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The Champ
The Champ tells the story of a little boy named T.J. who is torn between his divorced parents: a loving mother and an alcoholic ex-boxing father who is now working on his come-back in order to give his boy a better future.
2 April 1904, New York, New York, USA
18 August 1934, New York, New York, USA
10 October 1927, Ferndale, Michigan, USA
December 30, 1917 in Fallbrook, California, USA
29 April 1957, California, USA
26 March 1919, Kokomo, Indiana, USA
18 September 1920, Newark, New Jersey, USA
7 May 1950, Bridge City, Texas, USA
February 19, 2003
Great performance from Jon Voight and Rick Schroeder
April 01, 2007
The original film took 85 minutes, this one 121; the extra length has not improved the story.
May 09, 2005
The most offputting thing about such canny, tear-stained movies as The Champ is not their naïveté but their unholy sophistication. These movies don't mean to deal with the world as it really is, but as it should be.
May 24, 2003
Even more of a tear-jerker than the 1931 version of the same story, there is not a dry eye on the screen.
February 13, 2004
I admit it. I cried.
November 11, 2004
Voight is fine as boxer on a comeback, but Ricky Schroeder steals the film. I dare you not to cry!
April 01, 2007
The tear-jerking is so determined and persistent that your ducts feel as if they'd been worked over with a catheter.
August 21, 2003
Seek out the 1931 King Vidor version.
February 09, 2006
A pointless update of King Vidor's '30s weepie.
August 21, 2010
Zeffirelli's inferior remake to King Vidor's 1932 classic, starring Jon Voight in the Oscar-winning role that Wallace Beery had originated, is a manipulative tear-jerking melodrama.
April 01, 2007
A three-alarm, three-hanky movie of the highest order, perfect for your kids who don't get to see many truly sad films.
January 04, 2005
Pale remake of Wally Berry classic.

