Facing Ali

2009
7.9| 1h40m| R| en| More Info
Released: 29 May 2009 Released
Producted By: Network Entertainment
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Ten of Muhammad Ali's former rivals pay tribute to the three-time world heavyweight champion.

Genre

Documentary

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Director

Pete McCormack

Production Companies

Network Entertainment

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Facing Ali Audience Reviews

Linkshoch Wonderful Movie
GamerTab That was an excellent one.
Ella-May O'Brien Each character in this movie — down to the smallest one — is an individual rather than a type, prone to spontaneous changes of mood and sometimes amusing outbursts of pettiness or ill humor.
Fleur Actress is magnificent and exudes a hypnotic screen presence in this affecting drama.
joe-seidman The movie set out to tell the story of Mohammed Ali through the eyes of 10 of his more noteworthy opponents and did a commendable job at that. Ali's story is well documented, however, and there's not much info we don't already know from a historical perspective. The unexpected (and perhaps unintended) beauty of this movie is in the honesty, humor, wisdom, sadness and humility of the 10 boxers who tell the story. Particularly compelling parts include: George Chuvalo discussing what it was like to lose 2 sons to drug ODs and a wife so distraught over it that she committed suicide; Joe Frazier finally breaking down and being moved to tears over Ali's current condition; Ernie Shaver's outright admiration for Ali and confessing that Ali truly did win their fight (he originally claimed he was robbed); Ken Norton's personal revelations about being down and out before the fight and the new lease on life his fight w/Ali gave him; and Ron Lyle's sage wisdom on not letting what many claimed to be a BS stoppage that denied him the HW title make him bitter and instead embracing the celebrity and opportunity his fight w/Ali provided him for the rest of his life. These are just a few but there are many more. I found myself compelled by the stories these 10 great fighters told (except for Ernie Terrell)and the movie left me with a new found respect and admiration for all of them. Even my wife, who is no kind of sports fan, absolutely loved it.I can't imagine any boxing fan who sees this film not putting it at or near the tippy top of their favorite boxing movie list
poe426 Watching mixed martial artist Georges St. Pierre hammer out a one-sided win over wrestler Josh Koscheck the other night reminded me just how much I love the sport of boxing. I grew up during what I call The Golden Age of Boxing- the Ali Era(s)- and he was a hero of mine; still is, for reasons that have nothing to do with boxing- but it was his unrivaled ring career that captivated me as a kid. He was poetry in perpetual motion- passive aggression personified, if you will- and he singlehandedly cleaned out the heavyweight division during his career (during two of his three tenures as champ), and this documentary points up that fact: the men who talk about him here were all top-ten contenders, and he faced and beat them all. Their leather-worn faces are a road map of Ali's career and if George Foreman was the Einstein of Punching, then certainly Ali was the Einstein of BOXING. If I have one gripe about this documentary, it's the sparsity of the fight footage: to this day, it's nigh impossible to lay hands on copies of the fights mentioned. One can find almost ANY mixed martial arts bout on DVD; not so most of the greatest fistfights of all time.
lastliberal It was 1964, I was 14 years old. It seems so long ago - well, it was. I was in the seminary in Subiaco Arkansas listening one night to Cassius Clay and Sonny Liston. It started a love of boxing that lasted a very long time.This film was a blend of talking and boxing. It kept you glued to the screen so you wouldn't miss a word or a moment of action.It was a well balanced film; giving the good and the bad. You gained a real insight into Muhammad Ali, and into those who fought him. A fight with Ali was literally a lifesaver for Ken Norton, who was broke.An excellent documentary about a great man.
jimbob12404 I wasn't sure what to expect with this film. I had not heard anything about it and when I was able to get a copy I figured it would be a puff piece, but it is much much more than that. Interviews with several opponents of Muhammad Ali reveal a lot about both the interviewees themselves, and their lives, and their almost unanimous love for Ali. Footage of each fighter's bouts with Ali is plentiful and exciting, and watching it will make you cry when you realize how much he has lost over the years. Something else that will make you cry is what one of his greatest opponents--I won't say who it is---cries openly for Ali and calls him "a great guy...and I hope he gets to live the way we all live...he's earned it." This film just knocked "Tyson" out of the top spot in my best sports documentaries of the year list.