The Set-Up (1949 film)

For the 2011 film, see Setup (2011 film).
The Set-Up

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Robert Wise
Produced by Richard Goldstone
Screenplay by Art Cohn
Based on a poem
by Joseph Moncure March
Starring
Music by C. Bakaleinikoff
Cinematography Milton R. Krasner
Edited by Roland Gross
Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures
Release dates
  • March 29, 1949 (1949-03-29) (United States)
Running time
72 minutes
Country United States
Language English

The Set-Up is a 1949 American film noir boxing drama directed by Robert Wise and starring Robert Ryan[1] and Audrey Totter.[2][3] The screenplay was adapted by Art Cohn from a 1928 narrative poem written by Joseph Moncure March. The Set-Up was the last film Wise made for RKO, and he named it his favorite among the pictures he directed for the studio, as well as one of his top ten during his entire career.[4]

Plot

Bill "Stoker" Thompson (Robert Ryan) is a 35-year-old has-been boxer about to take on an opponent at the fictional Paradise City Arena. His wife, Julie (Audrey Totter), fears that this fight may be his last and wants him to forfeit the match. Tiny (George Tobias), Stoker's manager, is sure he will continue to lose fights, so he takes money for a "dive" from a mobster, but is so certain of Stoker's failure that he does not inform the boxer of the set-up.

The beginning of the film shows Stoker and Julie in their room at the Hotel Cozy, passionately debating whether he should participate in the fight. Julie tells him that she has a headache and won't attend the match. Stoker claims the $500 prize could allow them to buy a cigar stand or invest in another boxer, Tony Martinez, and start a new life. Julie says she cares more about his well-being than money, but Stoker responds: "If you're a fighter, you gotta fight."

After Stoker departs for the arena, Julie continues to struggle with her fear and desire to support him, but ultimately ends up not using her ticket to the event and instead roams the streets surrounding the arena.

At the beginning of the fourth and last round of the vicious match with the much younger and heavily favored Tiger Nelson (Hal Fieberling), Stoker learns about the fix. Even though he is told that Little Boy (Alan Baxter), a feared gangster, is behind the set-up, he refuses to give up the fight.

Stoker wins the vocal support of blood-thirsty fans who had at first rooted against him and ends up defeating his opponent. He pays for his decision with a beating in an alley outside the arena from Little Boy, Tiger Nelson, and their cronies. The group irreparably damages Stoker's hand with a smash from a brick.

The story closes with Julie meeting Stoker as he staggers out of the alley and collapses into her arms. "I won tonight," he tells her. "Yes," she answers. "You won tonight. We both won tonight."

Cast

Background

In 1947, almost two decades after March's poem was published, RKO paid him a little over $1,000 for the rights to the piece.[1] Although March had nearly a decade of Hollywood writing credits during the 1930s (working on what a 2008 essay in The Hudson Review called "one forgotten and now unseeable film after another"), RKO did not ask him to adapt his own poem.[1]

The screen adaptation included a number of alterations to the original text.[1] The protagonist's name was changed from Pansy Jones to Stoker Thompson, his race was changed from black to white, he went from being a bigamist to being devotedly married, and his beating and subsequent death on a subway track was turned into an alley assault and a shattered hand. The opponent's name was changed from Sailor Gray to Tiger Nelson.

Production

Casting

In an audio commentary accompanying the 2004 DVD release of the film, Robert Wise attributes the change in the protagonist's race to the fact that RKO had no African-American star actors under contract.[4] Although the film did have an African American actor (James Edwards) in a minor role as another boxer, Edwards was not a "star" under the then existing studio rules. March later commented in an Ebony interview, saying:

not only [did they throw] away the mainspring of the story, they evaded the whole basic issue of discrimination against the Negro.... Hollywood’s attitude to the Negro in films has been dictated all too often by box-office considerations: they are afraid of losing money in the Jim Crow South.[1]

Robert Ryan, who was cast as Stoker Thompson, had boxing experience from his time at Dartmouth College, where he was heavyweight champion for four years in a row.[4][5]

Wise and Sid Rogell had first thought of Joan Blondell to play Julie, following her performance as Zeena Krumbein in Nightmare Alley, but RKO owner Howard Hughes refused, saying "Blondell looks like she was shot out of the wrong end of a cannon now".[6]

Filming

Dore Schary, the uncredited executive producer who got the project going at RKO before his 1948 move to MGM,[1] is credited with giving the film a real time narrative structure, three years before the device was used in High Noon.[1] Viewers are shown the passage of time throughout the film:

Prior to The Set-Up, Richard Goldstone's production credits had been limited to a half-dozen Our Gang comedy shorts.[1]

The fight scene, which features an exchange of blows between Stoker and his opponent that is very close to the original poem,[1] was choreographed by former professional boxer Johnny Indrisano.[4] Wise used three cameras to capture the action: one focused on the ring in its entirety; one on the fighters; and a third, hand-held device to catch details such as a glove connecting with a body.[4]

Reception

Critical response

When the film was released The New York Times reviewed the drama and lauded the picture's screenplay and the realistic depiction of the boxing milieu; they wrote:

This RKO production...is a sizzling melodrama. The men who made it have nothing good to say about the sordid phase of the business under examination and their roving, revealing camera paints an even blacker picture of the type of fight fan who revels in sheer brutality. The sweaty, stale-smoke atmosphere of an ill-ventilated smalltime arena and the ringside types who work themselves into a savage frenzy have been put on the screen in harsh, realistic terms. And the great expectations and shattered hopes which are the drama of the dressing room also have been brought to vivid, throbbing life in the shrewd direction of Robert Wise and the understanding, colloquial dialogue written into the script by Art Cohn.[7]

Jefferson Hunter, in a summer 2008 essay for The Hudson Review, said:

All through The Set-Up, we see confirmed the oldest of truisms about film, that it tells its stories best in images, in what can be shown—a crowd’s blood lust, the boxers’ awareness of what’s coming to them in the end—as opposed to what is spoken or narrated.[1]

Awards

Wins

Nominated

Notable quote

Tiny: How many times I gotta say it? There's no percentage in smartenin' up a chump.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Joseph Moncure March: Poem Noir Becomes Prizefight Film from The Hudson Review
  2. Variety film review; March 23, 1949, page 8.
  3. Harrison's Reports film review; March 26, 1949, page 50.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Wise, Robert (Director) (6 July 2004). Audio Commentary: The Set-Up (Motion picture). Warner Studios.
  5. Burr, Ty. "The Actor Who Knew Too Much". Dartmouth Alumni Magazine. Retrieved 6 August 2015.
  6. Kennedy, Matthew (28 September 2009). Joan Blondell a life between takes. Jackson: University Press of Mississippiy. p. 144. ISBN 9781604733006. Retrieved 6 August 2015.
  7. The New York Times. Film review of The Set-Up, March 30, 1949. Last accessed: December 14, 2007.
  8. "Festival de Cannes: The Set-Up". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-01-11.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/17/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.