World in My Corner

World in My Corner
Directed byJesse Hibbs
Screenplay byJack Sher
Story byJack Sher
Joseph Stone
Produced byAaron Rosenberg
StarringAudie Murphy
Barbara Rush
Jeff Morrow
CinematographyMaury Gertsman
Edited byMilton Carruth
Music byJoseph Gershenson
Color processBlack and white
Production
company
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • February 17, 1956 (1956-02-17) (United States)
Running time
82 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

World in My Corner is a 1956 American film noir drama sports film directed by Jesse Hibbs and starring Audie Murphy, Barbara Rush and Jeff Morrow. The film was produced and distributed by Universal Pictures. It is one of the few non-Western films in which Murphy appeared.[1]

Plot

Tommy Shea, a boxer from Jersey City, is sponsored by millionaire Robert Mallinson. He falls for Mallinson's daughter Dorothy, who wants freedom from her father's controlling ways and to pursue her writing career. In order to acquire enough money to begin his life with Dorothy, Tommy begins to work for crooked fight promoter Harry Cram. This causes conflict with his honest manager, Dave Bernstein. As his big fight approaches, Tommy is torn about what he should do.

Cast

Production

The film was Murphy's first following the tremendous box-office success of To Hell and Back (1955), a film with the same producer and director as for World in My Corner. Murphy fights with several real-life boxers on screen, including Chico Vejar, Art Aragon and Cisco Andrade.[6][7] Andrade later praised Murphy as being "the first actor I ever saw who wasn't afraid of getting hit hard in a prize fight scene."[8]

Reception

In a contemporary review for The New York Times, critic Milton Esterow wrote: "The prizefighters on the Palace screen are getting thinner. The Palace ring dramas aren't putting on any weight, either. The theatre's last fight film was about a middleweight (160 pounds). Yesterday's offering, 'World in My Corner," concerns a welterweight (147 pounds). ... Universal-International keeps the leather flying with the aid of a gent named Chico Vejar, who has been in the ring for real. But please, U-I, hang up the gloves and toss in the towel for a while. We're getting a little punchy."[9]

According to Murphy's biographer, the film "didn't do anything at the box office".[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ World in My Corner at Audie Murphy Memorial Site
  2. ^ "BoxRec: Chico Vejar".
  3. ^ "Carving Out a Career as a Hollywood Ex-Wife". Los Angeles Times. 23 August 1987.
  4. ^ "BoxRec: Cisco Andrade".
  5. ^ "BoxRec: Tommy Hart".
  6. ^ "Audie Murphy's a Prize Fighter in New Loop Movie". Chicago Daily Tribune. Mar 11, 1956. p. j11.
  7. ^ "Dick Wagner, 'I Was on Top of the World Then; I Was King Kong': Cisco Kid: Contender Who Was Never Quite Champ'". Los Angeles Times. Apr 7, 1985. p. sg5.
  8. ^ a b Don Graham, No Name on the Bullet, N.Y.: Viking, 1989 p263
  9. ^ Esterow, Milton (1956-02-18). "Screen: 'World in My Corner' Opens at Palace". The New York Times. p. 12.