अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंUp and coming ambitious boxer Tommy Shea must choose between making dishonest money with crooked promoter Harry Cram or honestly winning a title, as advised by his manager Dave Bernstein.Up and coming ambitious boxer Tommy Shea must choose between making dishonest money with crooked promoter Harry Cram or honestly winning a title, as advised by his manager Dave Bernstein.Up and coming ambitious boxer Tommy Shea must choose between making dishonest money with crooked promoter Harry Cram or honestly winning a title, as advised by his manager Dave Bernstein.
Jimmy Lennon Sr.
- Ring Announcer
- (as James F. Lennon)
Harold 'Tommy' Hart
- Stretch Caplow
- (as H. Tommy Hart)
Joey Barnum
- Sparring Partner
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Mushy Callahan
- Referee
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Sayre Dearing
- Ringsider
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Stanley Farrar
- Doctor
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
There was two other underrated boxing stories produced by Universal Pictures: THE SQUARE JUNGLE, and THE IRON MAN, directed by Jerry Hopper and Joseph Pevney, starring Tony Curtis for the first and Jeff Chandler for the second. This one is made by Jesse Hibbs, a western specialist and starring Audie Murphy, who was for Hibbs the equivalent of what Chandler was for Pevney. It is a good time waster bringing no surprises at all, showing the boxing underworld as we all have seen it before in so many movies: corrupted managers, love story between the lead and the gorgeous gal whom he falls in love with, the friendly and paternalistic trainer. This is not THE SET UP, nor THE CHAMPION or THE HARDER THEY FALL, I warn you. But it is unusual to see Murphy in something else than a western and directed by his fetish director Hibbs with whom he also gave a strange drama: JOE BUTTERFLY and not a western.
Audie Murphy plays Tommy Shea, a not particularly distinguished boxer whose career is anything but stellar. However, an aging boxing manager, David Bernstein (John McIntire), thinks Shea has real promise...though he lacks discipline and training. It happens that Bernstein works for a rich guy...a guy who is looking to back a promising young fighter and soon Tommy is getting the guidance he needs. The problem, however, is that to get a chance at the title, Tommy might need to play by the rules of the mob...perhaps throw a fight or two. What is he to do?
This is a decent boxing film. But in a genre where there are many great boxing pictures, it's quite undistinguished by comparison. It's not like the movie is bad or anything like that...but similar stories have been told better. It also would have helped had the writer made Tommy a bit more likable and less impulsive.
This is a decent boxing film. But in a genre where there are many great boxing pictures, it's quite undistinguished by comparison. It's not like the movie is bad or anything like that...but similar stories have been told better. It also would have helped had the writer made Tommy a bit more likable and less impulsive.
Audie Murphy is an honest young boxer with an honest manager in John MacIntire. But he wants beautiful Barbara Rush, and her father, Jeff Morrow, is a manipulative man. Can Audie remain an honest man and have Miss Rush?
It's pretty much a standard boxing movie, although Murphy, who is mostly quiet, out with long speeches that mark plot switches three or four times. The corruption of the fight game is hinted at throughout, but doesn't turn into actual action until the last act. The fight scenes with Chico Vejar are well shot, and pretty brutal. With Tommy Rail, Howard St. John, and Sheila Bromley.
It's pretty much a standard boxing movie, although Murphy, who is mostly quiet, out with long speeches that mark plot switches three or four times. The corruption of the fight game is hinted at throughout, but doesn't turn into actual action until the last act. The fight scenes with Chico Vejar are well shot, and pretty brutal. With Tommy Rail, Howard St. John, and Sheila Bromley.
Jesse Hibbs began his career as an assistant director from 1937 to 1953. Then he became cinema director during 1953 and 1958 and directed 11 movies , 6 with Audie Murphy : 3 westerns, 1 comedy, 1 war autobiography and this box drama that has already been done in other movies in a far better way. Because "World In My Corner" is really flat with no punchy rhythm, the worse for a box movie. Absolutely no inventive direction and cinematography, even during the fights. Forgettable.
Routine. Standard. Flat. Marginal. Yeah, I'd say the majority of my fourteen, esteemed IMDB colleagues below have this 1956 boxing flic pegged just about right. Nearly everything about it...the fight scenes, the cinematography, the acting of Audie Murphy and Barbara Rush, the dialogue by someone named Sher...screams "mediocrity!" Occasionally, there are flashes of interest, like a smarmy study in toxic wealth by an actor with whom I'm not familiar but soon hope to be, Jeff Morrow. Or real life pugilist Chico Vejar who turns in the film's best, most natural acting job. But just as often the film slips below the ho hum line into the land of serious boredom as in those interminable love scenes between the two leads. Solid C.
PS... Murphy's character says he's Jersey, but every time he opens his mouth I hear Longhorn.
PS... Murphy's character says he's Jersey, but every time he opens his mouth I hear Longhorn.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाMovie Opening is the real Local Jersey City newspaper "Jersey Journal. ".
- भाव
Al Carelli: Your timing's off, boy. You're going to need a lot of experience.
- क्रेज़ी क्रेडिटCredits appear as headers on newspaper articles.
- कनेक्शनReferences The Public Enemy (1931)
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
विवरण
- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 22 मिनट
- रंग
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.85 : 1
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