Probably won't convince many people that the girl next door is anything more than that.
Against the Ropes (2003)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:128
Fresh:16
Rotten:112
Average Rating:4.2/10
Consensus: A bland, dumbed-down package of sports cliches.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] for crude language, violence, brief sensuality and some drug material
Runtime: 1 hr 50 mins
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:Feb 20, 2004 Wide
Box Office: $5,696,752
Synopsis: Meg Ryan stars in this fictionalized account of real-life boxing manager Jackie Kallen, the first female to ever make a name for herself in the sport. As the film begins she's just an assistant to... Meg Ryan stars in this fictionalized account of real-life boxing manager Jackie Kallen, the first female to ever make a name for herself in the sport. As the film begins she's just an assistant to the owner of a sleazy sporting arena, but her antagonism toward a mafia-affiliated boxing bigwig (Tony Shalhoub) and her hunch about the innate boxing talent of a young street thug named Luther (Omar Epps) lead her to take up managing. She recruits a retired trainer (Charles S. Dutton, who also directed) to mold Luther into a champ, and starts pushing and climbing through the sport's rampant sexism. The script by Cheryl Edwards is packed with platitudes and great throwaway lines, and to its credit the film doesn't shy away from showing Kallen's less flattering angles. Ryan looks and sounds great, sporting a fun Midwestern accent and a series of sexy outfits as she sashays through the cigar smoke and testosterone, tough-talking her way to victory in argument after argument. Though set in the present, AGAINST THE ROPES has a grungy 1970s feel to it, recalling ROCKY, THE CHAMP, THE MAIN EVENT and other films of the era. The real-life Kallen served as an associate producer. [More]
Starring: Meg Ryan, Omar Epps, Tony Shalhoub, Tim Daly
Starring: Meg Ryan, Omar Epps, Tony Shalhoub, Tim Daly, Kerry Washington, Joe Cortese, Charles S. Dutton
Director: Charles S. Dutton
Director: Charles S. Dutton
Screenwriter: Cheryl Edwards
Producer: Robert W. Cort, David Madden
Composer: Michael Kamen
Studio: Paramount Pictures
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Reviews for Against the Ropes
Neither very credible nor one of those beyond-belief disposables you still find affable.
There's virtually no information about the sport in the movie, which means it has about as much to do with boxing as Christina Aguilera's 'Fighter' does, and it means we have no connection to something that is supposed to be Kallen's passion.
Ryan may yet have a movie in her that will match the critical and commercial success of the 15-year-old When Harry Met Sally ..., but Against the Ropes isn't it.
The horror of Against the Ropes is that a screenwriter had a real person in front of her with an interesting, complicated story yet deemed her not "cinematic" enough.
A riotously awful biopic rife with stereotypes and boxing movie cliches.
This awkward hybrid of two popular film genres is to the art of moviemaking what Ali’s famous “rope-a-dope” technique was to boxing.
Ryan's performance is all on the outside. She pitches her voice low and tahks about bahkzing. She wears teensy tight outfits. And she has done something unwise to her lips.
More business as usual, despite the feminist aspects of Kallen's story.
No amount of movie-star twinkle could lighten screenwriter Cheryl Edwards' bizarre character arc.
What [Ryan] appears to be doing is an impression of Johnny Depp doing an impression of Keith Richards doing an impression of Liz Taylor.
Ryan is clearly enjoying herself. She adroitly maneuvers her trademark cuteness into a kind of oblivious brashness -- a curious mix of brassy and brave.
If `Erin Brockovich' is the role model here, `Against the Ropes' falls far short.
If bad movies were punches, Against the Ropes would land like a perfectly timed round-house haymaker...
Omar Epps, sporting a great physique and aggressive acting chops, opens up the ring bringing heart and drama to an intro that hadn't much more to offer than big names.
Meg floats like a bee and stings like a butterfly in this misguided jumble of sports cliches.
“Against the Ropes” has slim, sizzling Meg Ryan in its corner… but the film is a loosely-patched version of about twelve other movies.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 36% 36% | Angels & Demons |
| 25% 25% | Four Christmases |
| 68% 68% | Funny People |
| 95% 95% | Star Trek |
| 14% 14% | The Ugly Truth |
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 32% 32% | Terminator Salvation |
| 44% 44% | Night at the Museum: B… |
| 86% 86% | A Christmas Tale |
| 60% 60% | Paper Heart |
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