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Ready to Rumble Movie Review
Ready to Rumble Review

"Ready to Rumble" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Brian RobbinsProducer : Robert F. Newmyer,Jeffrey Silver
Screenwiter : Steven Brill
Starring : David Arquette,Oliver Platt,Scott Caan,Bill Goldberg,Rose McGowan,Page Falkinburg,Martin Landau
Wrestling - for all of its flash pots, Solid Gold dancers, and large, scantily
clad, sweaty men – is the 21st century version of Ringing Bros., Barnum and
Bailey’s traveling tent show. When I was a kid, I used to watch the exploits
of Andre the Giant, Macho Man Randy Savage, and the Honky Tonk Man. The newest
generation of wrestlers have never interested me, with all of the theatrics and
bad, bad attitudes toward almost everything under the sun. The “sport” of
wrestling has become three hours of anger, deception, sexual dominance, and
violent acts with chairs. The one thing that has always eluded me with the
newest generation of wrestlers – Goldberg, Sting, Mankind, and The Rock – is
the human element that drew me into the action so well as a kid. But Ready to
Rumble helped remind me of the glory days I once had, sitting before the
13-inch RCA with the bottom knob broken off, watching my heroes triumph over
the adversities of life’s travels.
The film follow two losers, played by Scott Caan and David Arquette, who run a
septic truck business for the local town of Lusk, Wyoming. Their idol is Jimmy
King (Oliver Platt), grand champion belt holder of the WCW Federation, who
proclaims “I WILL RULE YOU!” after every victory. Caan and Arquette attend a
WCW bout and, in horror, watch their idol fall from grace by turncoat WCW
wrestlers. Jimmy King is beaten to a bloody pulp and a fellow wrestler,
Diamond Dallas Page, takes the belt from the fallen king. After the show, Caan
and Arquette strike out to find their defeated hero and once again place the
crown upon the rightful king of the ring.
The strengths of the film lie in its wonderful script. It draws from the
familiar lines of many sport films yet retains a strong sense of disbelief that
helps carry the emotions of the characters to a heart-pounding end. Arquette
and Caan put out wonderful performances of simple men looking to fulfill their
dreams without anything standing in their way. The supporting cast of real
wrestlers – Goldberg, Sting, Macho Man Randy Savage, and Mr. Perfect – lend
their acting chops to help authenticate the action. And director Brian Robbins
lends a confident hand at capturing the beauty of the choreographed moves,
strongly capturing the feeling of this “circus” masquerading as a professional
sport.
But the best thing about the movie is how damn funny it is. The scenes are
littered with enough foul humor to embarrass the Farrelly Brothers but are
carried by the convictions of the characters and the innocence of common men in
the presence of giants. Even Joe Pantoliano, playing a sleazy wrestling
promoter responsible for the King’s downfall, and Oscar winner Martin Landau,
playing an old-school wrestler who trains King, bring wonderful diversity to
the characters in the film. Rose McGowan shines as well as a manipulative WCW
dancer who likes to wrestle and growl in bed.
Ready to Rumble is a fun, rambunctious film filled with laughs and a great
storyline. Take your favorite wrestling fan (or your favorite closeted
wrestling fan) and a good time is guaranteed.
Ready or not!
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Review by Max Messier
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YOU GUYS ARE MORONS! i hate that qoute "maybe they made it for ppl who think
wrestling as real as football". SHUT UP! when i watch wrestling i see ppl on a
solid peice of plywood slaming each other around jus to entertain fans! i c ppl
going through flaming table and doing flips off 20 foot cages. i c them getting
thrown into tacks off of 20 ft ladders! just to entertain the fans. i'd like to
c panzy football players do that.
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