A violent spectacle sport film of the male persuasion, Never Back Down blends faux-relatable sensitivity with extreme violence, resulting a badly paced formula film. This one’s all about the boys. Edited like a music video (lots, lots of montage), Never Back Down has a heart in there somewhere but it’s buried under so many layers of dumbness it’s difficult to get emotionally involved in the film. The plot concerns an angry young man named Jake Tyler (Sean Faris), who has moved to Orlando, Florida from Iowa when the film begins.
In the first 10 minutes Jake is established as walking cornhusk with a precarious emotional trigger. When he is taunted on the field about his alcoholic father, recently killed in a car accident, Jake lashes out violently. He’s just mad at the world, trying desperately to restrain his tendency towards aggression while everything around him is begging to be ripped apart. Matters aren’t helped when Jake discovers that everyone at his new high school knows of his swinging skills thanks to a video posted on the Internet. As it turns out, this Orlando high school has an uncanny preoccupation with unsanctioned brawling.
Fighting, specifically Mixed Martial Arts, is an underground phenomenon here and students gather regularly at parties to watch men, women, and, yes, ex-couples go at each other in a ring of onlookers. Jake is sucked into this world by two cookie cutter characters: new friend Max Cooperman (Evan Peters), a Ron Weasley-goes-skating AV nerd with a modicum of coolness, and button nosed vanilla pop Baja Miller (Amber Heard). After the comely Baja invites Jake to a party, he meets her erstwhile boyfriend, the cruel, bronzed Ryan (Cam Gigandet), de facto champion of the fighting scene.
Jake quickly surmises that the real reason he was invited to the party was to engage in a bloody fight with Ryan. Despite initial hesitations, Jake bites when he hears the familiar jeer; degrading knock out ensues. Through Cooperman, Jake sets into motion the wheels of his revenge by training under Brazilian John Roqua (Djimon Hounsou), a former Mixed Martial Arts fighter who has given up the sport for a secret reason. With a promise of abstaining from fighting outside class, but with the cast-iron goal of duly humiliating Ryan at the upcoming championship beat down, Jake works tirelessly with Roqua while enduring more teasing and egging on at school.
The film plods on, following the familiar hero's journey trajectory, complete with Homeric references for AP Lit points. Jake gets his chance to cry, to shine, to disappoint his mentor, to redeem himself, to finally defeat his demons and to get the girl. A reiteration of this same old story is never unwelcome, but Never Back Down is so thoroughly genre that even the twists are predictable. The performances are as stiff as the dialogue. Hounsou, narrowly escaping “Magical Negro” categorization by shades of a troubled past, is reliably good but his job is mostly to act as a stand in for Jake’s absent father. Yawn.
The one element that could have set the film apart, the spotlight on the Mixed Martial Arts fighting style, gets an unexplained short shrift. According to the press kit, MMA is a phenomenon that’s sweeping the country. I wouldn’t have known this from merely watching the film. Even with this lack of clarity, Never Back Down does deliver on a promise of a lot of gory action. The violence is lovingly rendered here, with ribbons of spit and blood flying out across the screen in slow-mo every time the hero gets punched in the face.
In spite of its declarative title, Never Back Down doesn’t come down on either side of the violence dilemma. Its ultimate message is terminally mixed: Violence is bad except when you just have to teach the antagonist a lesson and the point must be driven home by a humiliating beat down captured for posterity on a thousand iPhones. And inner turmoil! Don’t forget that particularly cherished hallmark of the dick flick. There’s really a lot of muddled commentary to be found here. Explorations of class structure and bored teenage anomie are attempted in Never Back Down, but who wants their social critique served with a garnish of male anguish? You do? Okay, well you’ll like the film then.
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I feel that the film is grossly misrepresented in this review. As a younger viewer, I found the film to be riveting and couldn't take my eyes off the screen. There was never a dull or 'boring' moment. I highly reccomend it to anyone that wants their spirit stirred, or that likes inspirational come from behind films with good action scenes.
...really...i mean...bad bad movie...bad acting...predictable story...and the MMA world was completely misrepresented...the fights...not realistic...strikes glorified for some slo mo blood...real fights end on the ground...its about skill...and as a fighter...im very disappointed...all this will do is spawn a bunch of angry teen street fighters...ignorant to the fact that techique is more important...so...
This has got to be one of my favorites, if not my favorite. It's funny and filled with action, great music, babes, Inspiration, determination, . what more? Mariana McConnell needs to go review movies more her type like, pooh bear or perhaps go color with dora.
Way too harsh on the review here. It sounds to me like it's not your type of movie genre. If you like action flicks, I would go hit this one up if I were you, granted there isn't any great plot twists or anything but why would you go to a movie about mixed martial arts in high school for plot twists? Anyways lighten up a bit on the criticism.
I am a 39 year old single mother of two teenaged boys 19 & 16, I took them to see this movie as my older son is getting involved in mixed martial arts training and we have been watching alot of mma fights together on tv and I really enjoyed this movie, obviously if you dont like mma you won't like this movie so why review it.
OI...you must not have watched the same movie I did. In the BEATDOWN I am pretty sure all of Jake's wins came from submission ON THE GROUND. And not all REAL fights are on the ground. Take Stephan Bonnar and Forrest Griffin. One of the greatest fights in all of the UFC. That fight went to the ground maybe twice the whole fight. When watching MMA most of the viewers want to see the loser get knocked out by an amazing punch. They want to see his body become limp and fold its way to the mat.
So I think this movie did a good job of grabbing the attention of its viewers. Also, I think OI is an idiot.
first of all, i want to start by saying that this was a genuinely good movie and entertaining. not to mention filled with much appreciated eye candy. but Crooked, (cool name btw) you are seriously disturbed if you think Amber Heard is fat. She was gorgeous in that movie b/c she was not anorexic. It is people like you who continue to perpetuate this impossibly unhealthy standard of Hollywood beauty and am appalled by it. Eating Disorders are awful and you seem to want to breed them, so thank you for continuing this unhealthy stereotype.
This movie is an awesome movie, it had me on the edge of my seat the whole time. the peer reviews for this move bring out the true side of it. It has all the things you need in a great movie, good looking girls, fighting, beatings, its got it all. i give this movie a 10/10
Well i am a jiujitsu fighter and i must say the ground fight were not realistic enough. yes of course ther ewas alot submissions and it is one of the only movies ive seen with streetfighters fighting on the ground, but i mean sometimes just a simple beginner move couldve done the job and then he does an amazing advanced armbar...yes yes not alot of people know of ground fights and submissions but i mean when you got the guy in a perfect armbar like one guy had at a moment and the other seems beatten sudently does a backflip to escape i find it not representative of what real ground fighting is at least for the level thoses guys were supose to be in the story.(trained with gracies and won vale tudo...)
Well i want to start by saying that i don't know if the fights look real or not, but i liked this movie because it shows real emotions that teens have. Im not a teen anymore but I know alot of them that are always angry at the world so this movie shows that extra activities do help maybe its not fighting but they can get into music classes or dance..But aside from that the movie was so good...so if that means that I like dick flicks so be it...mariana
ok i just went to see this movie and what is wrong with people today.... how do u make the world of mma into a teen drama movie... ridiculous... buddy almost kills u and u give him the i respect u look lol doesnt make sense... and they ripped off sooo many movies like rocky when their running on the peer or whatever it was and then the love story well that basicly rips off every teen movie out there lol so why doesnt he play football anymore? how did his dad actually die we never see the accident.... and who the hell is buddies dad that everyones afraid of... this movie was a waste or reel film... overall i wasted my money on seeing this movie...
Al you really don't have to see the accident to know what happend, he got in an accident jake explains it in the movie. My guess is you went to see this movie already disappointed with it, people like you piss me off, and with you saying they ripped off so many movies, what movie now a days doesn't? but to tell you the truth a lot of teens are doing MMA now, and whether they are getting into brutal fights or not is totally up to them, personally one of my friends does MMA and he came to school looking like he got the crap kicked out of him. and for the guy complaining about them being able to get out of an advanced armbar, it's a movie, I know how near impossible it is, but once again a movie. Overall I thought it was a really good movie, good action scenes a lot of the fighting was done well, of course they could have done better but once again your not gonna go full on in a movie, one you could injure someone pretty bad and it's just not necessary.....so skip your trash mariana, go review some chik flik
We thought i was a fantastic movie...we dont know alot about the fightin on the ground thing you guys are talking about but if you were the type of person that doesnt have experience with the whole "right fighting skills" you wouldnt even notice...we thought it looked realistic. also it had some sick moves lol...really cool!!...and we also liked the storyline behind it. It is a conflict or inside feeling that anyone could get. and about his dad dieing anybody can have that happen to them...at any moment. Overall that is one of our favorite movies and that we are going to get it when it comes out on DVD!!! cant wait... anywho thanx for letting us review the movie!! GREAT MOVIE!!
this movie kicked ass!!! as a young man , this movie gets your heart pumping and wanting to be in jake's shoes. this is definitly a great inspirational movie. i personally do mixed martial arts and this was a good movie 2 connect too. so for all you old fat losers that talk about movies all day. go screw yourself with your lame ratings. you guys seriously need to stop drinking hatorade and get laid. because this movie rocked!!!
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March 15th, 2008 at 23:29
I feel that the film is grossly misrepresented in this review. As a younger viewer, I found the film to be riveting and couldn't take my eyes off the screen. There was never a dull or 'boring' moment. I highly reccomend it to anyone that wants their spirit stirred, or that likes inspirational come from behind films with good action scenes.