| African American Drama
 Classics
 Crime & Criminals
 Cult Classics
 Family Life
 Gay & Lesbian
 General
 Love & Romance
 Military & War
 Murder & Mayhem
 Period Piece
 Religion
 Sports
 Television
 
 | 
    | | |  | Fat City |  | List Price: $19.94 Your Price: $17.95
 |  | 
 |  |  |  | 
| Product Info | Reviews |  | Features:
 
 ColorClosed-captionedWidescreen
 
 Description:
 
 Jeff Bridges stars as an amateur boxer on a brief rise who catches the eye of an aging pugilist (Stacy Keach) heading downward in this 1972 film by John Huston and based on the novel by  Leonard Gardner. Keach becomes the younger man's mentor, and the two hit central California's tanktown circuit of small matches for small money, interspersed with visits to smoke-filled bars and hellish gyms. Theirs is a cut-rate dream, all right, but as real and driving--and finally just as punishing--as the mythical black bird itself in Huston's The Maltese Falcon. The cast is outstanding, the cinematography by  Conrad Hall stunning, and the climax one of Huston's most painfully memorable. The story is filled out by surrounding detail that never leaves the memory: boxers and trainers who whisper of injuries that could put them out of business for good; a lone fighter who takes a bus into town, bides time in a crummy motel room, takes a beating in the ring, then leaves on the next bus with a few dollars in his pocket. This film helped re-establish Huston's reputation as a major filmmaker. It was followed by the likes of The Man Who Would Be King. --Tom Keogh
 | 
 | 
 | 
 |