While Resurrecting the Champ seems to be just what you expect, it's only when you've let your guard slip that you realize it's hiding something altogether more forceful in its glove.
Resurrecting the Champ (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:113
Fresh:67
Rotten:46
Average Rating:6/10
Consensus: While sluggish in spots, Resurrecting the Champ is a sports/newsroom drama elevated by high-caliber performances by Samuel Jackson, Josh Hartnet, and Alan Alda.
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... 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]
Starring: Samuel L. Jackson, Josh Hartnett, Kathryn Morris, Rachel Nichols
Starring: Samuel L. Jackson, Josh Hartnett, Kathryn Morris, Rachel Nichols, David Paymer, Teri Hatcher, Alan Alda
Director: Rod Lurie
Director: Rod Lurie
Screenwriter: Michael Bortman, Allison Burnett
Producer: Mike Medavoy, Bob Yari, Mark Frydman, Rod Lurie
Composer: Larry Groupe
Studio: Yari Film Group
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Release:
Apr 8, 2008
Reviews for Resurrecting the Champ
Resurrecting the Champ isn't about what it seems to be about. It also isn't about what it thinks it's about.
There's no rule that says a movie must have a likable character at its center, but it helps if a nonlikable central character is at least interesting.
Resurrecting the Champ is enjoyable in the moment -- But it's the complexity of Lurie's moral universe that makes it linger in the mind.
Samuel L. Jackson easily could have gone over the top with his role as an elderly and homeless former professional boxer. He's gone pretty far with less tempting material. Instead, he gives a subdued, often poignant performance as Champ...
Clumsiness follows clumsiness -- the acting, the staging, the details of the plot -- until you reach the point of cool indifference.
...authentic isn't the word I'd use for this maudlin male weepie, a compendium of the worst clichés of sports and journalism movies.
What is irony if not a movie whose production notes declare 'A film about truth demands authenticity' and is not authentic?
The thoroughly unconvincing drama Resurrecting the Champ might be based on a true story, but that doesn't mean you're going to believe a single frame of it.
...Resurrecting delivers a heckuva story marred by some credibility problems but lands the majority of its punches via subtly powerful performances and a moving undercard of paternal connection.
Lurie, once a journalist himself and the man behind such odd but probing political dramas as The Contender and Deterrence, lets Resurrecting the Champ unfold at a deliberate pace that invites ethical contemplation.
Director Rod Lurie and screenwriters Michael Bortman and Allison Burnett have fashioned a sneaky drama that sets us up for bland clichés and instead veers into big questions of ethics and exploitation.
If you don't recognize Samuel L. Jackson at first in Resurrecting the Champ, it may be because the movie is actually good.
Because it focuses on characters and relationships rather than merely the more sensational aspects of the story, Resurrecting the Champ delivers a knock-out.
Hartnett and Jackson deliver finely tuned performances that bristle with the sting of life lessons learned the hard way.
Jackson does some good work, sporting a high gasp of a voice and letting his character surface to reality smoothly, but the movie becomes too much of a morality play as it unwinds.
In Lurie's Resurrecting the Champ, about the only cliché missing is somebody barking 'Get me rewrite!' into a Bakelite pay phone.
The explorations of the strained father-son dynamic and a message about redemption are well-done.
Latest News for Resurrecting the Champ
August 27, 2007:
Pardon me for being offended when a flick revolving around the question of journalistic ethics takes so many liberties with the truth simply to spin a tall tale designed to tug on unsuspecting heartstrings. ![]()
More...
August 26, 2007:
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Booze and babes were still in high demand as the teen sex comedy Superbad ruled the North American box office for the second straight weekend despite the arrival of a handful of... More...
August 23, 2007:
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Action stars Jet Li and Jason Statham face off this weekend in the new crime thriller War which leads a flood of new releases pouring into North American multiplexes trying to... More...
August 23, 2007:
Critical Consensus: Champ Is No Chump; Nanny Is Dire, Bean is No Holiday, Dawn Needs Rescue
This week at the multiplex, you'll have your choice between babysitters (The Nanny Diaries, starring Scarlett Johansson and Laura Linney) manchilds (Mr. Bean's Holiday, starring... More...
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