
Believe in hope.
Billy "The Great" Hope, the reigning junior middleweight boxing champion, has an impressive career, a loving wife and daughter, and a lavish lifestyle. However, when tragedy strikes, Billy hits rock bottom, losing his family, his house and his manager. He soon finds an unlikely savior in Tick Willis, a former fighter who trains the city's toughest amateur boxers. With his future on the line, Hope fights to reclaim the trust of those he loves the most.
- 7.4
- 2015
- Released
- 2h 3m

Jake Gyllenhaal
Billy 'The Great' Hope
Rachel McAdams
Maureen Hope
Forest Whitaker
Titus 'Tick' Wills
Oona Laurence
Leila Hope
50 Cent
Jordan Mains
Skylan Brooks
Hoppy
Naomie Harris
Angela Rivera
Victor Ortiz
Ramone
Beau Knapp
Jon Jon
Miguel Gómez
Miguel 'Magic' Escobar
Dominic Colón
Mikey
Jose Caraballo
Eli Frost
Malcolm M. Mays
Gabe
Aaron Quattrocchi
Keith 'Buzzsaw' Brady
Lana Young
Gloria
Danny Henriquez
Hector Escobar
Patsy Meck
Judge Kayle
Vito Grassi
Nick
Tony Weeks
Referee
Jimmy Lennon Jr.
Jimmy Lennon Jr.
Charles Hoyes
Stuart Korman
Clare Foley
Alice
Rita Ora
Maria Escobar
Jim Lampley
Himself
Adam Kroloff
Simon Stillman
Joe Fishel
Gala Attendee
Michelle Johnston
Mrs. Doyle
Jackson Nunn
Book Vendor (uncredited)
Released
en
$30,000,000.00
$91,709,827.00
- #sports
- #fighter
- #tragedy
- #death
- #boxing
- #box ring
- #father daughter relationship
Reviews

As far as boxing sport movies goes Southpaw isn't a film to remember, but the whole aspect of a criminal being made a successful man because of his wife/daughter, people in his life the MC deemed to fight for, added that one drama notch to get you all goose bumped. Regardless, as far as boxing goes, these fights weren't doing it for me as a boxing sport fanatic and practitioner myself. They wer

I can handle the rules, man, I'll handle the rules. Ultimately this is just another one of those sports movies about someone who went off the rails due to tragedy, but came back to make the audience cheer. There is absolutely nothing new here, every cliché is adhered to, every chance to tug the heart strings is prominent, while the finale is as obvious as any one who watches sports movies will
Rachel McAdams, Forest Whitaker and, specially, Jake Gyllenhaal show us how good of an actors they are. Also, we discover the great performance by Oona Laurence but that's the(one and only) big strength of the movie; its cast. The story is the one told a thousand times without many new details that would make it any different. The directing is correct but the story is just too well known.











