0:00
/
01:21
A blue-collar family man breaks the promise he'd made years ago to never fight again. Now forty years old, with a wife and four children who need him, Joe Carman risks everything-his marriage, his family, his health-to go back into the fighting cage and come to terms with his past.
Rating
NR
Director
Jeff Unay
Studio
IFC Films
-
- The fight scenes are raw and filled with tension. A very personal look into the life of this family and all their pain. Such an upclose and genuine look at the struggles human beings create for themselves that you'll likely be left wondering will we ever stop, or at very least, will Joe.Reply
- Shot in a raw but well-developed vérité style, the documentary swerves neatly from Carman's high-adrenaline matches to him goofing off with his kids to the dark and violent people in his life (his father, his coach) who influence the choices he makes.Reply
- Thanks to the extraordinary access Joe and his family granted to Unay, the pain comes through seemingly unfiltered. The anguish is so raw and the sorrow so intense that the viewer feels like a voyeur.Reply
- Though it may leave audiences with a fair number of questions unanswered, "The Cage Fighter" is engrossing and notably well-packaged within its limitations.Reply
-
- spare and brutal documentary... an unflinching portrait of a man finding himself in the ring.Reply
- Carman may initially seem like an "average Joe," but both he and this thoughtful film contain multitudes.Reply
- Although it's a documentary, The Cage Fighter teems with characters that are familiar from fictional tales.Reply
- At just 81 minutes, "The Cage Fighter" has been whittled down to its fighting weight, trimmed of every ounce of fat.Reply
- "The Cage Fighter" is hardly epic in scope or originality, but it is uncommon to watch this degree of open self-flagellation on screen.Reply
- The Cage Fighter isn't sentimental about the notion of an aging sports hero who needs one more day in the proverbial sun, recognizing that desire as macho folly.Reply
-
- There's nothing particularly groundbreaking about "The Cage Fighter," a competent work of non-fiction filmmaking that doesn't veer in any surprising directions, but it's an impressive consolidation of several cinematic traditions.Reply