The Prize Fighter (1979) Online
A mobster tricks an ex-boxer and his manager to take part in a series of (fixed) fights as part of a scheme to get his hands on an old boxing gym.
Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
Tim Conway | - | Bags | |
Don Knotts | - | Shake | |
David Wayne | - | Pop Morgan | |
Robin Clarke | - | Mike | |
Cisse Cameron | - | Polly | |
Mary Ellen O'Neill | - | Mama | |
Michael LaGuardia | - | The Butcher | |
George Nutting | - | Timmy | |
Irwin Keyes | - | Flower | |
John Myhers | - | Doyle | |
Bill Ash | - | Towel Man | |
Joan Benedict Steiger | - | Dori (as Joan Benedict) | |
Merle G. Cain | - | Bumper | |
Holly Conover | - | Judy | |
Alfred E. Covington | - | Ring Announcer |
Part of a cycle of ring fighter movies, mostly boxing, some wrestling, initiated by the box-office and critical success of the Academy Award Best Picture winning boxing movie Rocky (1976). The films include Rocky II (1979), Rocky III - Das Auge des Tigers (1982), Rocky IV - Der Kampf des Jahrhunderts (1985), Der Fighter (1983), Title Shot - Der Killer lauert am Ring (1979), Wie ein wilder Stier (1980), Der Champ (1979), Mathilda... schlägt alle K.O. (1978), Was, du willst nicht? (1979), The Prize Fighter (1979), Ich bin der Grösste (1977), Body and Soul (1981), Vorhof zum Paradies (1978), Kesse Bienen auf der Matte (1981) (aka "The California Dolls"), Das charmante Großmaul (1978), Der Mann aus San Fernando (1978) and Mit Vollgas nach San Fernando (1980).
The Prize Fighter (1979) national publicist C. W. Henderson received a top public relations industry award for placing over 100 newspaper and magazine articles about a single scene in this feature film; he placed more than 150 stories in the nation's newspapers and magazines about the filming of a segment of the movie that depicts a world championship boxing match, according to The Atlanta Journal and The Atlanta Constitution of July 4, 1979; The Prize Fighter was filmed in Georgia.
Bags Collins' boxing record before coming out of retirement was 0-20. All of his losses were by KO.
The scene in which Don Knotts' character, Shake, cracks five eggs into a glass on top of a refrigerator is a spoof of the egg cracking scene in Rocky. In Rocky (1976), Rocky Balboa cracks five eggs into a glass on top of a refrigerator. During the process, he is constantly sniffing and exhaling. In this scene, Don Knotts also constantly sniffs and exhales, but does so in a very exaggerated and comedic fashion.
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