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Boxing Gym: movie review

( Unrated ) ( Monitor Movie Guide )

It's boxing minus all the malarkey in "Boxing Gym," in documentary director Frederick Wiseman's latest.

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Jared Leeds/AP/File
Documentary filmmaker Frederick Wiseman sits in his office in Cambridge, Mass., Jan. 31, 2000. Wiseman's latest film is Boxing Gym.

鈥淏oxing Gym鈥 is the 38th feature by our greatest documentarian, Frederick Wiseman, and his second film about dance in a row. I don鈥檛 mean this entirely facetiously. His last movie, 鈥淟a Danse 鈥 le ballet de l鈥橭p茅ra de Paris,鈥 was one of the rare dance movies where the performers' movements were shown in full instead of being fractured into snippets by pyrotechnical auteurs. Wiseman鈥檚 respect for the integrity of the body is all of a piece with his respect for the integrity of a person, a situation, a mood.

He is the least intrusive of great directors, and 鈥淏oxing Gym,鈥 which is about a gym in Austin, Texas, is so offhandedly observant that, for a while, you may wonder if much of anything is really going on. Wiseman and his longtime cameraman John Davey show us the rituals and banter that play out in this gym, which caters to men, and a few women, from up and down the social ladder. We are so used to boxing movies that heighten the violence that 鈥淏oxing Gym鈥 comes across as a restorative. It鈥檚 a boxing movie minus all the bull that usually goes with it. Grade: A- (Unrated.)

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