词条 | The Great White Hope (film) |
释义 |
| name = The Great White Hope | image = Great white hope movie poster.jpg | image_size = 215px | alt = | caption = Theatrical release poster | director = Martin Ritt | producer = Lawrence Turman | screenplay = Howard Sackler | based on = {{Based on|The Great White Hope|Howard Sackler}} | starring = James Earl Jones Jane Alexander | music = Lionel Newman | cinematography = Burnett Guffey | editing = William Reynolds | distributor = 20th Century Fox | released = {{start date|1970|10|11}} | runtime = 103 minutes | country = United States | language = English | budget = $9.87 million[1] }}The Great White Hope is a 1970 American biographical romantic drama film written and adapted from the Howard Sackler play of the same name.[2][3][4] The film was directed by Martin Ritt, starring James Earl Jones, Jane Alexander, Chester Morris, Hal Holbrook, Beah Richards and Moses Gunn. Jones and Alexander, who also appeared in the same roles in the stage versions, both received Best Actor and Actress Academy Award nominations for their performances. The film and play is based on the true story of Jack Johnson and his first wife, Etta Terry Duryea, and the controversy over their marriage and Duryea's death by suicide in 1912.[5] PlotSet between 1910 and 1915, the story follows Jack Jefferson, patterned after real-life boxer, Jack Johnson, going on a hot streak of victories in the boxing ring as he defeats every white boxer around. Soon the press and racists announce the search for a "great white hope", a boxer who will defeat Jefferson for the heavyweight title. Meanwhile, Jefferson prepares for a few more matches, but he lets his guard down by courting the beautiful, and very white, Eleanor Bachman, and when everyone, including Jack's black "wife", discover this, the tensions grow to fever pitch. Jack's close black friends become scared over his pushing the envelope of success and the white authorities conspire to frame him with unlawful sexual relations with Eleanor and thereby take away his title. It leads to jealousy, a run from the law, and finally, disaster. Cast
ReceptionThe film opened to positive responses from both audiences and critics. They especially loved the performances of both James Earl Jones and Jane Alexander, who were in the original stage play: they won Tonys for the play. Jones would get bigger roles after this film, and Alexander made a debut here. Jones later contributed commentary to a documentary about Jack Johnson that would sum up this film, saying: "To know the story of Jack Johnson is to know that it is a study in hubris." However, critical opinion of the film has declined in recent years. The Great White Hope currently maintains a 43% "Rotten" approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 7 reviews, indicating mixed-to-negative reviews. Critic Vincent Canby referred to the film as "One of those liberal, well-meaning, fervently uncontroversial works that pretend to tackle contemporary problems by finding analogies at a safe remove in history" while critic Emanuel Levy wrote "The movie is too theatrical and every idea is spelled out for the audience." Box OfficeAccording to Fox records the film required $16,075,000 in rentals to break even and by 11 December 1970 had made $9,325,000 so made a loss to the studio.[6] See also
References1. ^Solomon, Aubrey. Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History (The Scarecrow Filmmakers Series). Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 1989. {{ISBN|978-0-8108-4244-1}}. p256 2. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/theater/76934977.pdf|work=The New York Times|date=1968-10-04|author=Clive Barnes|title=Theater: Howard Sackler's 'Great White Hope'}} 3. ^{{cite web|url=https://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9804E5D91E3EE034BC4A52DFB667838B669EDE|date=1970-10-12|title='Great White Hope' Brought to Screen|author=Vincent Canby|work=The New York Times}} 4. ^{{cite book | last=Sackler | first=Howard | title=The Great White Hope, A Play | location=New York, NY | publisher=The Dial Press, Inc | year=1968 | oclc=451597}} 5. ^[https://www.pbs.org/unforgivableblackness/knockout/women.html Unforgivable Blackness] accessed 11/5/2016 6. ^{{cite book|page=329|title=The Fox that got away : the last days of the Zanuck dynasty at Twentieth Century-Fox|last=Silverman|first=Stephen M|year=1988|publisher=L. Stuart}} External links
15 : 1970 films|1970s romantic drama films|American films|American biographical films|American romantic drama films|English-language films|Films directed by Martin Ritt|Boxing films|Films set in the 1910s|Films shot in Arizona|Films shot in California|Films about race and ethnicity|20th Century Fox films|Films about interracial romance|Cultural depictions of Jack Johnson |
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