Framed for murder, heavyweight boxer Terry Williams is sent to prison, but is released after a few years on good behavior. He becomes a championship contender and then, on the eve of the big... Read allFramed for murder, heavyweight boxer Terry Williams is sent to prison, but is released after a few years on good behavior. He becomes a championship contender and then, on the eve of the big fight, finds the man who can prove that he was framed for the crime for which he served t... Read allFramed for murder, heavyweight boxer Terry Williams is sent to prison, but is released after a few years on good behavior. He becomes a championship contender and then, on the eve of the big fight, finds the man who can prove that he was framed for the crime for which he served time.
- Boxing Match Spectator
- (uncredited)
- Boxer in Gym
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- Spectator at Ambulance Scene
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Featured reviews
The low budget comes through at times and the direction can be amateurish, but the last fight scenes seem like the real thing. The script is the real gem. Good dialogue and complex characters. It's not "The Set Up" and not really a noir, but it's definitely worth checking out. It was Ann Richards last film with her husband, Edmund Angelo, directing. Maybe they should have done more?!!
When the story begins, Terry is in prison and has shown himself to be a terrific boxer. He's so good that a promoter manages to get him released. Ironically, the judge who agrees to the release was the same one which presided over the trial where Terry was convicted of murder! As for Terry, he's excited more at being able to perhaps prove his innocence than his prowess as a boxer. Oddly, despite this, Terry is an amazing boxer...and soon is being considered for the title fight against 'the champ'. But what about his need to prove his innocence?
The major theme in this one is not just Terry proving his innocence but two other themes. One is about boxing and women...and Terry's trainer hates that Terry is falling in love. The other is about a boxer named 'Punchy'...who is severely brain damaged by years of boxing. Punchy's ex-girlfriend is worried this will also be Terry's fate!
The film manages to be pro- AND anti-boxing....but mostly anti. The script is quite good and the film well worth seeing even though most of the actors are unfamiliar faces and the film was obviously made by a minor studio. I was about to give it a 7, but the ending was a bit disappointing and left some important plot elements dangling.
Sheldon Leonard and Wally Cassel are quite strong in critical supporting roles, though lead actor William Bishop is a slightly flat cross between Frank Lovejoy and Rock Hudson. He pulls it off adequately, but it's the brother characters played by Leonard and Cassel who buoy the narrative, with the latter as a quite obviously gay, and spurned, boxing trainer.
A fascinating aspect of this film is its absolutely relentless final boxing match, where Bishop takes a pummeling not unlike the depiction of the LaMotta/Leonard fight in RAGING BULL where DeNiro's LaMotta refuses to go down. One has to wonder if Scorsese caught this rarity on late-night television and it stuck.
It's difficult to find information on this film but it appears to be in the public domain, so perhaps it will turn up as a bargain basement DVD. Particularly interesting to note that this is the sole film of stage director Edmund Angelo (who also produced, and cast his wife, Ann Richards).
Did you know
- TriviaExecutive producer Theodore J. Ticktin sued Jack Broder, Realart Pictures Inc. and Cheryl-TV Corp. for $500,000 for releasing Breakdown on television too soon after the film's theatrical release, resulting in lowered theatrical profits. Truth of the matter was, the film had already been in distribution for two years and by that time had earned the maximum amount of revenue that could have realistically been expected by its inevitable position as the second feature on the lower half of double bills in the least demanding, least lucrative booking situations.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Flipper City (1973)
Details
- Runtime1 hour 16 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1