Undisputed
(2002)
Rated R
Starring: Wesley Snipes, Ving Rhames, and
Peter Falk
Rating:

out
of

|
Walter Hill has a very diverse array of films in his directorial credits.
From 1979's The Warriors to 1992's Trespass, most of Hill's films have
had a gritty, urban edge to them. 2002's Undisputed keeps the grit, but
takes the atmosphere behind bars. Monroe Hutchens (Wesley Snipes)
was a promising young boxer with an impressive string of wins when an
unfortunate loss of temper landed him behind the
bars of Sweetwater Prison. Sweetwater has a boxing program that pits boxers
from Sweetwater and other prisons against each other every six months.
Monroe is the undisputed champion on the prison circuit with 68 wins.
On the outside, the undisputed Heavyweight champion is Alonzo "The
Iceman" Chambers (Ving Rhames). The Iceman's career is derailed when
a young woman accuses him of raping her at a party. Chambers is found
guilty and sentenced to serve time at Sweetwater.
Mendy Ripstein (Peter Falk), a one-time boxing promoter from the golden
days of yesteryear, is serving time at Sweetwater for tax evasion. He
gets one last shot at promoting a great fight: the undisputed champion
of the outside world vs. the undisputed champion on the inside. Thanks
to shady deals and mob involvement, the fight will serve to make all involved
very wealthy. That is, if the two boxers don't kill each other before
the fight takes place.
Ving Rhames is excellent as the overconfident Iceman. His inability to
accept that his freedom has been taken away and that the pecking order
of the prison doesn't give a damn about his riches on the outside is skillfully
portrayed. Snipes, on the other hand, wrings what he can out of the Hutchens
character but there isn't much to squeeze out. In either case, it's nearly
impossible to sympathize with either boxer in the film. Both guys seem
to have good qualities, but the script never gives enough details about
either boxer's circumstances to allow the audience to feel much more than
indifference to their individual fates.
Even so, the boxing sequences are superb. They're realistic enough to
be believable and over-the-top enough to be entertaining. They're not
enough to save the film from being B-movie material, but they do save
it from being mediocre.
Boxing
film fans might want to check out Undisputed for the fight
scenes, but those seeking a film with more meat might want to check
elsewhere.
Trivia: Ving
Rhames had spent two years getting in shape for another movie role biopic
about a boxing legend, but when that fell through this script caught
his eye and he simply resumed his training for this film. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |