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Resurrecting the Champ (2007)
Runtime: 1 hr 53 mins
Theatrical Release: Aug 24, 2007 Wide
Box Office: $2,930,900
Synopsis: In RESURRECTING THE CHAMP, Samuel L. Jackson sheds the cooler-than-thou persona he's perfected in films such as PULP FICTION. But even previous turns as the downtrodden characters in CHANGING LANES and BLACK SNAKE MOAN are nothing compared to the role of Champ in this film from director Rod... In RESURRECTING THE CHAMP, Samuel L. Jackson sheds the cooler-than-thou persona he's perfected in films such as PULP FICTION. But even previous turns as the downtrodden characters in CHANGING LANES and BLACK SNAKE MOAN are nothing compared to the role of Champ in this film from director Rod Lurie (THE LAST CASTLE). Jackson transforms into a homeless man, completely changing his voice and carriage to reflect someone who has lived on the street for years. When the audience first meets Champ, he is being attacked by a group of 20-something men. A sports journalist named Erik Kernan (Josh Hartnett, THE BLACK DAHLIA) happens upon the scene and rescues Champ from a brutal beating. But it's Erik who needs rescuing as well: his job at the Denver Times is in jeopardy as a result of his pedestrian prose, and his marriage to a fellow journalist (Kathryn Morris, COLD CASE) is on equally shaky ground. In finding Champ, he's found his story. Champ isn't an average man living on the street. Instead, he boasts of being famed boxer Battling Bob Satterfield, and he hands Erik a Pulitzer-worthy story of a life gone wrong. Based on a true story, RESURRECTING THE CHAMP is less a typical sports movie than it is an engaging drama. There's enough boxing history and action to satisfy sports fans: Satterfield is said to have battled big names such as Jake La Motta of RAGING BULL fame, and bouts are fought and won throughout the film. But it's Erik's internal conflict that makes this an interesting film. He is a man forever caught in the shadow of his father, a famed sports broadcaster he never really knew, as he tries to raise his own son. [More]
Genre: Dramas
Starring: Samuel L. Jackson, Josh Hartnett, Kathryn Morris, Rachel Nichols, David Paymer
Screenwriter: Michael Bortman, Allison Burnett
Producer: Mike Medavoy, Bob Yari, Mark Frydman, Rod Lurie
Composer: Larry Groupe
DVD Info
Release:
Apr 8, 2008
DVD Features:
- Region 1
- Keep Case
- Widescreen - 2.35
Audio:
- Dolby Digital 5.1 - English
- Subtitles - English, Spanish - Optional
Additional Release Material:
- Audio Commentaries - Rod Lurie - Director
- Behind the Scenes - Making Of
- Interviews - 1. Josh Hartnett - Star
- 2. Samuel L. Jackson - Star
- 3. Kathryn Morris - Star
- 4. Alan Alda - Star
- 5. Rod Lurie - Director
- 6. Eric Bryson - Boxing/Stunt Coordinator
- Featurettes - 1. RESURRECTING THE CHAMP
- Trailers - Theatrical Trailer
Reviews
Nothing can wrench this movie from the grip of a saccharine, formulaic script full of plattitudes and divided allegiances.
Even though the melodrama gets ratcheted up at the end, there were plenty of moments I found myself cheering for the Champ.
Resurrecting the Champ is a specialty of director Rod Lurie, a civics lecture disguised as a film.
Success, adulation, temptation, disgrace, redemption -- it's all there, expressed mostly through the predictably non-expressive Hartnett.
A two-star execution of a four-star goal, and is therefore worthy of a viewing.
Slow in the father-son heart to heart parts, Champ brings it all back home in the end with a great story line and saving performances by Jackson, Alda and Hatcher
Like a championship fight, a movie is often reviewed in rounds. This being said, I think I'll go the safe route and call the film a draw.
The script and director Rod Lurie just can't get the parts to meld.
It's hard to have a genuine emotional response when the manipulative mechanics are all too strongly felt.
Lurie's film actually works better as a study of a reporter coping with ambition and ethics as opposed to a story about Kernan and Champ or Kernan and his son.
Everything is about winning respect versus earning it. This film earned mine. I'm glad I took a chance on it. By the look of my theater, not many others did.
Towering over the entire picture is Jackson, who takes a showy role and invests it with so much humanity that it's impossible not to feel deeply for the character every step of the way.
This is a story that anyone should be able to relate to because we all fall short of perfection.
Without Jackson -- and a little help from Alan Alda and Peter Coyote -- this would be another in the long line of instantly forgettable Josh Hartnett vehicles.
Resurrecting the Champ is authentic in its newsroom scenes, and appropriately concerned at how entertainment value trumps diligent reporting.
The highs (Samuel L. Jackson's performance) and lows (Josh Hartnett's performance and the film's semi-successful moralizing) balance out as something awfully close to a draw.
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Around the Network
Resurrecting the Champ at IGN
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