Day of the Fight
Day of the Fight
| 26 April 1951 (USA)
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'Day of the Fight' shows Irish-American middleweight boxer Walter Cartier during the height of his career, on the day of a fight with black middleweight Bobby James, which took place on April 17, 1950.

Reviews
Linbeymusol

Wonderful character development!

Flyerplesys

Perfectly adorable

BroadcastChic

Excellent, a Must See

Solidrariol

Am I Missing Something?

cgyford

"Look" magazine photographer and chess-player Stanley Kubrick teamed up with old school chum Alexander Singer to launch their filmmaking careers and that of their star with this short but sweet self-financed boxing documentary, based on the future legendary director's 1949 photo feature "Prizefighter", which after the original buyer went belly-up was sold to RKO for a cool $100 profit.We follow the fan (short for fanatic as no-nonsense narrator Douglas Edwards informs us) to the places where matched pairs of men get up on a canvas covered platform and commit legal assault and lawful battery in an attempt to capture the primitive vicarious visceral thrill of seeing one animal overcome another with the science of hammering each other unconscious with upholstered fists.Irish-American middleweight Walter Cartier is selected at random, with a little help from boxing historian Nat Fleischer, from the 6,000 professional prize fighters who more often than not fail to scrape a living in America to give us insight into the people the fan seldom sees and never considers behind the facts and figures and columns of cold statistics in the record books.Walter Cartier makes an amiable enough presence at the centre of the action to be able to go on to a TV acting career as we see his daily routine transform him into arena man, with able support coming from his twin brother and manager Vincent Cartier and opponent Bobby James as well as a brief appearance from Nat Fleischer and the dulcet tones of news reader Douglas Edwards.The filmmakers make a fine pairing as Kubrick ducks and dives with his hand-held camera getting up close and personal with Cartier both before and during the fight while Singer rises above it all with his camera on a tripod to catch an overview of the action which together with the debut score of another childhood friend Gerald Fried all comes together to make a strong first impression."No one ever told Walter to be a fighter..."

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tieman64

"I saw Barry Lyndon at the Cinerama Dome on a screen so big I just went, 'Oh, my god!' " – Brian De Palma The early 50s. Stanley Kubrick quits his job at "Look" magazine and, intent on becoming a film director, directs "Day of the Fight", a short documentary for RKO Radio Pictures.The film, shot for almost four thousand dollars, all of which was gathered by Kubrick (borrowing from friends, relatives and his own funds), takes an innovative approach to the newsreel format, Kubrick functioning as director, producer, writer, sound-man and cinematographer.Because he had total control, "Day of the Fight" remains the best of Kubrick's early shorts. Whatever its flaws, it's a gritty, interesting little flick, demonstrating the kind of naturalism and humanity that many of his early "Look" photographs exhibited. Like many Kubrick films, "Day of the Fight" also has a methodical quality, Kubrick's camera lingering on the daily routines and pre-fight rituals of a young boxer. The film captures the claustrophobia of 1950s New York, the impersonality of urban life and the violence of the boxing ring. Some kinetic sequences recall Kubrick's "Killer's Kiss" and the hand-held boxing sequences in "Barry Lyndon", but the quieter moments impress as well, each one imbued with a kind of pre-fight anxiety, every shot oozing dread, anticipation and nervous energy.Unfortunately, RKO's "March of Time" newsreel went into liquidation and RKO was only able to buy "Day of the Fight" for a hundred dollars more than its production cost, though they liked the short enough to offer Kubrick fifteen hundred dollars to film a second documentary called "Flying Padre"."Flying Padre", Kubrick's follow up short for RKO, is thus purely a work for hire. You can sense that Kubrick had zero interest in this story, an insignificant little tale about a Catholic priest in New Mexico who uses a small plane to tend to his 400 square mile parish. Kubrick wrote the short's narration and has his small cast re-enact several moments from the priest's past (he takes a sick child to his mother, flies to an isolated ranch, gives staged sermons etc), but with the form and content of the short controlled by the newsreel companies of the day, there's little room for anything interesting other than a couple neat camera angles and some good cinematography.8/10 – "Day of the Fight" 5/10 – "Flying Padre" Of interest to Kubrick completists only.

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johnnyboyz

It's always interesting to go back to the beginning of a director's career, in this case Stanley Kubrick's, and take a look at his earlier work. Day of the Fight just happens to be the first film by now legendary director Kubrick who is widely regarded as one of the best contemporary directors ever. This film is around about 15-20 minutes long and revolves around the build up to a boxing match the study of the build up will revolve around.Interestingly enough and perhaps the most interesting thing about it is that it was inspired by a photograph Kubrick himself took for a 1949 edition of a magazine. This could be seen as an early example of suspense, with constant reference to the boxing match and its importance made through narrator Douglas Edwards, a good casting for the serious and deep voice the film required. As a short, it works and the suspense and build up maintains some sort of interest as the montage plays out. Kubrick includes all sorts of shots and angles creating the nice range for the eye, my favourite being the low angle on the statue of Mary in the church about half way through.But the focus could well be the fight itself. There is some good camera work to be had out of the actual match and a low angle between a boxer's legs would later be used by Kubrick in Killer's Kiss, another early Kubrick film. I actually would have liked the boxing match's result to have been the other way around as I feel it would've added a new dimension to the short, a sort of anti-climatic spin that might've worked well. But that said, it's worth seeing if for the match itself and the chance to see where it all started off for the great man.

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Irie212

The Day of the Fight is rarely seen, but essential viewing for anybody who takes cinema, or Kubrick, seriously. It encompasses one day in the life of a boxer in New York City in 1951, and is beautifully filmed (Kubrick at the camera) and structured, with the audience knowing throughout that the day will end in a fight, so there is built-in tension about that upcoming bout, and who will win. The voice-over is tightly written by Kubrick, and his writing is only one of many suggestions of the scope of the filmmaker's gifts. Two examples: A scene where the fighter is at home playing with his dog while the voice-over talks about the brutality the man employs in the ring-- terrific contrast in moods. And the audio is perfect: the only time Kubrick films with sound is when the boxer enters the ring-- then you hear crowd sounds, announcers, everything. Until then, it's a documentary with voice-over. It really is a minor work of an important genius.

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