Boxers who deserve a movie

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by Melankomas, Feb 2, 2023.


  1. mirexxa

    mirexxa Heavyweight Champ Full Member

    993
    938
    Jan 21, 2022
    I want to see a Tyson movie TOP CLASS hollywood **** with top actors
     
    ikrasevic and Bronze Tiger like this.
  2. Bronze Tiger

    Bronze Tiger Boxing Addict Full Member

    4,378
    5,327
    Jun 23, 2018
    I’ve got another vote for Emile Griffith…the rags to riches boxer thing has been done to death …a gay boxer in the manly sport of boxing…that’s interesting…plus you could show the fallout after the Paret fight
     
  3. Bronze Tiger

    Bronze Tiger Boxing Addict Full Member

    4,378
    5,327
    Jun 23, 2018
    It’s such a good idea… I’m actually shocked it hasn’t been made already
     
    Pugguy and Greg Price99 like this.
  4. Pugguy

    Pugguy Ingo, The Thinking Man’s GOAT banned Full Member

    17,860
    28,891
    Aug 22, 2021
    Wow, didn’t know that about Kardashian.

    I appreciate what you’re saying - he is def. not your average nutter but individuals like him can escalate even more as time goes and become very real dangers to people - as the Kardashian restraining order reflects.
     
    Thread Stealer likes this.
  5. ronnyrains

    ronnyrains Active Member Full Member

    1,214
    835
    May 27, 2014
    Yes Jerry Quarry could have had a mini-series like Rich Man Poor man with his life.
     
  6. GoldenHulk

    GoldenHulk Boxing Addict Full Member

    4,708
    5,298
    Jan 7, 2007
    Tommy Morrison although it would be a tragedy.
     
  7. GoldenHulk

    GoldenHulk Boxing Addict Full Member

    4,708
    5,298
    Jan 7, 2007
    Love BHOP one of my favorites and my all time number one middleweight.
     
  8. mirexxa

    mirexxa Heavyweight Champ Full Member

    993
    938
    Jan 21, 2022
    Still waiting for that Tyson movie
     
    Richard M Murrieta likes this.
  9. Gui Dosnera

    Gui Dosnera Member Full Member

    374
    593
    Mar 7, 2023
  10. Mike_b

    Mike_b Well-Known Member Full Member

    2,949
    2,579
    Jul 9, 2020
    Dewey bozella
     
  11. thistle

    thistle Boxing Junkie

    7,637
    8,172
    Dec 21, 2016
    Bert Gilroy Film Proposal by Author James Glen (pugilistica.com)

    Bert Gilroy the Scots-Italian middleweight, real name Antonio Rea.

    Gilroy was a dual Scottish Champion, middle & light-heavyweight 1938-50.

    He was the UK's leading contender No. 1, 1939-48, and official challenger to both Jock McAvoy, British middleweight king, 1933-44,

    and to British & Empire's World light-heavyweight Champion, Freddie Mills, 1942-50.

    Mills later unified the World title in his second attempt against American Gus Lesnevich in 1948!

    McAvoy the fearsome British middleweight was himself affected by boxing politics and denied a World middleweight title fight,

    yet 'allowed' to fight all-time great John Henry Lewis for the World's light-heavyweight title in 1936. McAvoy obliged and he took Lewis the distance over 15 rds. Gilroy chased McAvoy from 1938-45 with the crucial years being 1939-44. In 1940 Bert won an eliminator against the well noted and world ranked Arthur 'Ginger' Sadd for McAvoy's crown. Fate proved to be a curse rather than a blessing at this point as Bert suffered a serious injury while on Military manoeuvres and broke his pelvis bone. The bout was naturally cancelled and Bert lost a year out of his boxing career. Bert returned in 1941 went straight back to No. 1 and his promised title match was still in the wait, and in fact 'never' took place at all, even though McAvoy hadn't defended his title since he was down to fight Gilroy that night back in June 1940. Indeed McAvoy held that same title 'uncontested' for an additional 4 years and retired in 1945 without making another defence of his British middleweight title!

    The same can be said for Bert's status against Freddie Mills, Mills held his British & Empire's World light-heavyweight title for 8 long years without ever defending it!

    Bert was official challenger to the title and Mills' No. 1 contender from 1945-48 yet once again no title fight for Gilroy. Bert & Freddie did meet once in 1944 in a non-title bout and with Gilroy ahead on points, Mills gets the verdict in a not very well received 8th round stoppage owing to a cut eye that Bert had received in the opening rounds. Why were the two never brought together again, and it is even more of a legitimate question to inquire as to how Freddie could hold a title 8 long years without 'ever' making one title defence, not one!

    Gilroy competed with excellence and consistency from mid-1937 when he came into his own, and in fact had only tasted defeat 13 times out of his next 85 contests, when he retired in 1950, including a 41 fight stretch without defeat, mid-1937 to early 1943. Of the losses, 7 of them met with 'documented' questionable decisions or circumstances surrounding the fights and a handful of them to bigger men, Heavyweights - Bruce Woodcock, Ken Shaw and Stephane Olek fighters Bert shouldn't have really been fighting in the first place.

    All in Bert Gilroy took part in 7 contests for Scottish titles, one 'eliminator' for the Scottish middleweight title, two more for the title itself, which he won, two battles for the Scottish light-heavyweight title, winning that title too and likewise two attempts at the Scottish heavyweight title against Champion, Ken Shaw, losing both, the first questioned. Bert as mentioned had one 'eliminator' for the British middleweight title, and though No. 1 for the better part of 10 years, was denied a shot at both McAvoy's middleweight title and Freddie Mills' light-heavyweight title, Why?

    Gilroy fought all the top Scots, Irish and British contenders and fighters, including South African and French ring greats, among them, names like Johnny Clements, Tommy Smith, Tommy Henderson, Ben Valentine, Arthur 'Ginger' Sadd, Jock McCusker, Glen Moody, Jack Hyams, Pat O'Connor, Freddie Mills, Bruce Woodcock, Ken Shaw, Marcel Cerdan, Johnny DeVilliers, Stephane Olek, Don Cockell and his last fight in 1950 against a giant of a man Irish heavyweight Gerry McDermot for a career that spanned 18 years and 119 fights.

    Bert was 'hailed' from ring legends such as Jimmy Wilde and Elky Clark to top reporters and writers, Euan Wellwood, Malcom Turner, the famous Norman Hurst and tragic Henry Rose, George Biddles and Barrington Dalby to top flight American boxing manager and promoter Charley Rose and one of Britain's leading referee's at the time Eugene Henderson all forecasting Bert Gilroy to be the next British middleweight Champion and/or a World Champion.

    Bert Gilroy's final score was 119 fights, 86 (44) wins, 25 loses 8 draws, he was Scotland's longest reigning Champion, Scotland's greatest 'Bigman' and the greatest Scottish fighter never to 'hold' a British or World title. He may well have been Britain's greatest middleweight.

    In Bert's own words "they Shut me Out"...the Thistle in the Rose, Scotland's Bert Gilroy!
     
  12. Richard M Murrieta

    Richard M Murrieta Now Deceased 2/4/25 Full Member

    22,635
    30,423
    Jul 16, 2019
    Salvador Sanchez and Alexis Arguello.
     
    HolDat and DS Phil Hunter like this.
  13. ikrasevic

    ikrasevic Who is ready to suffer for Christ (the truth)? Full Member

    7,235
    7,708
    Nov 3, 2021
    Yes. As much as the theme is dedicated to the boxer, it is also dedicated to the film.
    I think Ray "Sugar" Robinson deserves a movie first, but not just any movie; than a big-budget movie.
    A film in the category of "Raging Bull", which presented the 6-time opponent Ray "Sugar" Robinson on the screen; Jake LaMotta.
    Ray "Sugar" Robinson is certainly a more successful boxer than Jake LaMotta (Jake LaMotta deserves a movie because he defeated Ray "Sugar" Robinson first).
     
    mirexxa likes this.
  14. Mike Cannon

    Mike Cannon Boxing Addict Full Member

    4,287
    7,778
    Apr 29, 2020
    Denzel Washington ?
     
  15. DS Phil Hunter

    DS Phil Hunter Active Member Full Member

    982
    1,329
    Jun 11, 2022
    I prefer a documentary over a biopic personally. I mentioned many times Ali with Will Smith was terrible but Muhammad Ali playing himself in The Greatest was hilarious I don't think anyone else could play him any better. I remember watching Tyson with Michael Jai White and thinking it was a decent attempt at telling his story.

    I'd like to see in depth
    documentaries on

    Daniel Mendoza
    John Gully
    John Jackson
    Tom Cribb and Tom Molineaux
    Bill Richmond
    John L Sullivan and Jake Kilrain
    Gene Tunney
    Primo Carnera
    Jersey Joe Walcott
    George Chuvalo
    Earnie Shavers
    Leon Spinks
    John Conteh
    Oscar De La Hoya
     
    HolDat and ikrasevic like this.