NEW YORK — The sports movie, like any genre, can easily fall victim to overly familiar story beats. An underdog challenger. A big match. You know how the rest goes.
But a trio of new movies brings some original moves, and a few curveballs, to a genre where tried-and-true formula often reigns supreme. In a movie year that's already given us ''Challengers'' – a tennis movie that has almost nothing to do with tennis and everything to do with the dynamics of a threesome – these movies carve out their own place in the hard knocks world of sports dramas.
Each, curiously enough, is a directorial debut by an industry veteran. And each features, among other fine performances, one of the great standbys of the sports film and the abiding refuge of great character actors: the inspirational coach.
''Day of the Fight''
Jack Huston's ''Day of the Fight,'' currently playing in theaters, stars Michael Pitt as down-and-out middleweight boxer ''Irish'' Mike Flannigan. He is, like some battered boxers before him, seeking redemption. Flannigan's once-promising career was long ago derailed by a fatal drunk driving accident. But on this day, he's preparing for an unlikely opportunity: an undercard bout at Madison Square Garden.
''Day of the Fight'' is loosely based on the 1951 Stanley Kubrick documentary short of the same name, and it's likewise in black and white. Huston, the ''Boardwalk Empire'' actor and grandson to director John Huston, has mulled the movie since watching his ''Boardwalk'' co-star Pitt, the sometimes troubled but always talented actor.
''I had in my head this image of Michael Pitt punching a sandbag when we were on the set of ‘Boardwalk,'" says Huston. "I think his life in a strange way mimics that of a boxer — sometimes the ups, sometimes the downs. Specifically where he is in his life right now, he has the essence of that boxer mentality. He can take a punch but, guess what, he keeps standing up.''
''Day of the Fight'' culminates in the Madison Square Garden match, but the movie is largely about the preamble to the fight. The movie follows Flannigan on a series of poignant errands.