The Set-Up

1949

Crime / Film-Noir / Sport

7
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh85%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright89%
IMDb Rating7.8109143

sportsnoirgamblingboxingboxer

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Darryl Hickman Photo
Darryl Hickman as Shanley
Tommy Noonan Photo
Tommy Noonan as Masher on Street
Robert Ryan Photo
Robert Ryan as Stoker
Herbert Anderson Photo
Herbert Anderson as Husband
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
667.11 MB
988*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 12 min
P/S ...
1.21 GB
1472*1072
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 12 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by MartinHafer8 / 10

gritty and well-acted

I love Robert Ryan films. Whether playing a scum bag or a hero, his gritty and realistic performances have always impressed me. One of his better films is this boxing flick. Ryan is an old washed-up boxer who is expected to take a dive. Through much of the film, you really don't know what he will do--throw the fight or try to salvage some of his dignity. And, I gotta say that the boxing scenes are brutal and realistic--it really HURTS to watch the fight. If you like the films THE HARDER THEY FALL or REQUIEM TO A HEAVYWEIGHT, then is this movie for you! In fact, try watching all three to get a look at the less glamorous and seedy side of boxing.

Reviewed by bkoganbing8 / 10

Running On Pride

If your taste runs to happy endings and beautiful people than stay away from The Set-Up. But if gritty and realistic drama is your taste you can't do better than this noir classic about the world of boxing. The Set-Up anticipated Rod Serling's Requiem For a Heavyweight by a decade as it deals with the same issues about a boxer at the end of his career.

Anthony Quinn might very well have seen Robert Ryan in The Set-Up when he played Mountain Rivera in Requiem For A Heavyweight. Rod Serling must have seen it as well. Both films deal with a boxer at the end of his career, but who has a lot of pride. Manager George Tobias and trainer Percy Helton get an offer from gambler Alan Baxter who is backing an up and coming heavyweight contender Hal Baylor. Ryan is just another step up the ladder, a ladder when Ryan was younger he was climbing. Tobias and Helton agree to take a dive, but no one can broach the subject to Ryan.

Which sets it all up for the final match and the aftermath where Ryan betrayed by all hangs in on nerve and pride alone. What happens afterward is for you to view, but don't expect the same kind of resolution that Requiem For A Heavyweight gave.

A really big surprise here are George Tobias and Percy Helton who normally play comic parts are quite serious here as a pair of fight game characters. The performances are so atypical of the work you've come to expect from both.

Ryan's amateur boxing career no doubt stood him in good stead for this role. He makes a rugged looking boxer who's been through the ring wars over and over again. That helps him in this latest encounter.

The sets are gritty and realistic, in fact I've never seen an urban area done so well until Otto Preminger's The Man With The Golden Arm debuted six years later. Preminger also might have been influenced by The Set-Up when he made his classic.

Although unnoticed at first, The Set-Up has slowly built a reputation as one of the great noir films out of RKO and one of the best boxing films ever made. For myself it certainly influenced a lot of people.

Reviewed by SnoopyStyle8 / 10

Rocky

Veteran boxer Bill 'Stoker' Thompson (Robert Ryan) is eager for his next fight. His wife Julie (Audrey Totter) fears the worst and wants him to quit. His manager Tiny bets against him and agrees to take a dive with mobster Little Boy. Tiny is so certain of a lost that he doesn't even tell Stoker of the set-up. The fix is in except no one has told Stoker.

I love the behind-the-scene locker room with the other boxers. One can feel the sweatiness, the desperation, and the hierarchy of respect. This is Rocky before Rocky. The only thing I would change is the last line. Stoker is the better one to make a declarative closing statement. This should end with his "I won". That would be the poetic and ironic move. I don't really like her saying "We both won tonight". It's a little confusing. In a way, it's a minor change and a big deal.

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