Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA grocery store clerk turns prizefighter to win prize money to bail his drunken father out of jail.A grocery store clerk turns prizefighter to win prize money to bail his drunken father out of jail.A grocery store clerk turns prizefighter to win prize money to bail his drunken father out of jail.
- Al Gorski
- (as John Day)
- Tony Adamson
- (as Joe Vitale)
- Boxing Match Spectator
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Cab Driver
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Boxing Match Spectator
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Mrs. Hall
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
In The Square Jungle - that being the boxing ring - he's at it again as Eddie Quaid, an amateur fighter with great potential to go pro. He works in a grocery store, and is told by his girlfriend Julie's (Patricia Crowley) father that he's a loser and will never amount to anything. That's it for him and Julie.
When he gets the opportunity to go pro, he makes his alcoholic father (Jim Backus) promise to lay off the booze. He begins working with a trainer (Ernest Borgnine). He wins the world championship against Gorski (John Daheim).
Eddie loses the next fight to Gorski and blames the ref (John Marley) for stopping the fight due to Eddie being one punch short of being pummeled. He asks the ref to "think twice" before stopping another fight.
On his next fight with Gorski, the ref thinks twice, and Eddie nearly kills Gorski. Gorski lives but his fighting days are over. It nearly destroys Eddie.
Good movie, with Curtis doing an excellent job in a dramatic role. I actually worked for Tony. He was a great guy, very charming, funny, and hard-working.
The film shows the dark side of boxing, certainly not in the way Requiem for a Heavyweight does, but the message is clear.
The gorgeous Leigh Snowden plays a girlfriend of Eddie's before Julie is back in the picture. She was hired by Universal as a Monroe type, and there is a resemblance. Few women can say they walked across a stage while entertaining the troops and won a seven-year contract as a result!
A very touching ending, with an appearance by Joe Louis.
Eddie (Curtis) is a working guy whose life is far from perfect. His father is a drunk and Eddie keeps making excuses for his old man and is quite the enabler. When Dad (Jim Backus) is locked up for being drunk and disorderly, Eddie even goes so far as to take up boxing to pay for his father's bail!
When Eddie has his first match, he's very rough but somehow manages to win. When a respected trainer watches him in action, he (Ernest Borgnine) agrees to train him...and after a montage sequence, he's a middle weight champion. What he does AFTER this is what makes up the bulk of the movie...when he just about kills a man in the ring...and he cannot handle that.
Like nearly all boxing films, the boxers throw way too many punches and show little defense. If sights really went that way, they'd seldom go beyond the first round! But, like other boxing films it is still quite entertaining...though the fans' reaction to the big fight at the end seemed ludicrous. It's blood they want...and it's blood they got!
So is the film good? Yes, in some ways. It's a nice indictment of the brutality of the sport. But on the other, I had a hard time accepting Curtis as a hard-as-nails boxer. He just looked too pretty and too frail. With a different actor, it probably could have been better. Curtis, by the way, was a fine actor...just not in this role.
This was the period when Curtis was Universal's beefcake star, so there are several shots of him stripped to the waist. George Robinson's camerawork offers a lot of close-ups during the fight sequences. The effect is to disguise what is going on, so the audience can't see exactly what is going on, yet make them look even more brutal. Curtis shows himself an effective movie actor, performing with his body, often more convincingly than with his face or his words.
With Ernest Borginine, Jim Backus, Pat Crowley, Paul Kelly, David Jannsen, and a brief appearance by Joe Louis.
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Bernie Browne: [Eddie has persuaded the referee of his next fight to "think twice" before stopping it] A referee can't think twice. If he does, that ring turns into a square jungle.
Eddie Quaid: What's so special about that? You think it's any different out there? Outside the ring? You think they're gonna give you favours and pat you on the back because you're a loser? I'm a fighter. And as long as I'm on my feet, I'll fight.
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- 1h 26min(86 min)
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