fpw Wrote:I don’t like boxing, but I liked this film. Overlong, but its depiction of life in the Great Depression is haunting. I FF’d through the last fight because I’d seen enough boxing for the night.
FF= 0.5
Bluesman Mike Lindner Wrote:The fight scenes just weren't that good. The scenes in RAGING BULL, ALI, and the first ROCKY left them on the canvas. Difference is, the leads in the flicks I mentioned trained hard to make the foights realistic.
t4terrific Wrote:The fight scenes in Rocky were the most unrealistic in film history (not counting Rocky II, III, IV, and V). Theatrically, they were good, but realistically horrible. Raging Bull's fight scenes were rather far-fetched too. They were better than most, at the time, but very far from reality.
Bluesman Mike Lindner Wrote:I liked it too. Russell Crowe may be a self-important scumbag in real life, but the hombre knows how to act. Great scene--where Jimmy goes to the rich mens' club to ask--beg--for money to get the heat turned back on so his children don't freeze.
Bluesman Mike Lindner Wrote:Didn't express myself well there, t4. I meant cinematically effective. But I'm hard-pressed to recall a flick with realistic foight scenes. Can you think of any? (BTW, I can't imagine a fight flick more exciting than the Hagler-Hearns match. Did you see it? I would =love= to get it DVD. =What= a fight! As Tommy Hearns said later, "I had him going. I would have knocked him out. But I broke my right hand on his thick head in the first round." Both men can look back on that match with nothing but pride. They gave =everything.=