Undisputed

2002

Action / Crime / Drama / Sport

88
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 49% · 107 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 46% · 5K ratings
IMDb Rating 6.1/10 10 34369 34.4K

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Plot summary

Monroe Hutchens is the heavyweight champion of Sweetwater, a maximum security prison. He was convicted to a life sentence due to a passionate crime. Iceman Chambers is the heavyweight champion, who lost his title due to a rape conviction to ten years in Sweetwater. WHen these two giants collide in the same prison, they fight against each other disputing who is the real champion.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
June 06, 2016 at 04:07 AM

Director

Top cast

Fisher Stevens as James 'Ratbag' Kroycek
Michael Rooker as A.J. Mercker
Jon Seda as Jesus 'Chuy' Campos
Wesley Snipes as Monroe Hutchen
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
697.92 MB
1280*534
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 34 min
Seeds 21
1.43 GB
1920*800
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 34 min
Seeds 28

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by michaelRokeefe 6 / 10

When does a champ become the challenger?

Outstanding movie with prison combined with boxing. A heavyweight title holder(Ving Rhames)is sent to Sweetwater Prison on a rape charge. It doesn't take long for the movers and shakers to set up a match with the champ and the prison champ(Wesley Snipes). A battle of undisputed undefeated. Very good fight scenes and you almost feel the sweat. A little slow at times, but the big showdown is all worth it. It is obvious Snipes and Rhames worked hard to pull this off. Peter Falk plays a vulgar mouthed resident gangster that thinks he rules the prison. Also in the cast are: Fisher Stevens, Wes Studi and Michael Rooker. This one goes the distance.

Reviewed by Leofwine_draca 5 / 10

Boxer vs boxer in tough prison fighting drama

A prison drama mixed with ROCKY is the basic premise of this unusual but entertaining little movie, brought to us by Walter Hill, a director with a track record of making "man's man" type films. It's as tough as you'd imagine, set within a men's prison inhabited by grizzled veterans (Wes Studi and a delightfully foul-mouthed Peter Falk), hard-ass guards (the underrated Michael Rooker) and various other familiar faces such as Jon Seda and Fisher Stevens.

However, this is merely the backdrop. The thrust of the film lies within the world of boxing, and the story carefully pits two very different fighters against each other. An action film this isn't; it's all about the gradual build-up to a single bout, a win-all/lose-all fight to the finish that means the world for both of the participants. Of the pair, Ving Rhames bags the larger-than-life character, a man who turns out to be little more than a glorified thug; Wesley Snipes gets to be solemn and proud, a real departure from his usual tough guy routines, and he makes the film. I won't spoil the outcome, needless to say it pays off nicely.

Reviewed by Woodyanders 8 / 10

A taut and absorbing prison boxing winner

Arrogant, brutish, but smart and formidable heavyweight boxing champion George "Iceman" Chambers (superbly played with swaggering brio by Ving Rhames) gets sent to prison on a rape charge. While in jail Chambers encounters modest, yet agile and fearsome reigning inmate champ Monroe Hutchen (a nicely understated performance by Wesley Snipes). Wily mobster Emmanuel "Mendy" Ripstein (an excellent portrayal by Peter Falk) sets it up so Chambers and Hutchen can find out who's really the best in a major high stakes fight. Director Walter Hill, who also co-wrote the lean, compelling, and intelligent script with David Giler, brings a tremendous amount of flashy style and invigorating burning energy to the absorbing narrative: the brisk pace rarely lets up for a minute, there's no filler to speak of, the tone is appropriately hard and no-nonsense, and the big match with Rhames' savage strength pitted against Snipes' lithe speed is extremely fierce, gripping, and exciting. Moreover, there's a welcome and refreshing moral complexity to the neatly contrasting main characters: Although a convicted murderer, Hutchen's low-key and reserved philosophical nature makes him likable while Chambers' raging ego and cockiness ensures that he's hateful and unappealing throughout. The first-rate supporting cast helps a lot: Michael Rooker as sympathetic head guard A.J. Rooker, Wes Studi as Chambers' obsequious cellmate Mingo Pace, Jon Seda as Ripstein's loyal caretaker Jesus "Chay" Campos, Fisher Stevens as the weaselly James "Ratbag" Kroycek, and Dayton Callie as Chambers' cagey manager Yank Lewis. Rhames and Snipes, both of whom are in exceptional ripped shape, make for thoroughly plausible fighters. Lloyd Ahern II's glossy cinematography, Stanley Clarke's moody score, and the rousing rap soundtrack are all up to par. Well worth seeing.

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