For decades, boxing movies have punched above their weight. Think of the rawness of Raging Bull or the modern, muscular Creed franchise. All the preparation and pageantry that goes into being a prizefighter seems to lend itself to the big screen, offering visual spectacle, clearly defined emotional stakes and character conflict made very literal. Perhaps that’s why acting heavyweights like Robert De Niro, Russell Crowe and Daniel Day-Lewis have all embodied pugilists in the cinematic ring.
What if you prefer Big Daddy splashes and Boston crabs to left hooks and straight jabs? The historical dominance of boxing movies means that films about wrestling are rarely viewed as serious contenders. Put aside Mickey Rourke’s meaty 2008 comeback vehicle The Wrestler and they trend towards comedy, like Jack Black’s Mexican luchador fable Nacho Libre or fun WWE underdog tale Fighting with My Family.
But the past six months has seen a cluster of three wrestling-themed films that are surprising, artful and moving. Perhaps the most thought-provoking is Opponent, arriving in UK cinemas next week. It is about as far from the spandex circus of WWE as you can get, following an Iranian couple and their two young daughters in snowy Scandinavia. They fled Iran because head of the family Iman (Payman Maadi) – a veteran Greco-Roman wrestler with Olympic experience – found himself targeted by the police.
Holed up in a cramped refugee centre near the Swedish-Finnish border, the family try and navigate the immigration system. Perhaps it would help their asylum appeal if Iman tried out for the Swedish national wrestling team? But the sweaty, straining intimacies of the sport are what got him into trouble in the first place.
Powered by Maadi’s stoic but multi-layered performance, Opponent is a powerful immigration drama that alternates between harsh realism and something more dreamlike while slowly constricting its grip like a python. The result is suitably dizzying.
- We started as a boxing gym – now we’re a whole community
- Paul Bullion on The Witcher’s new character Lambert – and arm wrestling Henry Cavill
There is a little more razzamatazz in The Iron Claw, based on the true story of a Texan wrestling dynasty – notably hunky young brothers Zac Efron, Harris Dickinson and The Bear’s Jeremy Allen White – as their tough-as-boots father Fritz Von Erich (Holt McCallany) pushes them towards the world championship belt that eluded him during his own career.