Jim, der letzte Sieger (1953)

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Jim, der letzte Sieger: Directed by Basil Dearden. With Jack Warner, Robert Beatty, Bill Owen, Maxwell Reed. Boxing drama following the lives of five different fighters and their reasons for becoming boxers.

“Based on the stage play by Ralph W.Peterson, THE SQUARE RING hardly ventures outside its theatrical roots but is one of the very few British films about the u0026#39;Noble Artu0026#39;. It contains every single cliché known to boxing movies: the nervous novice, the washed up ex-champ looking for one more shot at the u0026#39;big timeu0026#39;, the anxious wife who threatens to leave if he doesnu0026#39;t quit, the behind the scenes u0026#39;fixu0026#39;, camera close ups of ringsiders screaming for blood and of course the rows of spectators throwing imaginary punches during the fight scenes. Unfortunately THE SQUARE RING has the worst impersonation of a u0026#39;punch drunku0026#39; boxer in celluloid history. George Rose narrows his eyes into slits, screws his mouth sideways and ends up resembling a grumbling grotesque gargoyle. His repetitious rendering of the line u0026quot;first, first …Iu0026#39;ll show u0026#39;emu0026quot; in a strange, gravelly groaning whine is deeply embarrassing. Itu0026#39;s a terrible performance from Rose. Almost as bad is Bill Travers as a morose heavyweight in a permanent state of idiocy, reading a juvenile comic and only answering questions in a monosyllabic, moronic fashion. These two wouldnu0026#39;t pass the stringent medical examinations of todays Boxing Board of Control. On the plus side THE SQUARE RING has an excellent performance from Bill Owen, who bounces into the dressing room full of vitality and spouts out lines like u0026quot;look at the nose son, not a dent in itu0026quot;. He moves like a confident fit boxer even when heu0026#39;s not in the ring. Real life man and wife Maxwell Reed and Joan Collins share a few scenes, your enjoyment of these scenes will be enhanced if you read her autobiography before viewing the film. Ronald Lewis makes his film debut as a clean cut, shy, Welsh amateur having his first professional fight, who learns the hard way that the pro ranks arenu0026#39;t u0026quot;fairu0026quot;. Look out for the stiff way he moves towards the centre of the ring when the first bell goes, itu0026#39;s unintentionally hilarious. If he moved like that in a real fight he wouldnu0026#39;t last 20 seconds. Also, watch out for the ending of his bruising battle, he literally sees stars (and so do we!). The climatic encounter between Kid Curtis (Robert Beatty) and the unbeaten prospect Barney Deakon (Alf Hines) contains some excellent camera work and is quite realistic. Robert Beatty, 44 at the time, looks too mature to be sporting the ring moniker u0026quot;Kidu0026quot;. His opponent was played by the former light-heavyweight from West Ham, Alf Hines, a good club fighter who fought at the Albert Hall, Wembley and Earls Court and had just retired from the ring. He played a boxer in another Joan Collins movie THE GOOD DIE YOUNG, boxing historians should find it interesting that the world famous gym owner, Joe Bloom, was the referee in both these movies. On 2 June, 1958, a TV version with Sean Connery playing Rick Martell and a very young Alan Bates was broadcast on the ITV Play of the Week. THE SQUARE RINGu0026#39;s technical adviser was Dave Crowley, the former British Lightweight Champion, itu0026#39;s not a bad little movie and is well worth watching. Fans of CARRY ON comedies will enjoy the early performances of Sid James and Joan Sims.”

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