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9 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Early portents of Kubrick's later trademarks, 5 September 2001
Author:
Geofbob from London, England
Stanley Kubrick was never one for realistic films about ordinary people; the
nearest he came to a straightforward drama was probably the heist movie, The
Killing. This shying away from realism seems to show itself in his very
first film, this short documentary about the boxer, Walter Cartier,
preparing for and engaging in a fight. Any boxer is a special person, but
some directors might have portrayed Cartier as a regular guy with a
particular skill; but from the start Kubrick stresses Cartier's unusualness
by showing waking up beside, and going around town with, his identical twin
brother, giving a surreal aspect to the film.
The way Cartier psychs himself up for the fight in his dressing room,
turning himself into a fighting machine, also seems to fit in with Kubrick's
later interest in making films about people under stress (eg Full Metal
Jacket) or in an abnormal state (eg The Shining and Clockwork Orange). It is
also intriguing to wonder whether the director's fondness for voiceover
narrative in his feature films stems from this and his other early
documentaries. Oh, by the way, it's quite a good documentary about a fighter
who, in fact, never became champ, and went into TV and films.
4 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Kubrick's humble debut..., 2 June 2007
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Author:
José Luis Rivera Mendoza (jluis1984) from Mexico
In 1950, legendary director Stanley Kubrick was a young photographer
who was beginning to be fascinated by the many films he discovered in
his visits to the screenings done by the Museum of Modern Art and other
cinemas of New York. The discovery of such a wide range of different
films made a big impact on the talented "Look" magazine photographer,
who began to experiment with the medium, heavily influenced by the
fluid movement that was the trademark of director Max Ophüls' work. It
was that very same year when Kubrick would have his first chance to
make a movie, as his friend Alexander Singer persuaded him to make a
short documentary that he could sell to a distributor of cinema
newsreels. Kubrick accepted the proposal, and inspired by an article he
had done for "Look", he began working on his first movie. That early
film would be "Day of the Fight".
"Day of the Fight" is a short documentary that chronicles a day in the
life of Irish middleweight boxer Walter Cartier, a very promising
fighter who is about to face an important contender, Bobby James, on
that very same day. However, before focusing on Cartier, the movie
makes a short yet informative description of boxing, its history, and
its fanatics; everything with the precise and direct narration by
veteran newsman Douglas Edwards. After that brief introduction, the
movie follows Cartier from early in the morning until the fight, which
takes place at 10:00 pm. Through the day, we follow Walter Cartier and
his identical twin brother Vincent (who is also a lawyer and Walter's
manager) in their preparation for the fight, starting with a good
breakfast and early mass, and the subsequent mental and physical
preparation that Walter makes in order to become a fighting machine.
While the idea of the film was entirely Kubrick's, the screenplay for
the narration was entirely the work of Robert Rein, who follows the
typical style of narrative that had been prevalent during the 40s
weekly newsreels of "The March of Time", as in fact, that company was
the originally planned buyer of "Day of Fight. However, since the
company went out of business that very same year, the movie was then
sold to RKO Pictures, who under the RKO-Pathé brand, became the movie's
distributor. Anyways, as written above, Rein's script follows the
classic conventions of the newsreels of its time, mixing the
educational purposes of the documentary with a heavy use of
melodramatics in the voice-over's narrative. However, credit must go to
Rein for making a very realistic, albeit sentimentalist, description of
the boxers' life.
If the voice-over of "Day of the Fight" sounds archaic and outdated to
us these days, Kubrick's direction of the film looks the opposite as
while still limited to its medium's restriction, the young director
managed to create a vibrant film thanks to his very fluid and dynamic
use of camera-work. While the movie is still a documentary bounded by
its obligatory narration, Kubrick uses his camera to create a character
out of the real persona of Walter Cartier, and while the boxer has no
lines in the movie, a lot of him can be known thanks to the images
Kubrick's camera has captured of him. As the moment of the fight gets
closer, Kubrick accelerates the pace, truly increasing the tension and
giving the story a real feeling of suspense as the fight begins. The
images from the fight are remarkably edited and the result is one of
the best scenes of a sports documentary.
While the screenplay is definitely typical of newsreels, Douglas
Edwards' narration gives it a slightly different edge, as he manages to
put the perfect emotion on what he is saying. No doubt thanks to his
many years as a sports newsman, Edwards gives his words an impact and
presence that makes the movie real, as if one was there with Cartier
training for the big day. True, it's still an outdated style of
narration, but Edwards' style makes it enjoyable. The rest of the
people who appears on film has no lines, while we follow the Cartier
brothers in their day, everything is narrated by Edwards and there is
no interview with the contenders. However, it's safe to say that in
this movie Walter projects a lot of presence and so it's not a surprise
that after his career as a boxer he had decided to become an actor
(landing a small, yet memorable role in "The Phil Silvers Show").
Considering the magnitude and importance of Stanley Kubrick's career,
it's very easy to dismiss this movie as part of his career; however,
unlike his second work ("The Flying Padre"), there are many things in
this movie that makes it interesting and showcase early bits of what
would become the Kubrick's style. Sure, it has every flaw a newsreel
could have (including the typical use of staged scenes), but it also
feels different, as Kubrick's eye for photography gave it a new look
(Certainly, Gerald Fried's music also helped on this). A short newsreel
like "Day of the Fight" may not be the most impressive debut for a
legendary filmmaker, but in all its humility, this little short
represents the beginning of a Master's career, and that's enough reason
to give it a chance. Kubrick fans, this is a must. 7/10
4 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Kubrick's first (and very rarely seen) movie is a portent of his later films and success., 27 April 2000
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Author:
Marc-David Jacobs from Portland, Oregon, United States
"This is a fight fan. Fan: short for fanatic" (first lines).
While Stanley Kubrick was working for Look Magazine back in the late '40s
and early '50s, he came across a photo shoot of a boxing match involving a
Walter Cartier. The article, entitled "Prizefighter," was published
January
18th, 1949. A year later, Kubrick contacted Cartier, asking him if he
would
like to be in a short documentary for the declining RKO-Pathé. Cartier
agreed, and Kubrick began, in 1950, with what would become his first film
ever.
The story itself is told in three parts (much like the later Full Metal
Jacket [1987]), which take up about 5 minutes apiece. The dialogue,
spoken
by veteran newsman Douglas Edwards, is very noir (example: "It's a living.
For some, not much of a living.") The first part regards boxing and the
fan. It portrays the walks of life boxing comes from. It ends when Natt
Fleischer, a boxing historian, is shown looking through a book of boxing
statistics. Kubrick's photojournalistic upbringing is showcased here; the
framing of the book is done in a nice, storytelling style. Kubrick
obviously knows what he's doing here. We then spotlight one particular
boxer in this book: Walter Cartier. The second and third parts are
dedicated to a single day in his life: the day of a middleweight fight
(April 17th, 1950). The second part is his life leading up to the fight
(from 6:00 A.M. to the arrival at the arena at 8:00 P.M.) It's a nice
sequencing of events, beginning with a shot of a program attached to a
pole
advertising the fight (a shot we will see again in Killer's Kiss [1955])
and
then showing Walter himself. It shows him waking up, going to communion
("in case something should go wrong tonight,") eating breakfast,
undergoing
his health examination, playing with his dog. As the fight draws near, we
see the "long last look in the mirror" as Walter examines his face. The
sequence will be perfectly transcribed to Killer's Kiss (1955) in a few
years. The third part (from 8:00 P.M. to the fight at 10:00 P.M.), begins
when Walter arrives at Laurel Gardens. The main focus is on the "big
wait."
We see the transformation Walter undergoes from normal man to fighting
machine. We see his opponent, Bobby James, for a few seconds. When
Walter
finally goes to the ring, we reach the real action of the short. The
fight
(which is less than a round and was shot live) is brutal, and seems to be
echoed repeatedly in Scorsese's Raging Bull (1980). If you look closely
during the fight, you can see men standing at ringside with cameras.
These
are most likely Kubrick and assistant director Alexander Singer (who was
later assistant producer for The Killing [1956]). As the fight reaches
the
KO, the camera focuses on crowd reaction (one shot is of Singer's fiancée,
for whom Kubrick did wedding photography). When the fight is over, and
all
is said and done, the 16-minute short concludes with "For him, it's the
end
of a working day." Music swells, the end.
Everything that could go well about this film did. The story is
excellently
planned out, the narration is full of emotion and energy, the music is
terrific (Gerald Fried, who met Kubrick through Singer, would go on to do
the music for Kubrick's first four feature films) and Cartier and
entourage
are people with whom one can connect (although none of them, excepting the
ring announcer, has a single line of dialogue). I have seen this film
multiple times, and I plan on seeing it many, many more. I recommend this
film to any fan of boxing, documentaries and expecially hardcore Kubrick
fans (that is, if you can get your hands on it). This films gets a 10 out
of 10.
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Pretty good., 7 May 2009
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Author:
planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
Had Stanley Kubrick never gone on to become a famous director, three of
his early films would never have been packaged together for sale on a
DVD. That's because these films are cheap shorts made by an eager and
unknown director--hardly works of art. They show none of the director's
expert touches--they are just standard short films you might have seen
in the early 1950s.
Of the three films in this package, the only one really worth seeing
for most people is DAY OF THE FIGHT. While it's not a great film (made
with a cheap hand-held camera) and seems rather "square", it does
remind you of his first feature, KILLER'S KISS and it surely provided
an excellent training ground for his craft. In other words, if Kubrick
hadn't done a "throwaway" film like DAY OF THE FIGHT, he wouldn't have
been able to make such a great low-budget film like KILLER'S KISS.
Overall, a film most could skip but perhaps worth seeing for fans of
this director or students who are in film school.
3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
more than anything a student film- but one with enough to look at, 21 March 2006
Author:
MisterWhiplash from United States
It's true, I would not know anything about this short RKO-type
documentary if not for the fact that it was the first time that
iconoclast Stanley Kubrick picked up a camera with rolling film stock
to be screened in theaters. But as a student filmmaker myself, I find
it of the utmost fascination - even when it is in a jittery, ragged
print like the one I obtained on video - to see the early, primitive
works of famous directors (Last Year in Vietnam by Stone, My Best
Friend's Birthday by Tarantino, and Les Mistons by Truffaut are others)
and the foundations of style. Day of the Fight, to be sure, is not
something of incredible note, and it would not be until the Killing
that Kubrick would create a great film. Yet through this film, I was
constantly aware- and pleased- by how this very typical kind of story
was executed.
In a way, it's almost of more worth to watch this film with the sound
off; the narration, while good at getting to know the very basics of
this boxer that's being profiled, it's also a distraction and not very
revelatory. As just a succession of images, however, it works a lot
more. It's the kind of short documentary that is 70% real, and 30%
staged, with Kubrick following the boxer and his brother on the streets
of New York, leading up to the fight that will bring him recognition.
When looking at how Kubrick uses the camera, it seems fairly simple
and, for those looking for all of the Kubrick trademarks,
disappointing. But in just looking at how he uses the camera, how he
gets his subjects in frame, and the importance of composition and the
subtleties of lighting, it's really quite good. And the fight sequence,
filmed by Kubrick and a friend, has some cut-away shots that almost
ring of the future of Scorsese's Raging Bull (though, of course, still
primitive).
Is it more of a curiosity, a film for Kubrick die-hard completists
looking to have all 16 of his works, docs and features, in their
collection? Sure, but it is also one of the better short doc's he made
in his formative years, taking a subject he was already interested in
(he was a photographer for Look magazine with this boxer under profile)
and going a step further. As his sort of film school, this is in terms
of the image even more fascinating than the lackluster 'doodle on the
fridge' film Fear and Desire.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Day of the Fight, 6 June 2010
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Author:
tieman64 from United Kingdom
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
"I saw Barry Lyndon at the Cinerama Dome on a screen so big I just
went, 'Oh, my god!' " Brian De Palma
The early 50s. Stanley Kubrick quits his job at "Look" magazine and,
intent on becoming a film director, directs "Day of the Fight", a short
documentary for RKO Radio Pictures.
The film, shot for almost four thousand dollars, all of which was
gathered by Kubrick (borrowing from friends, relatives and his own
funds), takes an innovative approach to the newsreel format, Kubrick
functioning as director, producer, writer, sound-man and
cinematographer.
Because he had total control, "Day of the Fight" remains the best of
Kubrick's early shorts. Whatever its flaws, it's a gritty, interesting
little flick, demonstrating the kind of naturalism and humanity that
many of his early "Look" photographs exhibited. Like many Kubrick
films, "Day of the Fight" also has a methodical quality, Kubrick's
camera lingering on the daily routines and pre-fight rituals of a young
boxer. The film captures the claustrophobia of 1950s New York, the
impersonality of urban life and the violence of the boxing ring. Some
kinetic sequences recall Kubrick's "Killer's Kiss" and the hand-held
boxing sequences in "Barry Lyndon", but the quieter moments impress as
well, each one imbued with a kind of pre-fight anxiety, every shot
oozing dread, anticipation and nervous energy.
Unfortunately, RKO's "March of Time" newsreel went into liquidation and
RKO was only able to buy "Day of the Fight" for a hundred dollars more
than its production cost, though they liked the short enough to offer
Kubrick fifteen hundred dollars to film a second documentary called
"Flying Padre".
"Flying Padre", Kubrick's follow up short for RKO, is thus purely a
work for hire. You can sense that Kubrick had zero interest in this
story, an insignificant little tale about a Catholic priest in New
Mexico who uses a small plane to tend to his 400 square mile parish.
Kubrick wrote the short's narration and has his small cast re-enact
several moments from the priest's past (he takes a sick child to his
mother, flies to an isolated ranch, gives staged sermons etc), but with
the form and content of the short controlled by the newsreel companies
of the day, there's little room for anything interesting other than a
couple neat camera angles and some good cinematography.
8/10 "Day of the Fight"
5/10 "Flying Padre"
Of interest to Kubrick completists only.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Interesting little short that works thanks to its pacing and shot variety., 29 July 2008
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Author:
johnnyboyz (j_l_h_m@yahoo.co.uk) from Hampshire, England
It's always interesting to go back to the beginning of a director's
career, in this case Stanley Kubrick's, and take a look at his earlier
work. Day of the Fight just happens to be the first film by now
legendary director Kubrick who is widely regarded as one of the best
contemporary directors ever. This film is around about 15-20 minutes
long and revolves around the build up to a boxing match the study of
the build up will revolve around.
Interestingly enough and perhaps the most interesting thing about it is
that it was inspired by a photograph Kubrick himself took for a 1949
edition of a magazine. This could be seen as an early example of
suspense, with constant reference to the boxing match and its
importance made through narrator Douglas Edwards, a good casting for
the serious and deep voice the film required. As a short, it works and
the suspense and build up maintains some sort of interest as the
montage plays out. Kubrick includes all sorts of shots and angles
creating the nice range for the eye, my favourite being the low angle
on the statue of Mary in the church about half way through.
But the focus could well be the fight itself. There is some good camera
work to be had out of the actual match and a low angle between a
boxer's legs would later be used by Kubrick in Killer's Kiss, another
early Kubrick film. I actually would have liked the boxing match's
result to have been the other way around as I feel it would've added a
new dimension to the short, a sort of anti-climatic spin that might've
worked well. But that said, it's worth seeing if for the match itself
and the chance to see where it all started off for the great man.
A surprisingly accomplished debut documentary showing one man skilfully and violently overcoming another..., 10 October 2011
Author:
cgyford from Ankara, Turkey
"Look" magazine photographer and chess-player Stanley Kubrick teamed up
with old school chum Alexander Singer to launch their filmmaking
careers and that of their star with this short but sweet self-financed
boxing documentary, based on the future legendary director's 1949 photo
feature "Prizefighter", which after the original buyer went belly-up
was sold to RKO for a cool $100 profit.
We follow the fan (short for fanatic as no-nonsense narrator Douglas
Edwards informs us) to the places where matched pairs of men get up on
a canvas covered platform and commit legal assault and lawful battery
in an attempt to capture the primitive vicarious visceral thrill of
seeing one animal overcome another with the science of hammering each
other unconscious with upholstered fists.
Irish-American middleweight Walter Cartier is selected at random, with
a little help from boxing historian Nat Fleischer, from the 6,000
professional prize fighters who more often than not fail to scrape a
living in America to give us insight into the people the fan seldom
sees and never considers behind the facts and figures and columns of
cold statistics in the record books.
Walter Cartier makes an amiable enough presence at the centre of the
action to be able to go on to a TV acting career as we see his daily
routine transform him into arena man, with able support coming from his
twin brother and manager Vincent Cartier and opponent Bobby James as
well as a brief appearance from Nat Fleischer and the dulcet tones of
news reader Douglas Edwards.
The filmmakers make a fine pairing as Kubrick ducks and dives with his
hand-held camera getting up close and personal with Cartier both before
and during the fight while Singer rises above it all with his camera on
a tripod to catch an overview of the action which together with the
debut score of another childhood friend Gerald Fried all comes together
to make a strong first impression.
"No one ever told Walter to be a fighter..."
A Docu Drama About Boxing From Boxers Point Of View, 18 January 2008
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Author:
harrsh85 from India
i had this movie for many months in my pc, i am die hard fan of stanley
kubrick and i am always fascinated by him but something really not
interested me to watch this movie mainly because of the bad print i
had, recently my pc got overloaded with lot of storage so i was going
through files so that i can delete and maintain freespace so in that
kind of situation i saw this movie, i was amazed by the way it was made
by that time; that too with that kind of budget, since i want to delete
i watched it again, now i am in dilemma whether to keep it or delete it
because i feel multiple viewings will help me a great deal in my
profession bec i too come from same profession, i think you understand
how good it is.
we can clearly understand that the filmmaker wanted to explore the
details about boxing for which he cleverly used point of view method
bec only the persons involved immersely in something will know the pros
and cons of that thing so it is a clever move to go that way.
this is a docu drama but at the same time the central character is the
real person as depicted. the detailing and the way they shot was
mindblowing but it will be exciting only when you see from that point
of time where film-making is a difficult task.
the style of this film is very similar to stanley kubrick's another
film called the killing which released after this movie like in the
voice of the commentator, lighting, camera angles, music, etc.., this
is not a positive movie about boxing and at the same time it is not
negative too, this is a truthful movie about boxing and boxers.
there are chances that this movie can be a great influence with martin
scorsese for his film raging bull, even though that is a true story as
this is too, film-making might have influenced from this movie but if
that is true you must understand what a great thing it is to get
influenced for 70's movie from 50's movie; that is stanley kubrick.
3 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Interesting for completists but no-one else, 1 October 2001
Author:
bob the moo from Birmingham, UK
The first short film by Kubrick, it follows a boxer through the day-long
wait for an evening fight.
I watched this out of interest as I watch the majority of Kubrick's films.
However this is the only appeal that I can see for watching
this.
The short follows the boxer through his routines on the day, the heavy
narration talks us through the whole thing. In theory the short is meant to
give us an insight in the boxer's thoughts and feelings however it really
only shows us what he eats and who he talks to.
This is interesting if you are a Kubrick completist but other than that it
is of limited appeal.
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