You have permission to publish this article electronically or in print, free of 
charge as long as the bylines are included.  A courtesy copy of your 
publication would be appreciated. 

Movie reviews for Fighting 
 

This is an enjoyable movie and rightly billed as Rocky for a new generation.  I 
must say the music, and cinematography people will instantly recognise the 
Rocky references, even without being told that this is being billed as Rocky 
for a new generation.

It stars Channing Tatum(Step up to the streets) as a former college wrestler 
Shawn McArthur struggling hard to make ends meet in New York after having an 
altercation with his father/coach of the wrestling team.  We meet him as he is 
struggling to offload a series of books he has no idea are counterfeit, one of 
the hapless buyers happens to be the gorgeous Zulay Valez (Zulay Henao, S. 
Darko something about her just reminds me of a cat), from the altercation that 
occurs with Harvey Boarden(Terrence Howard, Iron man) and some of his 
associates, Harvey gets the impression Shawn may indeed be just what he is 
looking for, for an underground fighting campaign, the rates of pay of course 
are several times more than either of them could make struggling to survive on 
the unforgiving metropolis that is New York.

Although billed as Rocky for the next generation, there are some testing 
questions the original Rocky would not have crossed his mind to contemplate, 
and of course there is the familiar territory of the arch nemesis of a 
protagonist, the talented wrestler Evan Hailey(Brian J. White The Shield) who 
happens to have been the catalyst for the original fallout with Shawn's father, 
as equally Harvey as Shawn's unofficial manager has to face some of the taunts 
from his comrades who are rolling in the money, notably Martinez(Luiz Guzman, 
Traffic) Jack Dancing(Roger Guenver Smith, He got game).

You are left wondering if Shawn is going to make it as a underground fighter, 
and if there is any romantic hope for him and the lovely Zulay equally 
struggling herself to raise a child on her own, and her troubling grandmother.
 
 Mr D Stevens is a reviewer at http://armchairbuff.blogspot.com/  Movie reviews 
 Keywords: Movie Reviews,  film reviews, movies, films, Fighting, Channing 
Tatum, Zulay Henao, Terrence Howard, Luiz Guzman, Roger Guenver Smith, Brian J. 
White, drama, romance, poverty, New York, underground fighting, street 
fighting, underground betting 
 Article contains 322 words

Reply via email to