Budo Journeyman had an entertaining post on boxing and martial arts as portrayed in movies. Below are some excepts. The original may be
read here, where there are lot of clips that you may enjoy.
Below
is a list of the main themes encountered in boxing movies. But bear in
mind that boxing on film has probably the longest history in cinema.
Ideal for the silent era, because language is not needed to explain the
drama (very early documentary movies feature famous boxing matches).
First theme:
Pitched
against the injustices of society, whether it’s race or class, or the
wrong side of the tracks; the ‘zero to hero’ story always has appeal; it
offers hope to even the most downtrodden.
Notice how many boxing
movies come out of America, clearly it taps into the myth of the
American Dream. You could start with Rocky (Stallone) and carry all the
way through to the ‘Cinderella Man’ (Russell Crowe), a biopic where the
underdog theme is really larded on.
Probably the most famous
non-boxing scene from a boxing movie, every line quotable. Great acting
‘On the Waterfront’ 1954, Marlon Brando and Rod Steiger in the back of a
taxi.
Second theme:
Tragic individuals and catastrophic results.
Probably
the most gritty story rendered on to screen is that of Jake LaMotta in
the movie ‘Raging Bull’, artfully told by Martin Scorcese. A true-life
story of how LaMotta’s urge to make a success of his life and career,
results in human carnage, in terms of relationships and family.
LaMotta played by De Niro; strong stuff, not pleasant.
We also need to consider how neither LaMotta nor the fictional Rocky
Balboa are blessed with high intelligence; but that seems okay in boxing
movies, where philosophy never really gets a look in (unlike martial
arts movies). You don’t need deep thinking to understand a boxing match.
Theme three:
Naturally,
everyone pretty much understands the rules and objectives of a boxing
match. Consider also how the contest and the drama is all conveniently
contained in a small space; no need for long rolling tracking shots to
follow the action. Compared to other action movies, this makes things so
much easier to manage.
Also, the narrative on every boxing movie
is split into two zones; inside the ring and outside the ring. The
viewer unconsciously understands this, and accepts it unconditionally.
We
also tolerate the brutality of the ring, no matter how graphic.
Example; ‘Raging Bull’ was a movie shot almost entirely in black and
white, but it didn’t lessen the gore-factor. In fact, it enhanced it.
The next theme:
There
are women’s boxing movies, but they are quite rare (think of Clint
Eastwood’s ‘Million Dollar Baby’). Decades ago, the idea was totally
unthinkable. There have been combat sports movies with women as the
central protagonists; recently ‘Tatami’ 2023, a judo movie which is
worth watching, for many reasons, cerebral, cultural and political, and
then there’s the judo.
From the male perspective there are often very positive themes of
honour, duty and responsibility, as well as sportsmanship (there is also
pressure against corruption).
A quick mention of bare-knuckle, whether historical or not. (But, let’s put aside anything with Brad Pitt in it).
My go-to examples for historical bare knuckles fighting are; the short section in Robert Downey Jnr’s ‘Sherlock Holmes’.
And, the not very successful, ‘Prizefighter, The Life of Jem
Belcher’, 2022. The Americans don’t seem to have an interest in these
stories, leaving it up to the Europeans, despite having their own
pantheon of fighters from the bare-knuckles age. I suspect that across
the Atlantic everything has to hook on the myth of the, previously
mentioned, ‘Great American Dream’. Europe and the UK tend to be more
historically nuanced.
Now, on to my main objective.
The common ground:
· Discipline and grind (Rocky chasing chickens and Shaolin types carrying buckets up steps).
· Underdog tales in both genres. It taps into something fundamentally human.
· Final climactic showdown. Think ‘hall of mirrors’ in ‘Enter the Dragon’ and any Rocky movie.
All of the above are found in martial arts and boxing movies, but…
The real differences:
· Martial arts movies don’t go for the same grit as boxing movies. They are more about grace and aesthetics.
·
Superhuman potential is really ramped-up in martial arts tales. The bar
is set really high. With boxing it tends to be grind and muscle, and,
dare I say it; more realism?
· Endurance versus self-actualisation
and philosophy. Eastern religions and disciplines very much guide the
martial arts storylines. While in the world of boxing, it tends to be
just doggedly staying in the fight and clawing your way out of poverty
etc.
· With boxing, the themes tend towards Western individualism,
while the Eastern traditions lean heavily into collectivism, even
heritage or ancestor worship.
· Technical aesthetics: In boxing
it’s the close-up toughness of the brawl. While in martial arts movies
we find the viewpoint is pulled back away from the action, so we can
appreciate the artistry and the flair of the fighters.