The Great White Hype

The Great White Hype

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Reginald Hudlin
Produced by Fred Berner
Joshua Donen
Written by Tony Hendra
Ron Shelton
Starring Samuel L. Jackson
Jeff Goldblum
Damon Wayans
Corbin Bernsen
Peter Berg
Jon Lovitz
Salli Richardson
Jamie Foxx
Cheech Marin
John Rhys-Davies
Music by Marcus Miller
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release dates
May 3, 1996
Running time
91 minutes
Language English
Box office $8,008,255

The Great White Hype is a 1996 film directed by Reginald Hudlin. It stars Samuel L. Jackson, Peter Berg, Damon Wayans, Jeff Goldblum, Jon Lovitz, Cheech Marin, John Rhys-Davies, Salli Richardson and Jamie Foxx.

The movie is a satire of racial preferences in boxing. The name is a play on the title of the 1970 film The Great White Hope, but it is not based on an actual boxing contest. It was inspired by Larry Holmes's 1982 fight with Gerry Cooney and Mike Tyson's 1995 return fight vs. Peter McNeeley.[1]

The film was distributed by 20th Century Fox, which also distributed the earlier film.

Plot

James "The Grim Reaper" Roper (Damon Wayans), the undefeated heavyweight boxing champ of the world, defeats his latest challenger with ease and visits an after-party thrown by the Rev. Fred Sultan (Samuel L. Jackson), a conniving and manipulative businessman who also acts as Roper's fight promoter. The Sultan relays some bad news to everyone: The fight was a financial flop. He deduces the reason that boxing events have become far less profitable is because audience members are sick of watching only black boxers fight each other. The Sultan predicts that a white contender, even one without a viable chance of winning, would create a huge payday for all involved in the fight (citing the Larry Holmes vs. Gerry Cooney battle in 1982 and the playing of the race card in that instance as a precedent), and he vows to either find or "create" a white contender in no time at all.

After failing to find a white boxer currently in the sport suitable by any means, he discovers that Roper actually lost to a white boxer, Terry Conklin (Peter Berg), back in his amateur days. The Sultan and his unethical crew (which contains actors Cheech Marin, Jon Lovitz, Salli Richardson and Corbin Bernsen) find Conklin in Cleveland, where he fronts a heavy metal band, advocates peace and Buddhism, and constantly preaches progressive social issues. Conklin is uninterested in returning to boxing to face Roper, though he is eventually coaxed through ego-stroking by the Sultan and a promise of $10 million to help his quest in eradicating homelessness.

Conklin arrives in Las Vegas, where he is "cleaned up," and starts to train for his return to the ring. Thanks to shady dealing, Conklin suddenly is named the No. 8 challenger in the world. Boxing pundits (including Bert Sugar who portrays himself in the film) and officials easily see the scam unfolding and label the fight a disgrace. No matter, though, as the prospect of a white vs. black fight appears to be as lucrative as first hoped. Conklin gets in shape quickly, regaining some of his old form, while Roper dismisses the fight as a joke - to the point where he puts on 25 pounds and is barely able to run after an ice cream truck.

Meanwhile, crusading television journalist Mitchell Kane (Jeff Goldblum) has finally gathered enough evidence to disgrace the unethical Sultan, but at the last moment, Kane is seduced by power and joins the Sultan's squad. As the Sultan's ego grows, Kane sees an opportunity to usurp him in power. Though Conklin was never believed to stand a chance in the fight, Kane recognizes that Conklin may actually win, and has Conklin sign with him, rather than the Sultan. Throughout all this, the true top contender to the heavyweight title, Marvin Shabazz (Michael Jace), and his manager Hassan El Ruk'n (Jamie Foxx) are repeatedly denied the rightful chance to a fight, and they proceed to cause a headache for everyone involved in the hype scam.

The Sultan and his crew (using the media) heavily promote the fight and publicize the white vs. black angle, even fabricating an Irish ancestor for Conklin. The racial angle works, and money starts to pour in. On the fight day, millions tune into Pay-Per-View for the fight, and Kane is confident about a new era beginning with a Conklin upset. The fight begins, and Conklin gets in only one good punch before the out-of-shape Roper easily dispatches his foe - which was the plan all along. Conklin quits boxing again; Kane's plan falls short; the Sultan cleans up financially; Roper's critics are silenced; and Shabazz, refusing to wait any longer, attacks the champ inside the ring. As the two fistfight, the Sultan screams to not give away something they can sell.

Shabazz then knocks out Roper during their ongoing melee inside the ring, Sultan then steps over Roper's unconscious body, and promotes the next fight—Shabazz vs Roper.

Cast

Reception

The movie gained mixed reviews.[2][3] It currently holds a 45% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 20 reviews.

Box office

The movie was not a box office success.[4]

Soundtrack

The Great White Hype
Soundtrack album by Various artists
Released April 30, 1996
Recorded 1994-1996
Genre Hip hop, R&B
Label Epic
Producer DJ U-Neek, DJ Premier, RZA, 4th Disciple, Doug Rasheed, P.M. Dawn, Studio Ton, Tik-Takk

A soundtrack containing hip hop music was released on April 30, 1996 by Epic Records. It peaked at 93 on the Billboard 200 and 27 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums. Camp Lo's single "Coolie High" became a minor hit, peaking at 25 on Rap charts.

  1. "Movin' On"- 4:11 (DJ U-Neek)
  2. "Baller's Lady"- 3:42 (E-40 and Passion)
  3. "Shoot 'Em Up"- 5:18 (Bone Thugs-n-Harmony)
  4. "If It's Alright With You"- 3:34 (Cappadonna and U-God)
  5. "Who's the Champion"- 3:42 (Ghostface Killah, RZA and Raekwon)
  6. "Coolie High"- 4:00 (Camp Lo)
  7. "Running Song"- 4:24 (Ambersunshower)
  8. "Knocked Nekked (From the Waist Down)"- 4:35 (Jamie Foxx and Dolemite)
  9. "We Got It"- 3:57 (Premiere)
  10. "I've Got You Under My Skin"- 3:58 (Lou Rawls and Biz Markie)
  11. "Bring the Pain"- 3:17 (Method Man)
  12. "And I Love You"- 4:38 (Marcus Miller)
  13. "Chicken Huntin'"- 3:42 (Insane Clown Posse)

References

  1. "Movies about hip-hop culture". www.IMDb.com. Retrieved 12 November 2014.
  2. "The Great White Hype :: rogerebert.com :: Reviews". Rogerebert.suntimes.com. 1996-05-03. Retrieved 2012-08-20.
  3. JACK MATHEWS (1996-05-03). "MOVIE REVIEW : Underlying Context Gets Ugly in 'Hype' - Los Angeles Times". Articles.latimes.com. Retrieved 2012-08-20.
  4. Brennan, Judy (1996-05-06). "The Craft Has the Knack for Scaring Up an Audience". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-06-03.

External links

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