsteps work­ ing in the local mill, sometimes double shifts trying to stay ahead of the gam ­ bling debts and other trouble courted by his younger brother Rodney (Casey Affleck). Rodney has served three tours in Afghanistan and is headed for a fourth; what likely seemed a reasonable, even desirable alternative to hometown op­ tions has clearly left him unhinged and desperate to numb the memories of what he has seen and done. Each man's choices make sense in their context. There's tenderness be­ 11 \ i x . i O rti g \ * ,*• tween them that wears like the connect­ edness of brothers who made trouble together and had bigger dreams than what life offered them. You sense that their choices followed their childhood inclinations, that even as boys, Rodney was the one who took foohardy risks, and Russell, the more centered. Russell's choices are the practical decisions of a man of strong will; one works to live, not to be satisfied; one does the tasks in front of him. He faithfully visits his ailing continued on page 14 » • • • •