The story of the life and times of the boxing legend Muhammad Ali.
Product Identifiers
Producer
A. Kitman Ho, Jon Peters, Michael Mann, Paul Ardaji
EAN
5017239191596
eBay Product ID (ePID)
3949991
Product Key Features
Film/TV Title
Ali
Actor
Mykelti Williamson, Mario Van Peebles, Giancarlo Esposito, Jamie Foxx, Will Smith, Nona Gaye, Jeffrey Wright, Jada Pinkett Smith, Jon Voight, Ron Silver
Director
Michael Mann
Format
DVD
Language
English
Release Year
2002
Features
Featurettes - 1. HBO Making Of special\2. Behind-the-Scenes\Audio Commentary - Cast & Crew Audio Clips\Trailer - Original Theatrical Trailer, Widescreen
Aspect Ratio
Anamorphic Wide Screen
Run Time
156 Mins
Genre
General, Action & Adventure
Additional Product Features
Certificate
15
Number of Discs
2
Director of Photography
Emmanuel Lubezki
Reviews
Variety - ...[The film] possesses an informed, intelligent perspective..., Total Film - ...Smith has nailed the voice, the charm, the body language -- he has, in short, become Ali as much as any actor possibly could..., Rolling Stone - ...Smith gives a towering performance, defiantly funny and impassioned....Mann and Smith deliver this powerhouse with the urgency of a champ's left hook..., Box Office - ...Smith is undeniably excellent in the role, capturing the essence of Ali's character....Other supporting performers are equally convincing..., Entertainment Weekly - ...Dazzling....As Ali, Will Smith undergoes the kind of astonishing self-transformation that makes you blink, then stare..., New York Times - ...ALI is a breakthrough for director Michael Mann....His overwhelming love of its subject will turn audiences into exuberant, thrilled fight crowds...
Author
Gregory Allen Howard
Additional Information
Michael Mann's ALI manages to be an informative look at the career of legendary boxer Muhammad Ali and an entertaining and moving portrait of the man. The action begins with the brash young Cassius Clay's surprising victory over Sonny Liston. The film depicts Clay's conversion to Islam, his partnership with "Bundini" Brown (Jamie Foxx in a wonderfully complex turn), his friendship with Howard Cosell (a transformed Jon Voight), his principled refusal to serve in the military during Vietnam, and his subsequent problems with the law and the boxing commission. The film concludes with Ali's battle with George Foreman in the "Rumble in the Jungle." Will Smith delivers a worthy performance, transforming his body, face, and voice to capture the spirit of the charismatic fighter. The work of the supporting cast is superb, including Smith's real-life wife, Jada Pinkett Smith, and Marvin Gaye's daughter, Nona Gaye, as the women in Ali's life. Mann brings the viewer in close to the boxing action, effectively depicting Ali's unique grace and quickness, and the violent frenzy of the sport. The film shows the familiar public figure of fights and press conferences, and also gives a glimpse of the quiet, thoughtful private life of Ali.
Movie/TV Title
Ali
Composer
Lisa Gerrard, Pieter Bourke
Sound source
Dolby Digital 5.1\DTS 5.1
Screenwriter
Eric Roth, Christopher Wilkinson, Michael Mann, Stephen J. Rivele
Only the main boxing section of Ali's life is featur...ed, but Will Smith is convincing as are the portayals of Don King, Foreman and Joe Frazier. Smith seems to be well over the top with the african freedom and civil rights indulgences in this film pursuing his own agenda to the detriment of the film. Having seen all the fights at the time, Ali was a damn good boxer in a time of many great fighters, he was the best ever heavyweight in my lifetime, thats enough.
I went on to Wikepedia after watching the film and it m...ade more sense - you need to know Ali's history really before watching. Entertaining but do your research first - I thought his first marriage only lasted about 2 days in the film...
brought as a xmas preasent dad liked flim very good quailty and ver...y quicl postingHaving converted most of my old video collection to DVD I was thrilled to find this film gem in digital format. If you watch this in widescreen format, it really does the battle scene great justice; coupled with surround sound, you'll be gripped by the amazing cinematography. I would recommend the director's cut that includes scenes about the relationship between the lead character and his estranged wife and helps you to understand the motivation behind his decision. The run time is 183 minutes for the directors cut and 120 minutes for the cinema version. I was, however, disappointed by the lack of extras, which any fan of this classic would expect to be included. There's only a 20-minute interview with
Ali, Michael Mann's boxing epic starring... Will Smith, isn't a bad movie. In fact, it's almost as pretty, in places, as Ali himself. But, unlike the champ, it packs little dramatic punch. The result: nearly three hours of heavyweight Hollywood ho-hum.
Mann found his real fame in the 1980's Miami Vice, which brought TV shows a then-radical music-video sensibility. And he's still quite good at using camera work and music to set moods, choreograph an audience's reactions, even do some storytelling for him. The movie, especially the meticulously choreographed boxing scenes, looks great. Busy camerawork and stirring score keep the film interesting enough that three hours pass before one even notices they're gone. (Particularly effective: sparingly used over-the-shoulder and below-the-belt camerawork in the ring, that provides a feel for a first-person perspective on a boxing match. One feels quite palpably what it would be to be on the receiving end of a flurry of Ali's punches—or Joe Frazier's, for that matter.) Visual hallmarks of authenticity abound. Settings, from Louisville to inner-city New York and even Kinshasa, look and feel faithful to their originals (as we imagine them, at least). And historical figures all bear their "signatures" : Elijah Muhammad and Mobutu Sese Seko both have their customary headwear, Malcolm X his reddish hair and goatee, and Howard Cosell his toupee.
Period music, lovely to hear, sets the tone in virtually every scene set in America, while West African pop star Salif Keita provides the musical backdrop for Ali's Kinshasa odyssey.
The movie sidesteps the first obvious pitfall: a descent into hagiography. Ali's poor choice of friends and management (including, ultimately, "Prince of Darkness" Don King) is presented quite openly, and his womanizing, if downplayed, is plain enough to see—we never see him with a woman he doesn't eventually marry (and divorce), and his second wife calls him on it. But these are common enough tropes of the celebrity-athlete's story. More importantly, we see Ali's personal weakness in failing to turn his back on the corrupt and manipulative Nation of Islam at critical moments—he's oddly cold to a Malcolm X who has clearly moved beyond the Nation of Islam's influence, and he chews out Elijah Muhammad's son Howard after beating Joe Frazier, but then submits again to their management. (Like Malcolm X, Ali owes much of his identity to the Nation's influence; but unlike Malcolm, he never quite breaks with them, even when he seems to have outgrown them.)
And inevitably, the film takes on the political aspect of Ali's early career: his engagement with the black militancy of Malcolm X and the Nation of Islam, his criminal prosecution and ban from boxing after refusing military induction, his denunciation of the U.S. as a bigger enemy to blacks and the poor than the Viet Cong, his decision to fight George Foreman in Mobutu's Zaire. (A celebrity athlete famous for the sport he can't compete in, Ali's transformed by his suspension and legal woes into a political figure, almost a political prisoner living in internal exile.) But somehow, none of Ali's inflammatory, anti-establishment positions feel particularly provocative as presented in this film. Even— or especially—today, for an American Olympic champion and celebrity professional athlete to take these kinds of positions would be explosive. (Can we imagine Tiger Woods taking such a stand? Michael Jordan?) Here, though, Ali's d