Discover
-
John Battsek
Executive Producer -
Simon Chinn
Executive Producer -
Roberto Cappannelli
Sound Re-Recording Mixer -
Mark 'Reg' Wrench
Editor -
Clare Lewins
Writer -
Stuart Luck
Director of Photography -
George Chignell
Producer -
Helen Bennitt
Executive Producer
-
Peter McGinn
10/1/2021 6:19:53AM
There are segments in this all access biopic that do indeed try to show sides of this most famous of celebrities we may not have seen before. The tapes he recorded with his children, interviews with his longtime inner circle. And it is understandable that it comes off ultimately seeming like a production from the Public Relations arm of Muhammad Ali Inc. at worst it comes off as one more forum to reflect that he was the greatest boxer, most famous celebrity, world’s best father, friend, social activist, and so on. Greatest boxer and most famous person, yeah, could be. The rest, not so much. What stood out in stark contrast to me to the 1 hour and 45 minutes of various forms of praise and good deeds, were the very few minutes showing him apologizing and regretting calling Joe Frazier a gorilla, Uncle Tom, and so on. This was Frazier, who helped Ali early on, both financially and with his efforts to regain his boxing license. Yes, it is nice that he apologized much later, but for most of us, we would have known not to say those things at all merely to build interest in a fight or get inside your opponent’s heads. Not saying those things about a friend and colleague would have been as natural as, say, a great boxer flicking out a left jab.
Muhammad Ali
Self (archive footage)Tom Jones
SelfMike Tyson
SelfJim Brown
SelfGeorge Foreman
SelfMarvis Frazier
SelfMuhammad Ali Jnr
SelfHana Ali
Self