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Best boxing movie

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2,807
What is the best boxing film ever? Here's a list to choose from:

Lights Camera, Come Out Punching!
The boxing movie has been a staple of Hollywood for more than a century. Here are some of the genre's champs and palookas


By Franz Lidz

1903

Prof. Langtry's Boxing School
Mother of all fight films involves a Tyson-like prof who stomps his opponent, twirls him overhead and hurls him to the canvas. He leaves the patsy's ears unchewed -- so much for realism.

1915

The Champion
Charlie Chaplin
The Little Tramp picks up a lucky horseshoe as he passes a training camp advertising for a sparring partner. After jamming it into his glove, he brains the Champ.

1929

Boxing Gloves
Joe Cobb, Norman (Chubby) Chaney
In this early Our Gang talkie, reluctant pugs Joe and Chubby duke it out over the lovely Jean (below). Farina, the promoter, makes each fighter believe that the other has agreed to take a dive.

1931

The Champ
Wallace Beery, Jackie Cooper
"Don't fail to get a ringside seat!" was the tagline for this weeper about a boozy, washed-up pug (Beery, above, who won an Oscar), his son, Dink, and sidekick, Sponge.

1934

Punch Drunks
Moe Howard, Curly Howard, Larry Fine
Curly the Waiter KO's the Champ at a restaurant after hearing Larry play Pop Goes the Weasel on the violin.

1939

Golden Boy
William Holden, Barbara Stanwyck, Lee J. Cobb
Low blows meet high art when a violinist abandons the stage for the ring. Clifford Odets's literary vinegar is turned to honeyed hokum.

1942

Gentleman Jim
Errol Flynn, Alexis Smith, Alan Hale
lynn gives a perfectly judged performance as James J. Corbett, the brash, quick-witted San Francisco bank clerk who KO'd the great John L. Sullivan for the heavyweight title in 1892.

1947

Body and Soul
John Garfield, Lilli Palmer
Stagey Socialist screed on money and the Little Man, in which a kid from the Lower East Side takes on the Mob and his conscience.

1949

The Set-Up
Robert Ryan
Shot in real time, long before 24, this chronicle of mendacity, venality and foolish pride is still Hollywood's most dead-on distillation of the sweet science. Ryan, in blue) makes a gracefully convincing fighter.

1956

Out to Punch
Popeye, Bluto, Olive Oyl
Before their big bout, heavyweight Bluto stuffs Popeye's heavy bag with scrap iron and encases his boxing shoes in concrete. But when Olive finally breaks out the spinach....

1956

The Harder They Fall
Humphrey Bogart, Rod Steiger, Max Baer
As windy as Champion ('49) and Somebody Up There Likes Me ('56), but with Bogart in his final film, as a burned-out sportswriter who exposes a fixing scheme.

1962

Requiem for a Heavyweight
Anthony Quinn, Jackie Gleason, Mickey Rooney
Melancholy mood piece by Twilight Zone creator Rod Serling about a shambling giant egged on to increasingly punishing rounds by his shady manager.

1972

Fat City
Jeff Bridges, Stacy Keach
John Huston's small masterpiece of skid row poetry is set in the smoky bars of Stockton, Calif., where the lives of two boxers (one on the way up; the other, down) intersect.

1976

Rocky
Sylvester Stallone, Talia Shire, Burgess Meredith
Before he started looking like Paul McCartney on steroids, before the ludicrous sequels, Stallone made a "rooting picture" with heart and just enough cruelty to give it resonance.

1977

The Greatest
Muhammad Ali, Ernest Borgnine, James Earl Jones
Formulaic hero-worship that glosses over the not-so-great parts of The Greatest's life. Ali is oddly unconvincing as himself -- Will Smith did him better in Ali (2001).

1980

Raging Bull
Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci
Martin Scorsese's raw, pulpy biopic of 1940s middleweight champion Jake LaMotta explodes with life and imagination.

1996

When We Were Kings
Muhammad Ali, George Foreman
Ali and Foreman prepare for their 1974 Rumble in the Jungle in Leon Gast's Oscar winner, which captures Ali at his most vital.

1997

The Boxer
Daniel Day-Lewis, Brian Cox
Sensitive, suspenseful and subtle-as-a-haymaker tale of a former IRA bomber whose Belfast boxing club unites Catholics and Protestants.

1999

The Hurricane
Denzel Washington
Washington at his stoical best in a dutifully earnest, deeply sentimental, not-exactly-true story of 1960s middleweight contender Rubin (Hurricane) Carter, who spent 18 years in prison on a phony murder rap.

2001

Ali
Will Smith, Jamie Foxx, Jon Voight
Weighing in at close to three hours, Michael Mann's handsomely mounted bio-epic may not exactly float like a butterfly, but it recreates the high points of Ali's most dramatic decade with stunning verisimilitude.

2004

Million Dollar Baby
Clint Eastwood, Hillary Swank, Morgan Freeman
Eastwood's darkly funny, surprising and immensely moving tale of ambition and disillusionment is as close to an anti-Rocky as any sports movie ever made.

2005

Unforgivable Blackness
Ken Burns's riveting documentary on Jack Johnson, the first black heavyweight champ, uses Johnson's life as a template for understanding racial injustice.

Issue date: Janaury 31, 2005
 

bender

Juniors
Messages
2,231
I watched Midnight Sting on TV last night. Starring James Woods and Louis Gosset Jr. I thought this was as good a boxing movie as i have seen (although i seem to be the only one). This movie was living proof that you should never con a con man.
 

El Diablo

Post Whore
Messages
94,107
Raging Bull and Rocky. When We Were Kings was a good documentary.

The Hurricane was nothing more than a lie. Glad they were sued over that shit.
 

Darth Bobo

Guest
Messages
655
bender said:
I watched Midnight Sting on TV last night. Starring James Woods and Louis Gosset Jr. I thought this was as good a boxing movie as i have seen (although i seem to be the only one). This movie was living proof that you should never con a con man.

I beleive the saying is "Never hustle a hustler".

That was a great movie but not exactly a "Boxing" movie, more a good movie that had boxing as part of the plot.
 

OVP

Coach
Messages
11,632
Raging Bull easy

As far as documentary's go, my favourite is "When we were kings".
 
Messages
2,807
I recently saw Fat City (1972) on tv, and really enjoyed it. From the review in post #1:

"John Huston's small masterpiece of skid row poetry is set in the smoky bars of Stockton, Calif., where the lives of two boxers (one on the way up; the other, down) intersect. "

Sums it up very well. Good performances by Stacy Keach and a very young Jeff Bridges.
 

Iafeta

Referee
Messages
24,357
I'm a massive Rocky fan...

but I quite enjoyed Million Dollar Baby. I can see why it got so many awards.
 
Messages
33,280
million dollar baby and raging bull, scorcese/de niro combo is gold, alos liked ALI but thought will smith could of been alot stronger during his delivery of taunts and the way he approached himself as ali
 

aqua_duck

Coach
Messages
18,768
I think ROcky is awesome, I, II, III, Iv were all good IMO.
I didn't mind Ali but it just went on for way too long.
 
Messages
8,480
Watched Rocky again recently and it is a brilliant film. The subsequent films didn't really follow the same structure and, while watchable, got caught up in the old american formula of triumph against all odds schmuck.

Million Dollar Baby is an amazing view, and my pick amongst those nominated.

Watched Cinderella Man on a flight to LA after Christmas. Good but not great. 3 stars.
 

sydraider

First Grade
Messages
5,704
Big Mick © said:
I love Rocky

and a movie called Gladiator with Cuba Gooding Jr in it...loved that movie.

Yeah Gladiator with Cuba Gooding Jr, James Marshall and Brian Dennehy, not a bad movie, not great but not crap either. I like that movie.

Also a Rocky fan here, didnt mind Ali but i have never been a big Ali fan so it didnt do much for me.

Wouldnt mind seeing a Biopic in the future of Kostya Tzsyu, know it mind sound corny but I think it would make a good story especially his training regime when he was in Russia.
 
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