The Set-Up (1949,
Robert Wise)
If there is ever one type of sports film people never seem
to tire of, it is undoubtedly the boxing-themed picture. Hockey is not really
part of the equation, basketball a bit more so, and baseball has had its heyday
of great films but few of have emerged over the past while. American football
is has also been the basis of a fair amount of solid movies, but it is boxing
which, for many reasons, is ripe for cinematic drama. One need only look back
approximately one year ago when The
Fighter was released and recollect its gargantuan popularity. Good,
dramatic cinema should about interesting characters, their story arcs and how
they culminate with a memorable, gut wrenching climax. In the case of boxing,
the gut wrench might even be literal. If one is to take those notions and
thrust them into a sports related story, what better athletic profession than
that of boxing? Man versus man, emotional and physical well being put to the
test with each successive round, and of course the crowds who, with vested interests
sometimes, gather around to witness two fine specimens whack the silly putty
out of each other.
We go back to 1949 for this particular boxing-themed film. Bill
‘Stoker’ Thompson, played by one of the best actors of the time, Robert Ryan,
is a mid-thirties boxer whose best days are clearly long behind him. At his
age, one should be mindful of eventual retirement, making plans for what is to
follow. Still, Stoker sticks around on the boxing circuit, hopeful that one of
these days he will in fact land a good punch on someone in a tilt and earn some
more respectable income, with more high profile matches to follow. His wife,
Julie (Audrey Totter), is far less certain of that potentiality. She is a good
and caring wife, hence her willingness to stick around with Stoker, although he
patience is wearing thin. Poor faith in our hero ‘s talents becomes all the
more evident when his manager, Tiny
(George Tobias), actually bets against his own fighter in cahoots with that
evening’s opposing manager and a feared gangster named Little Boy (Alan
Baxter). Tiny’s greed gets the better of
him as he wilfully chooses not to mention the set-up to Stoker, so confident is
he that the up and coming Tiger Nelson (Hal Baylor) will land his man the
knockout, allowing Tiny to keep his profits to himself. However, as Tiny’s
assistant warns, one should be mindful about the odds because, no matter what
the numbers are, there is always the ‘1.’
To say that the film’s strengths totally surround the
casting and performance of star Robert Ryan would be unfair to the hard work
put in by everybody else involved in the creation of the picture, yet also
quite difficult to avoid. Please allow this blogger to indulge in hyperbole, if
only this one time. After watching On
Dangerous Ground, The Racket and The Wild Bunch earlier this year, the actor’s
sheer strength had become quite evident. The word ‘strength’ is used to a
near-literal degree, with the characters he portrayed in all three of those
films being men of action, who spent little time thinking about how to go about
what they were after and simply ‘behaved’, frequently employing brute force. Robert
Ryan was not merely a good actor, but a powerful one. Equipped with a booming
voice and sense of dangerous bravado, he was to be reckoned with. What a
difference a film can make. In The Set-Up,
he does not necessarily someone who is smarter than those portrayed in the
aforementioned trio of movies, but someone who is far more down to earth,
decent and downright likeable. He is a boxer, dare we say a run down and beaten
up boxer, who stubbornly holds on to a prayer’s hope that he can still make it
(there’s that slightly ‘stupid’ factor again), but we know, right from the
first few moments he appears on screen, that he is an alright bloke. His general
demeanour, the love he has for his wife, his attitude towards his fellow boxers
in the locker room and, when it matters most (in more ways than just one), his
determination to prove that he still has something left in him to pull out a
victory against all foreseeable odds. Naturally the script plays a role in
making Stoker an enjoyable figure, one that deserves some empathy from the
audience, but it is Ryan that takes the material, and with those wry smiles,
that glint in his eye, creates the character to make it his own. To see Robert
Ryan play such a diametrically opposed character to much of the other famous
work he has done is a real treat further solidifies his status, in this
reviewer’s opinion, as one of Hollywood’s great, if too infrequently mentioned,
male actors.
In conjunction with the performance put on by Ryan and the
personality of Bill ‘Stoker’ Thompson is the sharp direction and script. Robert
Wise, famous for such films as The
Haunting and The Andromeda Strain
among many, many others, is the sort of director who plays things according to
the story and the details of the characters. The previous film in the marathon,
Gun Crazy, was a fine example of
exquisite photography and editing bringing characters and themes to full front
of the picture. Wise is a different director in The Set-Up, working in a much different manner, but no less
efficient. This film has very little flash, very few visual moments which call
attention to themselves. Nevertheless, the attention paid to the details of the
characters give the film a life of its own. One of the movie’s nicest moments
is when Stoker, already nervous about whether or not his wife Julie will decide
to attend the upcoming tilt or not, keeps peeking outside the locker room
window across the street to their hotel room. Is the lights go off, it must
mean Julie has made her decision and is on her way despite what reservations
she has about her husband’s profession. The lights do go off, producing a much
welcome sign of relief and satisfaction on Stoker’s face, although only a few
moments later, without his knowledge since he is still in the locker readying
up for his fight, Julie walks away from the arena, having convinced herself at
last that she does not, after all, want to see Stoker get smashed to bits once
again. It is a wonderful little sequence which serves not only to help build
the two central characters of Stoker and Julie, but give some emotional depth
to the story. Robert Wise is quite good at this sort of direction, paying
respect to what the story wants and where the characters should be heading,
emotionally speaking. It is not the sort
of direction that cries out for attention, but it works very well.
This tribute to detail helps contribute to creating a mythos
of sorts for Stoker. At first, all we know is that he is a boxer too old to be
still hanging around in the ring, so says his wife. Upon arrival at the arena,
people recognize him and even greet him cheerfully. Clearly, this man still
owns some piece of respect in the world. Then, in the locker room, the viewer meets
a series of fellow boxers who each mirror Stoker in some way. There is the
first timer whose nerves almost get the better of him (Stoker admits to feeling
the same some 20 years prior), the near delusional fighter who keeps repeating
some statistic about a former boxer who was knocked out 21times before becoming
champion (Stoker, as a boxer, as seen better days, frequently getting knocked
out) and the current main even fighter, who predicts that just one good punch
can give him victory (something Stoker tells his wife earlier that same
evening). The detail also to the crowd in attendance, whose thirst for violence
cares not so much for who wins, but for how much punching they get see two men
deliver to one another. It is actually quite impressive the number of unique
little characters in the crowd the film creates. It adds a lot to the world
this story takes place in. At the center of it all is the overarching plot,
which sees forces beyond Stoker’s control converge against him just as he has a
real sense that, for once, the tide will turn in his favour.
What we witness is a man facing his ultimate destiny in what
may be his final fight ever regardless of the outcome. Place your bets, people.
2 comments:
If your looking for this they have this on dvd
http://www.classicmoviesandtvcom.com/product/casino-royale-dvd-tv-climax-mystery-theater-peter-lorre-1954
The DVD is here
http://www.classicmoviesandtvcom.com/product/casino-royale-dvd-tv-climax-mystery-theater-peter-lorre-1954
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