Review of The Kings

The Kings (2021)
8/10
Four epic boxers, four great characters, four impressive trajectories and a perfect portrait of the vital political background
19 October 2021
Excellent four-part documentary on four great boxers (which were also quite interesting characters) whose careers crossed and clashed to each others throw the 80, with a seriously explored social and political background which they are also products and representatives. While all four fighters have been poor and became victorious and skilled sportsmen, half of them were media superstars, while the other half were black heavy punchers who attracted attention only after beating one of the other two. "Sugar" Ray Leonard was the smiling golden boy on TV (a rare black man in that position in those years) who was the perfect neo-liberal propaganda self-made man of Reagan (but was also the addicted unfaithful frenzied husband seriously eroded by low self-esteem). Opposed to the United States imperialism was Roberto Durán, the former street boy who fought as if his family would have no food if he lost, who represented the proud of Panama with his "Manos de Piedra" blowing down rich gringoes, befriended nationalist dictator Omar Torrijos and was also the macho womanizer with no discipline that was guided by his desires (a lusty drunk glutton). Inside USA, Thomas Hearns, "The Hitman", was the son of impoverished Detroit city where the black poor guys - just like he used to be - suffered deeply from reactionary anti-welfare and law-and-order repressive policies by Reagan. The last but not least, Marvin Hagler bypassed politics (as happens with most of sportsmen), was a compromised father and husband and a hard-training focused boxer who did everything alright, but was considerably ignored by the media and was obsessed by being called by the nickname he have himself, "Marvelous". The stories of these punching "kings" present great magic or tragic moments of boxing. As usual in perhaps the most "political" among all sports (it is a "sport of poor boys", as documentary correctly states), boxing brings here a fascinating portrait of a social and political background, which specific changes impact the world until nowadays. (Unfortunately I could not watched the first segment; I have also no watched the last one yet, but I will edit it here after watching).
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed