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Ali Movie Review
Ali Review

"Ali" Overview

Rating: R
2001
Cast and Crew
Director : Michael MannProducer : Paul Ardaji,A. Kitman Ho,James Lassiter,Michael Mann,Jon Peters
Screenwiter : Eric Roth,Michael Mann
Starring : Will Smith,Jamie Foxx,Jon Voight,Mario Van Peebles,Ron Silver,Jeffrey Wright,Mykelti Williamson
It saddens me to think that when most kids today see the name "Ali," they
probably think of whipped-cream-bikini babe Ali Larter, not Muhammad Ali, "The
Greatest," as he was wont to call himself -- as in the greatest fighter of all
time.
Now, with Michael Mann's lengthy biopic of the heavyweight king hitting
theaters, kids can think of former "Fresh Prince" Will Smith. And I'm still
not sure if that's a good thing.
In Ali, the original trash-talking fighter comes to the big screen -- a mere
one inch smaller than life -- with a brave Smith in the title role. The film
takes us through the usual stuff of biopics: From a brief look at his youth as
Cassius Clay in segregated 1960s Louisville, to a long stint as he became
Muhammad Ali as a member of the Nation of Islam, to his title being stripped
when he evaded the draft. Eventually, we go to Zaire, with Don King in tow,
where Ali fights in "The Rumble in the Jungle," where he would regain his
heavyweight title belt from a far more powerful George Foreman.
But those expecting a real knock-down film about boxing (and geez, why would
you expect something like that from a movie called Ali?) are going to be
disappointed. Sorely disappointed. As sore as taking an uppercut to the jaw.
The problem is not that there isn't any boxing in Ali -- indeed, there's about
30 minutes of it. That leaves about 25 minutes for a movie about Ali the
Philanderer and 105 long minutes for Ali the Muslim/Ali the Draft Dodger. The
result is a padded (2 hours, 40 minutes) and considerably dull biography of one
of sport's most engaging characters.
After opening with the Clay-Liston bouts, the movie quickly loses its momentum
by dragging us through its lengthy rehashing of Malcolm X and his friendship
with Clay, intercut with a ridiculous amount of standard-grade government
conspiracy nonsense, with the feds trying to oust X from power. By the end of
all of this, Malcolm X comes off like a stalker, and the Nation of Islam looks
no better than Don King. Finally, the film starts to pick up by taking us back
to the ring, but that momentum invariably dies again with sequences like Ali
wooing yet another in a long series of women, a perennial weakness, or taking a
long, dialogue-free musical sequence as Ali travels the countryside.
But when we're inside the ring, the film is superb -- in fact, it makes you
forget you're watching a movie. The action is not staged -- it's real boxing,
with real punches being thrown. And while Mann hints at some of the dirty
goings-on in his fights -- like the mystery substance on Sonny Liston's gloves
that blinded Ali for two rounds during their first bout -- he totally bypasses
others -- like the persistent rumor that Liston took a dive in round one of
their rematch. Ending the film with the Foreman fight manages to show us some
of his greatest hits, but it ignores seven years of subsequent fighting
(including "The Thrilla in Manila," his third and final match with Joe Frazier)
and more importantly, Ali's diagnosis with Parkinson's disease later in life.
A bigger problem is that Mann, who has turned the looooong form into some real
winners with films like Heat and The Insider, is starting to feel repetitious
and self-derivative in his directing. While it used to come off as cool, the
overexposed photography and patented zoom-in-and-refocus shaky-cams effect are
now starting to feel painfully retro.
On the other hand, Ali's supporting cast is almost inspired. Jon Voight might
deserve an Oscar for being unidentifiable and engaging as sportscasting legend
Howard Cosell, his second historical figure of the year (the first being FDR in
Pearl Harbor). He even gets close on the difficult accent. Jamie Foxx also
works well as much-needed comic relief, as Ali's trainer/"spirit man"/drug
addict pal Bundini. But casting Mario Van Peebles as Malcolm X is about as
effective as, oh, casting Billy Zane as Jesus. His work here is painful.
My quibbles with direction and some of the acting aside, Ali's biggest flaw is
its muddled script (cut back from an original 200 pages) that simply misses the
point of the man's life. All we really get out of the 160 long minutes are a
few good boxing sequences and a brief look at Ali's rough and cobbled-together
philosophy of life, along with the fleeting thought that his vanity and
self-absorption caused him to miss virtually everything going on in the world
around him. This theme is ultimately right, but the movie takes an awfully
roundabout way in getting to the point. And for the boxing alone, the film
isn't worth the effort. For a better history of Ali's greatest bout (and more
entertainment value), check out the documentary When We Were Kings.
The biggest question, of course, is how well the precocious and sweet Will
Smith transforms into Muhammad "I'm a baaaaad maaaaaan!" Ali. There's only so
much that makeup and intense workouts can do to turn the far smaller Smith into
the 210-pound Ali, but I give him a lot of credit for trying (he gained 35
pounds for the role -- and he's ripped). Most notably, Smith manages to
successfully capture Ali's unique cadence and accent, a feat that was probably
just as hard to pull off as the weight gain. But it's that Ali swagger that is
simply impossible to replicate. Ali really was The Greatest, and Smith simply
doesn't have the stage presence. No one does.
But on the whole, I'll give Smith due credit for his work here. But if Martin
Lawrence turns up as the star of Tyson, I'm going to have to pass.
He's not just the president, he's also a client.
Reviewer: Christopher Null
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