Walk Like a Panther (2018)
A group of 1980s wrestlers are forced to don the
lycra once last time when their beloved local pub is threatened with
closure.
Director:
Dan CadanWriter:
Dan CadanStars:
Country:
UKLanguage:
EnglishRelease Date:
9 March 2018 (UK) See more »Also Known As:
Panther See more »Company Credits
Production Co:
The
school of 90s Guy Ritchie is revived in this frankly ordinary British
romp which is a comedy in everything except actually being funny. It’s a
film about wrestlers: wrestlers like Big Daddy, Mick McManus, Les
Kellett and Jackie Pallo, that is, those British grip’n’grapple legends
made famous on 70s television by ITV’s World Of Sport. They are not the
fancy modern American kind, and this film patriotically claims that
unlike the American version, our native British wrestling wasn’t fixed.
(Erm, excuse me?)
Stephen Graham
does his likeable best to give this film some weight and bite playing
Mark Bolton, a Scouse lad who grew up hero-worshipping wrestlers because
his dad was one, part of an iconic group called The Panthers. But his
old man never had any time for him and wouldn’t let him wrestle. He was
effectively brought up by his dad’s mate and wrestling partner Ginger,
played in latter years by Jason Flemyng, and Ginger is to have a
poignant moment involving oranges, like Vito Corleone of old.
Now Mark is grown up, his dad (Dave Johns) is miserable because Brit
wrestling is a thing of the past. But an impromptu bout in their local
pub, The Half-Nelson, goes viral on YouTube and the Panthers are due a
comeback – will there be a redemptive reconciliation between father and
son? It’s a nice enough idea, and Julian Sands is entertainingly bizarre
as a cowboy wrestler dressed all in gold. But the very broad, mugging
performances are a problem, the comedy isn’t great, and it finally gets
bogged down in geezer-sentimentalism about saving community pubs from
the developer.
Thanks for reading and have fun watching movies.
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