VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,2/10
5342
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Dopo un breve studio sulla storia del pugilato, narrato dal giornalista Douglas Edwards, seguiamo un giorno nella vita del pugile mediomassimo irlandese Walter Cartier.Dopo un breve studio sulla storia del pugilato, narrato dal giornalista Douglas Edwards, seguiamo un giorno nella vita del pugile mediomassimo irlandese Walter Cartier.Dopo un breve studio sulla storia del pugilato, narrato dal giornalista Douglas Edwards, seguiamo un giorno nella vita del pugile mediomassimo irlandese Walter Cartier.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Stanley Kubrick
- Self - Man at Ringside with Camera
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Alexander Singer
- Self - Man at Ringside with Camera
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Judy Singer
- Self - Female Fan in Crowd
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizIt cost Stanley Kubrick $3,900 to make and he sold it (to RKO) for $4,000.
- Versioni alternativeWhen RKO obtained the film for their "This Is America" series, they added about four minutes of new material to the beginning of the film, making the short 16 minutes long instead of the original 12 minutes. The opening four minutes with boxing historian Nat Fleischer is markedly different from the rest of the film as if features footage from different boxing matches. The opening was also modified with the credits appearing in different order and the music for the opening was also changed. The majority of the picture is the same until the end. In the last sequence when the knock out happens, the narration is once again changes. Kubrick's original cut features Douglas Edwards talking about personal sacrifice and success. The extended RKO cut removes this portion of the narration and adds new one with Nat Fleischer to better match the opening segment - this narration is about how this fight will go down into the record books. The music at the end was also changed - Gerald Fried's finale cue was moved earlier to match the beginning of the new narration, but because it starts sooner, it doesn't line up with the ending. Thus the new end title card (which adds This is America to the bottom of the card) plays in silence.
- ConnessioniFeatured in The Art of Stanley Kubrick: From Short Films to Strangelove (2000)
Recensione in evidenza
It's true, I would not know anything about this short RKO-type documentary if not for the fact that it was the first time that iconoclast Stanley Kubrick picked up a camera with rolling film stock to be screened in theaters. But as a student filmmaker myself, I find it of the utmost fascination - even when it is in a jittery, ragged print like the one I obtained on video - to see the early, primitive works of famous directors (Last Year in Vietnam by Stone, My Best Friend's Birthday by Tarantino, and Les Mistons by Truffaut are others) and the foundations of style. Day of the Fight, to be sure, is not something of incredible note, and it would not be until the Killing that Kubrick would create a great film. Yet through this film, I was constantly aware- and pleased- by how this very typical kind of story was executed.
In a way, it's almost of more worth to watch this film with the sound off; the narration, while good at getting to know the very basics of this boxer that's being profiled, it's also a distraction and not very revelatory. As just a succession of images, however, it works a lot more. It's the kind of short documentary that is 70% real, and 30% staged, with Kubrick following the boxer and his brother on the streets of New York, leading up to the fight that will bring him recognition. When looking at how Kubrick uses the camera, it seems fairly simple and, for those looking for all of the Kubrick trademarks, disappointing. But in just looking at how he uses the camera, how he gets his subjects in frame, and the importance of composition and the subtleties of lighting, it's really quite good. And the fight sequence, filmed by Kubrick and a friend, has some cut-away shots that almost ring of the future of Scorsese's Raging Bull (though, of course, still primitive).
Is it more of a curiosity, a film for Kubrick die-hard completists looking to have all 16 of his works, docs and features, in their collection? Sure, but it is also one of the better short doc's he made in his formative years, taking a subject he was already interested in (he was a photographer for Look magazine with this boxer under profile) and going a step further. As his sort of film school, this is in terms of the image even more fascinating than the lackluster 'doodle on the fridge' film Fear and Desire.
In a way, it's almost of more worth to watch this film with the sound off; the narration, while good at getting to know the very basics of this boxer that's being profiled, it's also a distraction and not very revelatory. As just a succession of images, however, it works a lot more. It's the kind of short documentary that is 70% real, and 30% staged, with Kubrick following the boxer and his brother on the streets of New York, leading up to the fight that will bring him recognition. When looking at how Kubrick uses the camera, it seems fairly simple and, for those looking for all of the Kubrick trademarks, disappointing. But in just looking at how he uses the camera, how he gets his subjects in frame, and the importance of composition and the subtleties of lighting, it's really quite good. And the fight sequence, filmed by Kubrick and a friend, has some cut-away shots that almost ring of the future of Scorsese's Raging Bull (though, of course, still primitive).
Is it more of a curiosity, a film for Kubrick die-hard completists looking to have all 16 of his works, docs and features, in their collection? Sure, but it is also one of the better short doc's he made in his formative years, taking a subject he was already interested in (he was a photographer for Look magazine with this boxer under profile) and going a step further. As his sort of film school, this is in terms of the image even more fascinating than the lackluster 'doodle on the fridge' film Fear and Desire.
- Quinoa1984
- 20 mar 2006
- Permalink
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Il giorno del combattimento
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Church of St. Francis Xavier, 46 W. 16th St., New York, New York, Stati Uniti(Church where Walter Cartier and his brother, Vincent, attend morning mass)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 3.900 USD (previsto)
- Tempo di esecuzione16 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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