Ringside (1949) Poster

(1949)

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6/10
Tales from the Ring
sol121816 May 2008
(There are Spoilers) The movie "Ringside" is very similar to the 1940 boxing drama "City of Conquest" in it having two brothers with totally opposite vocations.

Joe O'Hara, Tom Brown, is a professional prizefighter who takes his profession of beating his opponent into submission as part of the job even if it, in reverse, happens to him. Joe's brother Mike, Don "Red" Barry, who had since quit the ring and became an up and coming concert pianist takes again up boxing after Joe was blinded in a bout with Middleweight Champion Tiger Johnson, John I Cason. Both thirsting for revenge as well as make enough money for his brother to get an eye operation to restore his sight Mike enters the boxing ring with the pseudonym Kid Cobra.

Running up a winning streak of 19 straight victories Mike makes sure that he doesn't knock out his opponents opting to win on points to give everyone, including Tiger Johnson, the impression that he has cream-puffs in his gloves not hands of stone. It's when Mike gets his title shot at the Middleweight Crown that he plans to use his fists to punish and pulverize the unsuspecting Tiger Johnson for what he did to his brother Joe. We also have Mike falling in love with his brother's girlfriend and fiancée Janet, Sheila Ryan, while Joe is laid up blind in his left eye in the hospital.

With the Middleweight Title now on the line Mike's secret identity is exposed by boxing gambler and tipster Swinger Markham, Tony Canzoneri. It was Markham who also tipped off Tiger Johnson's handlers that Joe had an injurer left eye which Johnson took full advantage of in his defense of his hard won title. This news of Kid Cobra's true identity brings Mike's brother Joe rushing from his hospital bed to the boxing arena to plead with him not to kill or seriously injure Tiger Jonhnson for his or anyone else's sake.

Even though Mike was supposed to be the sensitive and non-violent, in him being a musician, type he developed a vicious hatred to the point of killing someone in his attempt to avenge his brother. Joe being in the boxing business, from the point of taking and giving punches, had a far more honest feeling about what Tiger Johnson did to him. Being in the ring to win you have to be able to take as well as give punches and it's up to the referee the ring doctor or the fighter's, who's being badly beaten, handlers or even the winning fighter himself to have the fight stopped.

By grudgingly following his brother's Joe's advice Mike not only became the Middleweight Champion of the World but was thus able to pay for Joe's eye operation. Mike was also able to live with himself in not killing or seriously injuring an opponent in the ring which would haunted him , if not right away but later, for the rest of his life.

P.S "Ringside" also featured the former 1930's Lightwieght Champion of the World Tony Canzoneri, looking like a miniature Two Ton Tony Galento, as the "heavy" in the film playing Swinger Markham.
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6/10
Not A Knockout, But A Winner On Points
boblipton14 October 2019
Tom Brown is an aspiring middleweight boxer. His brother, Don 'Red' Barry is an aspiring middleweight..... I mean an aspiring concert pianist. Tom is engaged to Sheila Ryan, the daughter of his manager, Joseph Crehan. Don has been studying under William Edmunds, who admires his command of the piano, but worries he plays without passion. Tom wants the title bout with champion John Cason, so he can marry Sheila and send his brother to study in Europe. When he gets it, however, he not only loses; he's blinded. He had bet everything on the match, so there's no money for an operation, no money to send Don to Europe, no money to marry Sheila. So Don puts his plans on hold and starts boxing, to make enough money for an operation for his brother and to fight Cason.... and do to him what Cason has done to his brother.

It's a Lippert production, so if it sounds like a Poverty Row boxing picture from before the war, that's not surprising. What is surprising is the way B movie director Frank MacDonald makes it an enjoyable feature. Here are all these people who have known each other for decades, and they act like it, taking care of each other, and cracking chestnut jokes that sound lifelike and amusing.

The boxing sequences, which make up half the movie are well shot by Ernest Miller. Cason looks like a mean man who enjoys pummeling his opponents into the ground. He was a well-respected stuntman, but he delivers his lines well. Also excellent as a weaselly little gambler looking to get even with the brothers, and make a few bucks in the process, is Tony Canzoneri. He had been lightweight champion in the early 1930s.

It's certainly not a great movie, but it tells its story efficiently and entertainingly.
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6/10
Shootout At The Boxing Ring Corral!
bsmith55527 April 2020
Warning: Spoilers
"Ringside" is a minor boxing film about the O'Hara brothers, Mike (Don Barry) and Joe (Tom Brown). Mike is an aspiring concert pianist while Joe is a fighter trying to earn enough prize money to finance his brother's career.

Joe is engaged to J.L. Brannigan (Sheila Ryan) the daughter of Joe's manager Oscar Brannigan (Joseph Crehan). Mike is studying under Professor Berger (William Edmonds who sees a promising career in store for him.

Joe rises through the ranks and gets a title fight for the middleweight crown with bruiser Tiger Johnson (John Cason), Johnson learns of a damaged eye on Joe from gangster Swinger Martin (Tony "Edward G." Canzoneri). Johnson blinds Joe in the fight. Mike is devastated and vows to re-enter the ring with a goal to eventually meet Johnson in the ring to avenge his brother.

During his recovery, Joe falls in love with his nurse Joy White (Margia Dean). Mike, fighting under the name of King Cobra falls in love with Joe's fiancé J.T. Anyway, to make a long story short, Mike rises through the middleweight ranks until he earns a title fight with Tiger Johnson and.................

Barry and Cason were long time "B" western actors. This ti,me they put away their six guns in favor of boxing gloves. So it was a "Shootout at the Boxing Ring Corral" with Don "Red" Barry facing down John "Lefty" Cason.
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Weak, uninteresting Boxing pic
lor_16 June 2023
A Lippert movie from 1949, at 68 minutes it seems quite long because the story is uninteresting and completely cornball.

Don Barry plays a pianist who turns boxer to avenge his boxing brother's injury that was intentionally meted out in the ring by a vicious boxer, leaving bro a blind man. While the cliches can lull the viewer into unconsciousness (with no lasting effects) it's no fun at all to watch.

These B-movies of the '40s and '50s at their best were quite entertaining, but that was due to eccentric characterizations (think Elisha Cook Jr.) and plenty of comedy relief. None of that here, a fatal error. And after tons of poorly choreographed fight footage, the ridiculous happy ending, with a moral lesson included, is a real groaner.
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6/10
We Want Tony!
JohnHowardReid10 December 2012
Warning: Spoilers
A flabby remake of "City for Conquest", this made-on-the-cheap boxing drama does have realistic fight scenes but little else to recommend it. Some boring scenes with William Edmunds should have been deleted to improve the pace, and the guy who plays the hood who gives Lyle Talbot some interesting info (Tony Canzoneri, a former world's welterweight boxing champion in the fifth of only six movie appearances), should have been handed much more footage instead. Canzoneri makes a great villain. He has class and charisma, he carries himself well, he wears his clothes with grace and style, he moves like a panther, his voice is crisply insinuating, his acting perfect, so why didn't Hollywood use him in lots more films?
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2/10
Chopin Or Champion
bkoganbing22 May 2011
Ringside is a boxing story from B studio Lippert Productions. It concerns a promising pianist who gives up a career as such to go in the ring and avenge his brother who was blinded during a world middleweight championship bout. The pianist is Don Barry and the blind boxer is Tom Brown.

There is probably so much wrong with this particular boxing film I almost dare not catalog it. Barry has some boxing skills, but while he's fast with feet and hands, he lacks a real punch. He wins all his fights by decision. A punch is something you're born with in the fight game, it can't be acquired with training.

But even worse no concert pianist worthy of the name would dare risk his hands boxing. Both trades require good hands used for vastly different purposes.

Barry has it in his mind revenge, but Brown was a fool to get in the ring. He was told that he had optic nerve damage, but chose to go in anyway. No boxing commission even back then would have sanctioned Brown going in the ring. Fight fans and film fans would have known that back in 1949.

All in all Ringside ranks as one of the worst films on pugilism I've ever seen.
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3/10
Here we go again....it's the Golden Not syndrome!
mark.waltz18 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"Golden Girls" spoofed the entire plot with an episode that had the girls briefly managing a prize fighter in order to help him get into the school of the arts. A decade after the play and successful film version, low budget Lippert studios did their own variation of the plot that had a violin player stepping into the ring after his own brother got the knock out to end all knock outs. Don "Red" Barry is the young hero who picks up where older brother Tom Brown left off, winning the girl (Sheila Ryan) in his efforts to fulfill his own dreams and help his brother recover. It's totally predictable, over-loaded with clichés and filled with lame dialog as it moves down the path of mediocrity. The conclusion where the blind Brown confronts Barry in the middle of a fight over seeking revenge cinches this as one of the silliest films about boxing ever written, especially when compared to such classics as "The Set-Up" and "Body and Soul". The two boxing leads seem way to old to be entering the ring, making the whole thing pedestrian and unbelievable.
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A Boxing Turkey
dougdoepke29 November 2011
Two brothers use their boxing skills to help each other.

I got this turkey in the 3-movie package of Forgotten Noir. Good thing the other two aren't so bad. Reviewer bkoganbing is spot on. The premise is ludicrous, at best. Having tough guy King Cobra (Barry) sashay from the ring to the concert stage requires more than a little stretch.

No need to belabor the cheap sets, the screwball storyline, or the bad photography. Too bad the results don't rise to a campy level. I'm just sorry that two good performers like Barry and Brown are wasted in this misfire. One thing for sure—despite the bad script, they certainly look like brothers.

(In passing— Speaking of brothers, ex- pug Tony Canzoneri {Swinger Martin} could pass for Edward G. Robinson's thuggish brother.)
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