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Mickey Rourke

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Mickey Rourke: Wrestling With Demons is an intimate and revealing portrait of a complex man who happens to be one of the most intriguing actors of our time. Written with passion, insight and expertise by respected entertainment journalist Sandro Monetti, this is the compelling story of how Mickey Rourke wrestled his demons and won.Diner, Rumble Fish, 9 Weeks, The Pope of Greenwich Village, Angel Heart- Mickey Rourke ignited movie screens throughout the 1980s in a series of scorching performances that brought the most coveted scripts and the hottest directors in Tinseltown to his door. The heir to Brando, the critics called him, the next De Niro. But the quixotic actor turned down the choicest roles. Indulging a taste for hot women and fast motorcycles, he partied all night, showed up late on set, fought with his producers, and made a string of bad decisions that derailed the career of the most promising actor since James Dean. Disillusioned, Mickey Rourke decided to leave acting-for boxing As a professional boxer, he was undefeated in eight fights, but the pummeling he took in the ring destroyed his pretty-boy looks, and a series of injuries left him with nerve damage, brain damage, and problems with his memory and balance. Battered and broken, Mickey Rourke decided to leave boxing-for acting After several lean years in box-office flops, Mickey's magic appeared in the form of a low-budget but high-quality movie in which the washed-up actor played a washed-up wrestler. His stunning lead performance as Randy "The Ram" Robinson in The Wrestler garnered an Oscar nomination. Mickey Rourke was back, with a vengeance In Mickey Rourke: Wrestling With Demons, Monetti traces the rise and follies of the comeback king of Hollywood: From a tortured childhood in Schenectady and a troubled youth in Miami, where he trained at the Fifth Street Gym by day and strutted the streets in platform shoes and silk pants by night. To his lonely years at the Actor's Studio. Through countless women and two divorces, the deaths of his beloved brother Joey and his adored dog Loki, drugs and alcohol, fights and arrests, depression, thoughts of suicide, and years of therapy. Monetti explains how the method actor prepared for his iconic roles and reveals how he landed some of his best parts, including the biggest box office hit of his career with Iron Man 2. He identifies the star-making roles Rourke turned down. He divulges the name of the actor who, in early days, when the producers could not raise enough money on the Rourke name, briefly replaced Mickey in The Wrestler. The pages are alive with stories of Hollywood legends and rock royalty: Sean Penn, Kim Basinger, Robert Downey Jr., Sylvester Stallone, Francis Ford Coppola, Steven Spielberg, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, and David Bowie.

272 pages, Kindle Edition

First published September 24, 2009

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34 people want to read

About the author

Sandro Monetti

8 books6 followers
Ultimate Hollywood insider Sandro Monetti is a respected leading entertainment journalist who has interviewed all of the biggest stars in the world, including George Clooney, Angelina Jolie, Brad Pitt, Madonna and Paul McCartney.
His acclaimed books (biographies of Mickey Rourke and Colin Firth), articles and radio and TV reports whisk readers from Tinseltown parties to set visits and red carpet award shows around the world, capturing compelling celebrity stories told with pace, power and passion.
This Los Angeles based Brit has worked for leading media organisations such as the BBC, Sky TV and Express Newspapers and recently helped create and teach the world's first BA university degree course in celebrity journalism.
He has performed his hit one man stage show 'Clooney, Cowell, Pitt and Me: Amuing Encounters with the A-List'around the world including in London's West End and Off Broadway in New York.
Sandro moderates Q&As with movie stars for BAFTA/LA as well as the American Cinematheque and movie studios, makes frequent TV appearances as a showbiz expert is an event host.
He wrote and directed the short film spoof of Les Msierables, Miserable Lesbians, which won a record 8 Toscars (parody awards) and became a You Tube favorite. He has now adapted Mis Les for the stage in a full length musical which will be performed internationally from summer 2013.
Sandro loves 80s movies, underdog sports teams and is a licensed exorcist...seriously.
Learn more at www.sandromonetti.com

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5 stars
14 (13%)
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31 (30%)
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31 (30%)
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21 (20%)
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Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for Jen.
5 reviews4 followers
July 10, 2011
i know he's a strange bird, but i think thats why i like him so much!
Profile Image for Marsha.
Author 3 books1 follower
March 5, 2012
This book could easily be entitled” Everything Mickey Rourke.” It discusses his marriages with Debra Feuer and then Carre Ottis, who he met while filming “Wild Orchid” in 1989. This book discusses Rourke’s childhood. His mother and father got divorced. Mickey’s mother remarried, and Mickey and his stepfather did not get along. In fact, Mickey claims that his stepfather bullied him and beat him. Mickey has been in therapy for years which has helped calm him down. When he was a young actor in Hollywood, he was very rebellious and difficult for others to work with as he did not care for authority and did not have a lot of trust, must of this due to his difficult childhood. This book describes many of the movies he has been in including his come back film, “The Wrestler.” I thoroughly enjoyed this biography. It was well written and informative and fun to read.
7,055 reviews83 followers
November 8, 2017
Not very well written and with all the anecdotes I kind of feel like we pass through lot of thing but we miss the essential. There is also the fact that mot of it is based on memory from Mickey, who have a tendency to exaggerate thing a little, even the author say so... so we're not even sure if what we read is entirely true.
Profile Image for Julie Rautio smith.
8 reviews1 follower
May 9, 2013
Wow, the author loves Mr. Rourke. Quick read. I learned a few things I didn't know about Mr. Rourke and his career choices. Sad to see someone with his talent throw away all those years --boxing? He was awesome in "The Wrestler" -- and he's a dog lover, (albeit little ankle biting chihuahuas) so he's got a few things going for him. I hope in the future someone writes a better bio of his life.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
29 reviews1 follower
October 12, 2011
It was definitely an interesting read about one of Hollywood's quirkier stars, however it is glaringly obvious that the biographer has a huge man-crush on Mickey Rourke. You would think he walks on water based on this author's opinion.
Profile Image for Sharon Pearce.
2 reviews1 follower
September 17, 2020
I really enjoyed this book, which I purchased after watching the Wrestler. I appreciate that Mr. Rourke had a crap childhood, but then, so do a lot of other people and they rise above it and don’t behave like spoilt entitled brats. He had too much, too soon and couldn’t handle it, hence he activated the self destruct button.
After losing everything, at least he had the humility to admit to his mistakes and claw his way back from obscurity. I admire and applaud him for getting back on track with his life, and what really endears me to him is his obvious love for animals and his beloved dogs. As he says, when he was so low he couldn’t see a way out, he just couldn’t abandon his dogs, he had to keep trying. I think the author did a great job with this book and I was sorry when I reached the last page.
Profile Image for Dee Kendall.
537 reviews9 followers
November 25, 2018
DNR I just couldn't. This was stuff you would read in a trashy magazine.
Profile Image for Sarah.
440 reviews17 followers
March 19, 2016
I took a chance on this book when I saw it in Poundland and needed something to read on a long bus journey. I loved The Wrestler (How could you not?) and Harley Davidson and the Marlboro Man (although Mickey didn't think much of this film). This book is written in a very tabloid newspaper style which is unlike any other autobiography I've ever read. I got used to the style and begin to enjoy its gossipy bits. Here are a few to whet your appetites; Rourke called Tom Cruise a very rude word indeed because he expressed anti-psychiatry opinions, Rourke rarely wears underwear and Rourke admired Bush and Palin (I mean George W. Bush and Sarah Palin, rather than the band Bush and Michael Palin). There is a chapter of this book in which a psychologist (not his own actual therapist) gives an assessment of Mickey. This chapter felt like a segment on The Ricki Lake Show when she invites an expert on. This book felt more like a magazine I was reading at the hairdressers but was none the worse for that.
588 reviews3 followers
May 12, 2016
I have always thought Mickey Roark was kind of an interesting character. This was a nice peek into a creative and interesting man. It made me want to search out some of his work and watch with a new perspective.
Profile Image for Kim.
18 reviews
September 1, 2012


I think this book would have been more personable. It talked more about his movies than the true person he is.
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews

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