Parents' Guide to

Southpaw

By S. Jhoanna Robledo, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 16+

Deeply moving drama about boxing, life has brutal violence.

Movie R 2015 123 minutes
Southpaw Poster Image

A Lot or a Little?

What you will—and won't—find in this movie.

Community Reviews

age 9+

Based on 3 parent reviews

age 8+

The butt review

It is not bad for kids who can handle the violence and rude content. This is a great emotional action movie good for kids 8 and up.
age 10+

great for kids

its perfect for kids who are not disturbed with violence it is emotional and appropriate

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (3 ):
Kids say (13 ):

Far from original, SOUTHPAW ticks off every boxing film standard: Everyman fighter, ultra-supportive wife, Phoenix-rising-from-the-ashes story line culminating in the fight of the century. Southpaw even features a hard-driving hip-hop soundtrack that meshes perfectly with jump-roping scenes and footwork-and-punching practice -- shot beautifully by director Antoine Fuqua -- and the requisite encouraging speech that inspires one man to dig deep for one last shot at redemption. They're all part of this movie, and we've seen them all before.

And yet Southpaw is a tour-de-force, thanks in large part to outstanding performances from the cast, most notably an utterly transformed Gyllenhaal. He's ferocious and vulnerable and believable, sometimes all at once. See the movie for Gyllenhaal alone, though it helps that nearly all of his co-stars are also in fine form. He and McAdams share a great chemistry, and he clicks with Whitaker, too -- a crucial element in this genre. When the coach and his chastened pupil go to battle in Las Vegas for what may be the biggest fight of Billy's life, we want to be there with them to witness it all, even if we already know what will happen next.

Movie Details

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