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Storyline
During the Great Depression, a common-man hero, James J. Braddock--a.k.a. the Cinderella Man--was to become one of the most surprising sports legends in history. By the early 1930s, the impoverished ex-prizefighter was seemingly as broken-down, beaten-up and out-of-luck as much of the rest of the American populace who had hit rock bottom. His career appeared to be finished, he was unable to pay the bills, the only thing that mattered to him--his family--was in danger, and he was even forced to go on Public Relief. But deep inside, Jim Braddock never relinquished his determination. Driven by love, honor and an incredible dose of grit, he willed an impossible dream to come true. In a last-chance bid to help his family, Braddock returned to the ring. No one thought he had a shot. However Braddock, fueled by something beyond mere competition, kept winning. Suddenly, the ordinary working man became the mythic athlete. Carrying the hopes and dreams of the disenfranchised on his shoulders, Braddock rocketed through the ranks, until this underdog chose to do the unthinkable: take on the heavyweight champ of the world, the unstoppable Max Baer, renowned for having killed two men in the ring. |
Backdrops
The Director
Ron Howard
Ronald William "Ron" Howard (born March 1, 1954) is an American actor, director and producer. He came to prominence as a child actor, playing Opie Taylor in the sitcom The Andy Griffith Show for eight years, and later as the teenaged Richie Cunningham in the sitcom Happy Days for six years. He made film appearances such as in American Graffiti in 1973 and while starring in Happy Days he also made The Shootist in 1976, as well as making his directorial debut with the 1977 comedy film Grand Theft Auto. He left Happy Days in 1980 to focus on directing, and has since gone on to direct several films, including the Oscar winning Cocoon, Apollo 13, Frost/Nixon, A Beautiful Mind and How the Grinch Stole Christmas. In 2003, he was awarded the National Medal of Arts.
Description above from the Wikipedia article Ron Howard, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
News Stories
Top 5 Tuesday: Boxing Movies
Hey everyone, its Tuesday and you know what that means! Top five Tuesday time! Now with the warrior releaseing this week, I thought we would dedicate our top 5 Tuesday to top 5 boxing movies, now before you say it, I KNOW warrior is MMA, but there weren't too many of those out...
User Reviews
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Russell Crowe does it again
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Russell Crowe (Jim Braddock) is a boxer that lost everything except he's hope, and with hope he fights he's way back in the ring, this time, fighting for he's family. Renée Zellweger (Mae Braddock) plays the role of Jim's wife, a kind hearted woman that supports her husband trough the tough times they have to endure.

Although Russell Crowe plays the role of the warrior fighting with all of he's heart as he does in many of he's movies, this time he also has a powerful dramatic role which he plays wonderfully, making you feel the deep intensity of this movie.
The first time I saw this movie, it made me relive feelings like honor, power and righteousness that although many movies portray, the dramatic nature of this one truly makes a noticeable difference.
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reviewed by Jaruba on the 23rd of July 2010
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It's too conventional. And Russell Crowe is no John Garfield