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Film About Truth Demands Authenticity
When everyone involved with bringing Resurrecting the Champ
to the big screen read the soul-searching truth that ran through
every word in J.R. Moehringer’s article, it became the
utmost of priorities to make the film as genuinely true to
the spirit of the article as possible. To that end, Lurie wanted
to capture the powerful authenticity of the newsroom in All
the Presidents Men, so instead of constructing a set of a newsroom,
he shot in a real one.
For
logistical and financial reasons, Lurie chose to film in
Calgary. The story was set in Denver though because the look
of the city was a better match. It also made it possible
to shoot later key exteriors in Denver itself so that when
audiences see the Bronco’s training ground and John Elway’s
restaurant (where he makes a cameo appearance), they are looking
at the real thing.
The
newsroom scenes were also authentic, shot over six days right
in the middle of the Calgary Herald. “I wanted
to show the actual hustle and bustle that goes on in such a
place,” says Lurie. “We didn’t even ask people
to stop working while we filmed and some of the real staffers
actually found themselves in the movie.” Similarly, the
production filmed at a real homeless shelter called The Mustard
Seed and wound up hiring approximately forty of the shelter’s
residents and guests to be extras. “The caring individuals
at The Mustard Seed opened their arms to us as they do to everyone,” remembers
Lurie. “We wanted to make them part of something special
and special is what they gave us in return.”
The
boxing flashbacks were filmed at the Corral Arena at the
Calgary Stampede Grounds and at a local ranch. Eric Bryson,
the film’s boxing choreographer and stunt coordinator,
was one of Lennox Lewis’ former sparring partners, and
he was dedicated to recreating the boxing style of the fifties.
He also wanted to bring a sense of continuity to the fighting
styles of the older Champ, portrayed by Samuel L. Jackson,
and the young Champ, portrayed by Troy Amos-Ross, a real-life
Olympian boxer and Canadian Cruiserweight Champion.
“Troy’s eyes conveyed all the hopes and dreams
of the young Champ, and I was delighted to find that he could
act as well,” recalls Bryson, who also choreographed
the stunts in the sci-fi action thrillers The Day After Tomorrow
and Rollerball. “I was also very impressed by Sam Jackson’s
extraordinary ability to reproduce Troy’s style and memorize
a fight sequence after watching it for only a few minutes.
It turns out that Jackson had boxed as a young man and had
competed in a few fights when he was nineteen, so he was able
to draw on that experience and bring a greater sense of authenticity
to his movements.”
Bryson
added that Lurie was literally hands on with his support. “Rod
came down to the club and actually put the gloves on himself,” remembers
Bryson. “He got right into the ring and he honestly surprised
me. He showed exactly what movements he needed from the fighters
and so they were able to give him what he wanted.”
In
addition to working with Troy and Jackson, Bryson succeeded
in finding excellent boxers who actually looked like the
fighters they were supposed to play in the film. “Richard Reittie,
a member of a Canadian boxing team, truly looks like heavyweight
champion Ezzard Charles, who knocked out Satterfield in two
rounds in 1954, and Amateur Canadian Light Heavyweight Champion,
Glenn Hunter, not only looks like a young Rocky Marciano, he
punches like him,” says Bryson. “Every fighter
who appears in the film rehearsed at a local Calgary gym and
studied original footage of fights from the era. In the end,
they poured their hearts into the movie, and I think it turned
out to be a beautiful story.”
Bryson’s meticulous work on the film as well as the
stunning cinematography of Adam Kane (Heroes; The West Wing)
made the film a wonderful visual experience, and the magnificent
performances of the cast filled the movie with emotion. “Each
boxing scene was choreographed and filmed perfectly. Audiences
are really going to feel like they are ringside at a 1950s
boxing match,” says Lurie. “The cast, the crew
and everyone involved in Resurrecting the Champ really went
to the mat for this film and we can all be very proud of it.”
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Extented
Summary
Living on the streets of Denver, pushing a shopping cart
piled high with all his worldly possessions, the man everyone
calls “The Champ” (Samuel
L. Jackson) knows he was not the greatest boxer to ever step in the ring, but
at least he had a shot at it. |