|
Champion (1949)
In director Mark Robson's (and producer Stanley Kramer)
archetypal, film-noirish sports film, one of the best films about
boxing and prize fighting, and a cautionary tale about its main protagonist:
- the character of brutal, arrogant, deceptive and
savage prizefighter Michael 'Midge' Kelly (Oscar-nominated Kirk
Douglas), and the intense scenes of his training (a pre-Rocky sequence)
and boxing matches
- Midge's affair and break-up with cheating, gold-digging,
tough blonde Gracie Diamond (Marilyn Maxwell), boxer Johnny Dunne's
(John Daheim) opportunistic girlfriend, who was demanding that they
get married - and his blunt admission: ("You got as much chance
of marrying me tomorrow as today. And that's no chance at all because,
uh, guess what, I'm already married...I ain't kiddin'. I'm not kiddin'
ya."); she retaliated: "You've been takin' me for a sucker
all this time" but then begged to be with him: "You're
not gonna shake me now" although he immediately dumped her:
("You'd better promote yourself another meal ticket...Why don't
you call up Johnny Dunne?") and he physically threatened her
to not make a stink: ("Oh no, you're gonna be a good little
girl, 'cause if you aren't, I'll put ya in the hospital for a long,
long time")
- the night before the climactic boxing match ending,
the scene of Midge's conjugal rape of his estranged, abandoned and
wary wife Emma Bryce (Ruth Roman) when he pushed himself on her and
dared her to kiss him: ("You always take off every time I come
near ya....You still hate me, don't ya?...You're afraid of me...Then
kiss me goodbye!...Afraid?"); after they kissed, he noted: ("It's
still there, isn't it?...You're my wife") and the screen went
to black
- the brutal confrontation in the locker room before
the final fight when Midge's brother Connie Kelly (Arthur Kennedy),
who was dating Emma, accused Midge of being cold-blooded and taking
advantage of Emma: "You're no different. You're only worse.
Your blood has turned cold...My number finally came up too, didn't
it? And Emma, once wasn't enough for ya. You couldn't let her live
and be happy, could ya? Why did you do it!? Because you were bored?
Your chance to prove to yourself that you were really the champion?
Ya stink! Ya stink from corruption. You're worse than a murderer.
You're a grave-robber!"
- the concluding and exciting 12-round boxing fight
between perennial challenger Johnny Dunne and Midge - who was punished
and refused to quit after 11 rounds and won a knock-out in the final
round with "raw courage" and a surge of angry energy after
eyeing the jeering crowd (and hearing a ringside announcer's assessment
of the end of his career: "I think it's all over. Kelly's through,
he's all through. He's totally washed up, he's finished. We're getting
a new champion tonight!")
- Midge's triumphant glory speech to himself and trainer
Tommy Haley (Paul Stewart) in the locker room following his ferocious
victory: ("Did you hear that crowd? For the first time in
my life, people cheering for me. Were you deaf? Did ya hear 'em?
We're not hitchhiking any more. We're riding!")
- Midge's collapse and expiration in the locker room
of a cerebral hemorrhage- and an announcement of the diagnosis: ("He's
dead. Brain hemorrhage")
- Connie's back-handed, complimentary
eulogy for Midge, delivered to a reporter as Emma stood next to him
(the two were now free to marry after seeking a divorce in Reno): "You
want a statement from me, huh? All right. I'll give ya a statement.
He was a champion. He went out like a champion. He was a credit to
the fight game, to the very end" - the film's final line of
dialogue
|
'Midge' Kelly
(Kirk Douglas)
Gracie Diamond
(Marilyn Maxwell)
Emma Bryce
(Ruth Roman)
Connie Kelly (Arthur Kennedy) to Midge: "Ya stink!"
Connie's Eulogy to Midge: "He was a champion"
|