Bleed for This
Bleed for This (2016)

Bleed for This

1/5
(25 votes)
6.8IMDb

Details

Cast

Awards

Irish Film and Television Awards 2017


IFTA Award
Best Actor in a Supporting Role - Film

Washington West Film Festival 2016


Festival Prize
Film of the Year Award

Box Office

DateAreaGross
2 December 2016 USA USD 4,847,865
19 March 2017 Italy EUR 420,698
DateAreaGrossScreens
18 November 2016 USA USD 2,366,810 1549
12 March 2017 Italy EUR 257,518 152
DateAreaGrossScreens
19 March 2017 Italy EUR 87,423 84

Keywords

Reviews

I rated this movie as a 7, but I give it 8 for the first hour and 6 for the rest of the movie. The last hour could have had a better plot and focus more on the struggles of Pazienza.

"Bleed for This" is a Biography - Sport movie in which we watch the real-life story of World Champion Boxer Vinny Pazienza. While a World Champion Boxer had a near fatal car crash from which it wasn't certain whether he would ever walk again or not.

Ben younger is a terrible director, allowing directorial slip ups that bring you right out of the movie. Everyone's accent is bad.

This film should have all the ingredients for a rousing boxing biography, but a couple critical ones are missing: character and conflict. It has a great cast but very little introspection.

Well acted Movie, wasnt sure at the beginning what kind of movie would turn out to be but by the end felt was really well done. Nothing over the top so if Rocky is your style of boxing movie you may not love this.

This is a biopic of boxer Vinny Pazienza. He's an obsessed gambler.

If it wasn't based on a true story, the saga of boxer Vinny Pacienza would be hard to believe. Suffering a broken neck in a near fatal car accident, the World Lightweight Boxing Champion spends three months recovering with a primitive looking 'Halo' device screwed into his head to impede mobility.

This movie has to be one of my new favorite boxing movies. Miles Teller and the guy who played Harvey Dent are amazing together.

This is another in a list of fine performances by Miles Teller, who was so good in last year's "Whiplash." Here he captures the ego of Pazienza perfectly, making a man whose boasting should make him unlikable actually become someone to care about.

Comments