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Hands of Stone

  • 2016
  • R
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
19K
YOUR RATING
Hands of Stone (2016)
Follows the life of Roberto Duran, who made his professional debut in 1968 as a 16-year-old and retired in 2002 at age 50. In June 1980, he defeated Sugar Ray Leonard to capture the WBC welterweight title but shocked the boxing world by returning to his corner in the November rematch, saying 'no mas' (no more).
Play trailer0:57
40 Videos
73 Photos
BoxingBiographyDramaSport

The legendary Roberto Duran and his equally legendary trainer Ray Arcel change each other's lives.The legendary Roberto Duran and his equally legendary trainer Ray Arcel change each other's lives.The legendary Roberto Duran and his equally legendary trainer Ray Arcel change each other's lives.

  • Director
    • Jonathan Jakubowicz
  • Writer
    • Jonathan Jakubowicz
  • Stars
    • Edgar Ramírez
    • Usher
    • Robert De Niro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    19K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jonathan Jakubowicz
    • Writer
      • Jonathan Jakubowicz
    • Stars
      • Edgar Ramírez
      • Usher
      • Robert De Niro
    • 60User reviews
    • 75Critic reviews
    • 54Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Videos40

    Hands of Stone
    Music Video 2:27
    Hands of Stone
    Red Band Trailer
    Trailer 1:17
    Red Band Trailer
    Red Band Trailer
    Trailer 1:17
    Red Band Trailer
    Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 0:57
    Teaser Trailer
    HANDS OF STONE - Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:13
    HANDS OF STONE - Official Trailer
    Sugar Ray Calls For A Rematch
    Clip 1:31
    Sugar Ray Calls For A Rematch
    Leonard Vs Duran
    Clip 0:41
    Leonard Vs Duran

    Photos73

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    Top Cast99+

    Edit
    Edgar Ramírez
    Edgar Ramírez
    • Roberto Durán
    Usher
    Usher
    • Sugar Ray Leonard
    • (as Usher Raymond IV)
    Robert De Niro
    Robert De Niro
    • Ray Arcel
    Rubén Blades
    Rubén Blades
    • Carlos Eleta
    Ana de Armas
    Ana de Armas
    • Felicidad Iglesias
    Pedro Perez
    • Plomo
    • (as Pedro 'Budú' Pérez)
    Óscar Jaenada
    Óscar Jaenada
    • Chaflan
    John Turturro
    John Turturro
    • Frankie Carbo
    Ellen Barkin
    Ellen Barkin
    • Stephanie Arcel
    Jurnee Smollett
    Jurnee Smollett
    • Juanita Leonard
    • (as Jurnee Smollett-Bell)
    Yancey Arias
    Yancey Arias
    • Benny Huertas
    Drena De Niro
    Drena De Niro
    • Adele
    Ilza Ponko
    Ilza Ponko
    • Clara Samaniego
    • (as Ilza Rosario)
    Anthony Molinari
    Anthony Molinari
    • Marine Molinari
    Rick Avery
    Rick Avery
    • Gil Clancey
    Robb Skyler
    Robb Skyler
    • Howard Cosell
    Joe Urla
    • Angelo Dundee
    Eliud Garcia
    Eliud Garcia
    • Margarito Duran
    • (as Eliud Kauffman)
    • Director
      • Jonathan Jakubowicz
    • Writer
      • Jonathan Jakubowicz
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews60

    6.618.5K
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    Featured reviews

    8sinnerofcinema

    A visit in time through boxing

    Hands of Stone is a pleasant surprise for those willing to regress in time to experience the heights of boxing. Way before internet, there was a time and a place when events like boxing happened, specially when Roberto Duran fought, Panama would come to a stand still. Everyone was tuned into their television for the occasion. When he won, you would hear the country erupt in glee of victory with people sounding their pots & pans. The film showcases those days in an adequate manner. Yes there is the usual clichés happening, but the film's energy transcends those usual predictable story plot point to keep you engage enough to care for the characters. The time capsule through the production design and soundtrack made this film a delight to watch. There is a vast array of subliminal messages from the director, Well come to think of it, its not so subliminal as you see in the ring corners advertising to "Invest in Venezuela". Im sure this obvious product placement was a plea by the director and/or the Venezuelan team working on the film for the audience to take notice of the current situation Venezuelans are living. This strategy has been duly noted. The international cast serves the film well and brings the essence of Duran journey to life. Ruben Blades vintage soundtracks adds an unequal energy to the scenes boosting the film above your usual boxing flick. Hands of Stone is better served watching it on the big screen to truly appreciate the scope of the film.
    9socrates99

    Though I was one of those US soldiers in Panama who Duran hated, I still love this film

    The sad thing is, this is a movie that every American should see and understand, but that that is almost impossible, there's just too much disinformation standing between us and the truth.

    This is not a big film but that Robert De Niro was willing to lend his considerable talents to it speaks volumes about its worth. The story is a true one more than difficult to find in news reports at the time and so all the more jarring when told with the passionate clarity that it gets here.

    I admit I have a very personal point of view about this movie. I was stationed in Panama when Duran was fighting. I wish I could have seen him fight, but the closest I came was being outside a stadium and being stunned at the uproar coming from it. I asked someone what was going on and they said Roberto Duran was fighting. Roberto was more than just a fighter to Panamanians, he was their hero. The Chorrillo district he grew up in was mostly slum. To come up from such poverty seems more than heroic to anyone familiar with the area, it's downright miraculous.

    As Ray Arcel, his trainer, said, Roberto had some of the best instincts he'd ever seen. He was a natural fighter. His weakness was he was also a man prone to excess and excessive pride and the film does not shrink from those flaws. But to its credit it also doesn't shrink from putting the US in a less than admirable light.

    There's more that isn't mentioned in this film, such as the highly suspicious way General Torrijos, president of Panama, died, or the extensive prostitution our military base promotes which Roberto would have witnessed. Still this movie is a vast improvement over the usual way Hollywood portrays Central America.

    The acting is excellent throughout though I especially enjoyed Ana de Armas' portrayal of Roberto's wife, Felicidad, for the memories it gave me.
    8gradyharp

    'No mas'

    Writer/director Jonathan Jakubowicz has captured the true story of Panamanian boxer Roberto Durán and has been able to turn this rags to riches to dissipation and back story into far more than just a boxing story. This is a film that focuses on the interpersonal and professional relationship between a fighter and his trainer and it works well.

    The story is a rise, fall and rise again story of legendary Panamanian boxer Roberto Durán (Edgar Ramírez) who climbed into notoriety in 1968 as a 16 year old in his first controversial appearance at Madison Square Gardens. In June 1980, he defeated Sugar Ray Leonard (Usher Raymond) to capture the WBC welterweight title but shocked the boxing world by returning to his corner in the November rematch, saying 'no mas' (no more): he was retiring from boxing. By the time of his actual retirement in 2002 at the age of 50, he had 199 fights under his belt with 103 wins and four titles as a lightweight, welterweight, light middleweight and middleweight. The film however focuses on his relationship with legendary boxing trainer Ray Arcel (Robert De Niro) whose own exploits in the boxing world made him the first trainer to be inducted into the Boxing Hall of Fame.

    The cast is splendid – and in addition to Ramirez, Raymond, and De Niro there are fine supporting roles by Ana de Armas as Roberto's wife, Rubén Blades as Carlos Eleta, John Turturro as Frankie Carbo, Pedro Perez as Plomo, and Ellen Barkin as De Niro's wife, and Reg E. Cathey as Don King.

    For boxing fans and for those who respect the history of sports this film is a must. But beyond the boxing and historical aspects, the interacting between Ramírez and De Niro is richly rewarding and Oscar worthy performances. Grady Harp, December 16
    7bkrauser-81-311064

    It Borrows From the Best

    Hands of Stone is a rise, fall and rise again story of famed Panamanian boxer Roberto Duran (Ramirez) who leapt into notoriety in the 70's after his first controversial appearance at Madison Square Gardens. By the time of his retirement in 2002 at the age of 50, he had 199 fights under his belt with 103 wins and four titles as a light weight, welter weight, light middle weight and middle weight. The film however focuses on his relationship with legendary boxing trainer Ray Arcel (De Niro) whose own exploits in the boxing world made him the first trainer to be inducted into the Boxing Hall of Fame.

    Doing a movie of this nature, a couple of questions arise. How do you accurately and intimately make a film about the life and times of Roberto Duran who in addition to being a legend was also a legendary pre-fight s**t talker? How can one best encapsulate the real life of a man who at one point was the guiding light of an entire nation yet had enough of an ego to name all of his male heirs Roberto? Finally, how do you do make that movie great while siphoning off of cues and themes from inspirations like Rocky (1976) and Raging Bull (1980)?

    The answer is of course you can't; but you can make a half-way decent film out of everything. And that's basically what director Jonathan Jakubowicz and Bob and Harvey Weinstein have done. It plods its course, steadily paces itself, jab at the appropriate emotional moments and ducks from the energy-sucking minutia that episodic plot-lines tend to have in abundance. Robert De Niro is fine as Ray Arcel giving a spry, worthwhile performance in the same ballpark as Billy Sunday in Men of Honor (2000). Likewise Edgar Ramirez hits all the right notes as our beleaguered hero giving the screenplay a much better performance than it honestly deserves. Ana de Armas, Usher Raymond, Ruben Blades, Oscar Jaenada and Ellen Barkin are all very good with Reg E. Cathey giving a very small but showstopping performance as infamous boxing promoter Don King. Heck even the balance of languages (English and Spanish) is respectfully and organically done. If a great film is three great scenes and no bad ones, then Hands of Stone is 50% of the way there.

    Yet much like the underrated Southpaw (2015), it also has no pivotal, never forget scenes or iconic lines. The brightly colored barrios of Panama City and the glitzy sparkle of Las Vegas, not to mention the atmospherics of locker rooms inexplicably filled with smoke, don't really leave an impact. Neither do the stakes of Duran's life which, much like Billy Hope's, was and probably still is filled with conflict, inner-turmoil and a pride that manifests in nationalistic fervor. It's a shame too because if the film decided to explore that aspect of Duran's life, i.e. his relationship to Panama and its people, it could have been unique enough to recommend strongly.

    Yet instead, the film doubles down on the "success is ruination" themes picked up by Raging Bull, while kneading out the supposed nobility of a sport in which two grown men beat the crap out of each other. Yet while watching Hands of Stone, I kept hoping they would change up the kinetic, fast-paced editing of the fight sequences with moments that were, say a little more poetic. For those of you who know what I'm insinuating, congratulations you've seen a "great" scene from a "great" movie about boxing.

    The best that can be said about Hands of Stone is it does what it does predictably and well, like a cover band that's been around for years. It's energetic, it's fun to watch, it certainly has talented people who put their heart and soul into the project and it plays all the hits...yet it's not the real thing. Oh well, a tin star still shines, a discount belt still buckles and Hands of Stone is still good. Watch it if you must, otherwise watch Rocky again instead.
    GoneWithTheTwins_com

    A history lesson disguised as a boxing movie.

    In 1971, Roberto Duran (Edgar Ramirez) fights at Madison Square Garden - an incredible accomplishment at a notable venue, considering Duran's humble origins. The eventual lightweight champion's story is narrated by his legendary trainer, Ray Arcel (Robert De Niro), a man who helped thousands of boxers master the sport, and who now must teach the kid strategy and discipline to become a true winner. And taking into account De Niro's own expertise with boxing movies, it's difficult not to trust everything he says about the up-and-comer. But despite star power, a respectable budget, and suitable performances, the film is an utter failure when it comes to visual style, technical execution, and storytelling.

    The first problem is the narrative, which alternates between the past and the present, hoping to shed some light on the traumatic events that shaped each player. But it goes too far, wasting time on Arcel's personal drama (including estrangement from a daughter) while also focusing pointlessly on the supporting characters that interact with him. This should be Duran's story, but quite routinely, it pays unnecessary attention to Arcel, promoter Carlos Eleta (Ruben Blades), wiseguy Frankie Carbo (John Turturro), childhood pal Chaflan (Oscar Jaenada), and even the primary opponent, Sugar Ray Leonard (Usher Raymond). This is especially detrimental when Duran inevitably falls from grace; it allows the audience to lose interest in - and concern for - the antihero at the heart of it all, since there are so many other characters to follow. Even Roberto's wife Felicidad (Ana de Armas) is more sympathetic and believable (she's also featured in the only amusing scene, involving pleasurable intercourse that shifts into torturous childbirth).

    All of the cutting back and forth in the timeline is dreadfully commonplace - as well as irritating - lending to the feeling that this biographical yarn is so familiar and clichéd that twisting up its chronology must surely confuse audiences into thinking that it's modern and fresh. This leads into the second problem: "Hands of Stone" quickly becomes a history lesson disguised as a boxing movie.The 1964 Panama Canal Zone rioting was a significant, potent piece of a longstanding territorial conflict, but it just doesn't fit seamlessly into a film about Duran's rise and fall in the ring. The idea of fighting his whole life becomes comically downplayed when he's shown to literally begin streetfighting as a preteen on the poverty-ridden streets of El Chorrillo, before receiving more formal training by a coach at a local gym. And then there's time for a love story, which follows the typical course of recklessness with wealth and eventually drunken abuse.

    It's not enough to be an inspirational sports drama anymore - and definitely not when it comes to boxing, which has seen a tremendous quantity of theatrical efforts in the last few years alone. Just like Duran's immoral choices when it comes to psychological warfare and his motives for controversially (and famously) stopping his rematch against Leonard (depicted here to involve unscrupulous actions by a greedy agent and a mental defeat rather than overconfident slacking), "Hands of Stone" seems to have been made for all the wrong reasons. At times it's a bit of patriotic propaganda for Panama (it regularly resembles advertising or promotion instead of entertainment); at others it's an account of a detestable athlete, incapable of handling riches and celebrity - and certainly written poorly enough that he's irredeemable as a hero (a penultimate redemption bout is portrayed to be painfully trivial). Audiences are also supposed to believe (inconceivably) that this hotheaded brute used superior intelligence to distract his nemesis, rather than merely spitting out insults in the heat of the moment.

    In its hastiness to chronicle the singular Panamanian star, the film also can't be bothered with acceptable editing and structuring techniques; fades, cuts, fight choreography, and transitions betray severely amateurish efforts. Sequences are included out of expectation, not creativity; training montages, the segueing of rounds, and even sex/nudity appear because the filmmakers think these moments are anticipated - or required. For viewers unaware of the 1980 "Brawl in Montreal" and the rematch that followed later in the same year, "Hands of Stone" at least presents an unexpected (though not entirely satisfying) third option to that age-old dilemma of any pugilist showdown: the protagonist can only win or lose, and both choices have been previously, repeatedly committed to celluloid.

    • The Massie Twins (GoneWithTheTwins.com)

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    Related interests

    Sylvester Stallone and Carl Weathers in Rocky (1976)
    Boxing
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    Biography
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    Drama
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    Sport

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Robert De Niro met the real Ray Arcel around the time he appeared in Raging Bull (1980).
    • Goofs
      Some of the cars in the film are wrong for the period. For example, when Roberto first meets Felicidad it is supposed to be in 1971 but they walk past a green Chevy Malibu model that was not built until 1973. Also, set in 1971, Roberto is leaning back trying to look cool for Felicidad and there is a Ford Granada parked on the street. The Ford Granada was not built until 1975.
    • Quotes

      Ray Arcel: Please, you make it sound like I've been with some woman or something.

      Stephanie Arcel: I would rather you were with some woman.

      Ray Arcel: Don't always be a district attorney. I was seeing an old friend.

      Stephanie Arcel: You know, it's fine. I'm blonde. I look great in black. I will be a very hot widow.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon: Robert De Niro/Jordan Spieth/Martin Garrix and Bebe Rexha (2016)
    • Soundtracks
      Champions
      Performed by Usher (as Usher Raymond IV) & Rubén Blades

      Written by Raphael Saadiq,Taura Stinson, Usher IV and Rubén Blades

      Usher /Usher appears courtesy of RCA RECORDS

      © 2015 Sony Classical

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 26, 2016 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Panama
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official Facebook
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Bàn Tay Đá
    • Filming locations
      • Panama
    • Production companies
      • Fuego Films
      • Epicentral Studios
      • La Piedra Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $20,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $4,712,792
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $1,751,388
      • Aug 28, 2016
    • Gross worldwide
      • $4,978,353
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 51m(111 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Atmos
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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