|
The Set-Up (1949)
In director Robert Wise's excellent, noirish realistic
sports film drama, about corruption in the sport of boxing:
- Robert Ryan as almost washed-up 35 year-old pugilist
Bill "Stoker" Thompson and his concerned wife Julie (Audrey
Totter) - the scene of their argument about an uncoming fight -
she claimed that he was too old to fight; Bill was confident:
"Look, Julie, I can take this kid like I told you! I can feel
it! If I can belt him solid just once!"; she disagreed: "I
understand that he's 23, and you're 35, Bill! Thirty-five in this
business, you're an old man!..."; when he said he felt close
to making a "top spot" in the sport, she discouraged him: "I
remember the first time you told me that! You were just one punch
away from the title shot then! Don't you see, Bill? You'll always
be just one punch away! Oh, Bill, it ain't I wanna hurt you! But
what kind of a life is this? Springfield, Middletown, Unionville,
Paradise City! How many more beatings do you have to take?"
- the set-up: Stoker's corrupt manager Tiny (George
Tobias) neglected to tell his fighter that he should take a pre-arranged
'dive' in a fight and deliberately lose, presuming that he would
lose on his own; he accepted bribe money from gangland members; the
match was at the (fictional) Paradise City Arena, for $500 prize
money, between "Stoker" and a younger 23 year-old opponent
- the heavily-favored Tiger Nelson (heavyweight champion boxer Hal "Baylor" Fieberling)
- the celebrated and extended 18 minute four-round boxing
match, filmed in real time; it was a brutally-painful, bloody, sweaty
and exhausting slugfest, with a few cutaways to views of crowd members
in the audience
- in the post-fight alleyway scene, the battered and
bruised "Stoker" was confronted and surrounded by mobster
thugs, and beaten for disobeying the set-up; they threatened to crush
his hand with a brick to prevent him from ever fighting again ("You'll
never hit anybody with that hand again!")
- the concluding scene of a "Stoker" in the
arms of a comforting Julie - he told her what had happened: ("They
busted it! They busted it for good! With a brick! I wouldn't do it!
I wouldn't do it!...They wanted me to lay down! I was takin' that
kid!"); he then admitted: "I can't fight no more!";
she replied: "You won't have to fight no more, Bill. I'll make
it up to ya, darling! We'll get that cigar stand you talked to me
about or maybe even a piece of that fighter! It's gonna be alright
Bill, you wait and see"; Bill still felt that he had been victorious: "Julie!
I won tonight! - I won!"; she responded with the film's final
line: "Yes, you won tonight, Bill! We both won tonight! We both
won tonight!" -- with a last view of a neon 'Dreamland' sign,
and the sound of sirens from an approaching ambulance
|
|