The Champ (1931 film)
The Champ | |
---|---|
Directed by | King Vidor |
Written by | Frances Marion Leonard Praskins |
Produced by | King Vidor Harry Rapf (uncredited) Irving Thalberg (uncredited) |
Starring | Wallace Beery Jackie Cooper Irene Rich Roscoe Ates |
Cinematography | Gordon Avil |
Edited by | Hugh Wynn |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release date |
|
Running time | 87 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $356,000[1] |
Box office | $1.6 million[1] |
The Champ is a 1931 American pre-Code film starring Wallace Beery and Jackie Cooper and directed by King Vidor from a screenplay by Frances Marion, Leonard Praskins and Wanda Tuchock. The picture tells the story of a washed-up alcoholic boxer (Beery) attempting to put his life back together for the sake of his young son (Cooper).
Beery won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance (sharing the prize with Fredric March for Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde), Frances Marion won the Academy Award for Best Story, and the film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture and Best Director.[2] In February 2020, the film was shown at the 70th Berlin International Film Festival, as part of a retrospective dedicated to King Vidor's career.[3]
Plot
Andy "Champ" Purcell (
Champ is also a compulsive gambler, another vice which he repeatedly promises he will surrender. After a winning streak, he fulfills a previous promise to buy Dink a horse, whom they name "Little Champ" and decide to race. At the track, Dink happens across a woman who, unknown to either of them, is his mother Linda. She is remarried to Tony, a wealthy man.
Linda and Tony observe Dink and Champ together and realize that Dink is her son. Champ allows Linda to see Dink, who accepts that she is his mother. But he feels no emotion toward her, as she has never been part of his life. Linda resolves to remove Dink from the miserable atmosphere in which he's growing up and have him live with her family.
Catching Champ during an all-night gambling binge, Tony asks him to turn Dink over so that Tony and Linda can put him into school. Champ refuses. The night of gambling ends with Champ having lost Little Champ, which devastates Dink. Champ asks Linda for money to buy the horse back, and she gives it to him. But he starts gambling again and loses the money Linda loaned him. He also winds up in jail, breaking Dink's heart once more.
Ashamed, Champ finally agrees to send an unwilling Dink to live with Tony and Linda. On the train ride home, Tony and Linda try their best to welcome Dink into their family. He does not dislike them, but he is consumed only by thoughts of his father. He runs away back to Tijuana, where he finds that Champ has a fight scheduled with the Mexican heavyweight champion. When he sees Dink, Champ returns to good spirits, trains hard, and, for the first time, really does stay away from drinking and gambling. Champ is determined to win the fight, make Dink proud of him, and use his prize money to buy back Little Champ.
Tony and Linda attend the fight, bringing best wishes and assurances that they will make no further efforts to separate Dink from Champ. The match is brutal, and Champ is seriously injured. Dink and the others in his corner urge him to throw in the towel, but Champ refuses. He musters a last burst of energy and knocks out his opponent. After the fight, he triumphantly presents Little Champ to Dink. But after witnessing his son's overjoyed reaction, Champ collapses.
He is brought into his dressing room, where a doctor determines that his injuries are mortal. Champ urges Dink to cheer up and then dies. Despite the best efforts of others to calm him, Dink continually wails, "I want the Champ!" Finally, he spots Linda enter the room. Dink looks at her, cries out, "Mother!" and runs into her arms. She picks him up and he sobs, "The Champ is dead, Mama." She turns and carries him out of the room as he buries his face in her shoulder, crying.
Cast
- Wallace Beery as Andy "Champ" Purcell
- Jackie Cooper as Dink Purcell
- Irene Rich as Linda Purcell
- Roscoe Ates as Sponge
- Edward Brophy as Tim
- Hale Hamilton as Tony
- Jesse Scott as Jonah
- Marcia Mae Jones as Mary Lou
Production
Screenwriter Frances Marion wrote the title role specifically for Wallace Beery,
The Champ debuted on November 9, 1931, at the
Assessment
The film, along with Beery's role in Min and Bill, catapulted Beery's career.[4][13] Beery signed a contract with MGM shortly thereafter specifying that he receive a dollar more per year than any other actor on the lot, effectively making him the world's highest-paid actor. The picture also made nine-year-old Jackie Cooper the first child star of the 1930s, an era noted for its numerous, popular child actors.[4][14]
At the time the movie was released, critics criticized the film's lack of originality.[15] For example, The New York Times declared that "something more novel and subtle" was needed, although it also praised Beery's acting.[16] Variety, too, very much liked Beery in the film, noting that he delivered a "studied, adult" performance.[17] Time called the film repetitive, blasted Cooper for sniveling, and accused director King Vidor of laying "on pathos with a steam-shovel."[5] Nonetheless, Time praised the movie, declaring it "Utterly false and thoroughly convincing..."[5] Many critics cited the "special chemistry" between Beery and Cooper, which led the two actors to be paired again numerous times.[18] Cooper and Beery had no such chemistry off-screen.[19][20] Cooper accused Beery of upstaging and other attempts to undermine his performances, out of what Cooper presumed was jealousy.[21] Critics today still highly praise The Champ.[15][22]
The Champ has been described as an inverted
The Champ has had significant cultural effect. A number of motion pictures in the 1930s, some of them also starring Wallace Beery, repeated the basic story about a man surrendering to drink and redeemed by the love of his long-suffering son.
Reception
The Champ was a big hit upon its release. According to MGM records, the film earned $917,000 domestically and $683,000 foreign. The film itself also received overwhelmingly positive reviews , whereas it currently holds a 96% of freshness on Rotten Tomatoes, as of now. Irene Thirer of the New York Daily News described the film as “so profuse and so enjoyable as the film combines the amazing talents of Jackie Cooper with the superb histrionics of Wallace Beery”.[1]
Remakes
The movie was remade in 1952 as The Clown, starring Red Skelton as a washed-up clown rather than a washed-up boxer.[27] It was remade again in 1979 by Franco Zeffirelli (see The Champ).[28]
See also
References
- ^ a b c The Eddie Mannix Ledger, Los Angeles, California: Margaret Herrick Library, Center for Motion Picture Study.
- ISBN 0-7892-0484-3
- ^ "Berlinale 2020: Retrospective "King Vidor"". Berlinale. Retrieved February 28, 2020.
- ^ ISBN 0-520-20334-8
- ^ a b c d ""The New Pictures"". Archived from the original on August 15, 2007. Retrieved January 3, 2009.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link), Time, November 23, 1931. - ^ a b Gallagher, Tag. "Max Ophuls: A New Art - But Who Notices?" Archived December 10, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, Senses of Cinema. 22:2002.
- ^ a b "'The Champ' Rejects Fortune." The New York Times. November 15, 1931.
- ^ "Cinema's Art Directors." The New York Times. November 22, 1931.
- ^ "Here and There in the Studios." The New York Times. August 16, 1931.
- ^ "Projection Jottings." The New York Times. October 18, 1931.
- ^ "Screen Notes." The New York Times. October 31, 1931.
- ^ "Screen Notes." The New York Times. November 4, 1931; "Players On The Go." The New York Times. November 8, 1931.
- ISBN 1-55862-477-5
- ISBN 0-517-58325-9
- ^ ISBN 0-8108-1570-2
- ^ Hall, Mordaunt. "Father and Son", The New York Times, November 10, 1931.
- ISBN 0-399-52922-5
- ISBN 0-7864-1793-5
- ISBN 0-06-053423-0
- ISBN 0-87910-351-5
- ISBN 978-0-688-03659-1
- ^ ISBN 0-231-12034-6
- ISBN 0-15-133789-6
- ISBN 0-670-49185-3
- ^ Kerpan, Michael. "Passing Fancy (Dekigokoro)" Archived July 13, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, Senses of Cinema. June 2004.
- Berenstain, Stan and Berenstain, Jan. "The Bear Beginnings." Publishers Weekly. October 7, 2002.
- ISBN 0-87910-331-0
- ^ Canby, Vincent. "Zeffirelli's 'The Champ': A Return Match", The New York Times, April 4, 1979.
External links
- The Champ at IMDb
- The Champ at the TCM Movie Database
- The Champ at AllMovie
- The Champ at the American Film Institute Catalog
- The Champ at Rotten Tomatoes