Boxer Matty Burton suffers a serious head injury during a fight. This is the story about the impact on his marriage, his life, and his family.Boxer Matty Burton suffers a serious head injury during a fight. This is the story about the impact on his marriage, his life, and his family.Boxer Matty Burton suffers a serious head injury during a fight. This is the story about the impact on his marriage, his life, and his family.
- Awards
- 7 nominations total
Lexie Duffy
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- (as Lexi Duffy)
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Featured reviews
This is a beautiful film - peppered with moments of humour and breathtaking moments of shock. The use of music is inspiring (Nick Cave amongst the most wrenching) and Considine is a thoughtful and innovative director. I was fortunate enough to be at the screening where he attended for a Q&A and he spoke about the set being the actors' house and how they all feel comfortable and safe. And it shows. Jodie Whittaker is striking in her performance and all the supporting cast shine rather than simply be there. It is a shame that Paddy doesn't get the recognition he deserves. He spoke about turning up for films where he was disappointed in his part and the people he was working with - he is "in films for five pages" whilst we get the Hiddlestons and Redmaynes shoved at us. We should focus on the Paddy Considines and Stephen Grahams a lot more. A lovely, thoughtful and ultimately very moving story beautifully played out by craftsmen.
One of the most consistent and consistently underrated talents working in the industry today, British gun actor/filmmaker Paddy Considine has taken his time to step behind the director's chair again after his heart wrenching debut Tyrannosaur from 2011 but Journeyman re-establishes the fact that Considine is a force behind and in-front of the camera.
Not as powerful as Tyrannosaur or as unique, with Journeyman feeling a little more like well-trodden ground, Considine's film is still a great showcase for its lead performers in the form of Considine as champion boxer turned debilitated husband Matty Burton and Dr. Who herself Jodie Whittaker as Burton's caring but concerned wife Emma.
A boxing drama that barely spends any time in the ring, viewers should understand that Considine isn't concerned about following the general boxing movie tropes as he instead draws his focus away from the arena as we follow Burton on his journey to recovery after he suffers significant brain trauma in a title fight, ensuring the strain on his relationship with Emma and his friends is tested more than ever before.
Journeyman is a quiet affair, there's not much grandstanding or cinematic flair on offer and while it would've been nice for Considine to shake-up the familiar formula more often, the film is clearly the work of a performer that knows and understands his craft and remains in tune with the human intricacies that more polished and large-scale films can often lose sight of.
Considine himself is great as the determined, flawed and broken Burton while Whittaker takes a backseat to Considine's powerful turn, she to shows great heart and depth in her role, with the two top quality actors working magic when they get to share the screen together.
After Tyrannosaur and now this, it's safe to say Considine is a fine director of actors and should he continue to attract the type of talent to his productions as he has, it's an exciting fans for film fans the world to see what he has in store for us next.
Final Say -
It never punches above its weight class but Journeyman is another fine effort from one of the industry's most underappreciated talents, a boxing film with a different goal than the usual affair, Journeyman is well worth tracking down.
3 washing machines out of 5
Not as powerful as Tyrannosaur or as unique, with Journeyman feeling a little more like well-trodden ground, Considine's film is still a great showcase for its lead performers in the form of Considine as champion boxer turned debilitated husband Matty Burton and Dr. Who herself Jodie Whittaker as Burton's caring but concerned wife Emma.
A boxing drama that barely spends any time in the ring, viewers should understand that Considine isn't concerned about following the general boxing movie tropes as he instead draws his focus away from the arena as we follow Burton on his journey to recovery after he suffers significant brain trauma in a title fight, ensuring the strain on his relationship with Emma and his friends is tested more than ever before.
Journeyman is a quiet affair, there's not much grandstanding or cinematic flair on offer and while it would've been nice for Considine to shake-up the familiar formula more often, the film is clearly the work of a performer that knows and understands his craft and remains in tune with the human intricacies that more polished and large-scale films can often lose sight of.
Considine himself is great as the determined, flawed and broken Burton while Whittaker takes a backseat to Considine's powerful turn, she to shows great heart and depth in her role, with the two top quality actors working magic when they get to share the screen together.
After Tyrannosaur and now this, it's safe to say Considine is a fine director of actors and should he continue to attract the type of talent to his productions as he has, it's an exciting fans for film fans the world to see what he has in store for us next.
Final Say -
It never punches above its weight class but Journeyman is another fine effort from one of the industry's most underappreciated talents, a boxing film with a different goal than the usual affair, Journeyman is well worth tracking down.
3 washing machines out of 5
To my surprise, 'Journeyman (2018)' isn't so much a typical 'boxing film' as it is an unexpectedly realistic and heart-wrenching examination of how a single, blindsiding moment can change your life, for the worse, forever. It's also an exploration of one of the darker, less emphasised sides of a sport in which the participants consistently receive blows to the head, any one of which could end their careers or, worse, their lives (either as they know them or entirely). The film really is powerful. It's sobering stuff delivered through a phenomenal, award-worthy central performance and an incredibly nuanced, tactile screenplay that never feels heightened or 'Hollywood', instead feeling pretty much 'real' and incredibly raw right the way through. I was totally taken by surprise and on the edge of my seat throughout, watching through gritted teeth and teary eyes. It truly is brilliant, unbelievably compelling work, even if it isn't always easy to sit through. 8/10.
A really different boxing film, so much so that the boxing is barely the focus. Journeyman is very much a drama, not a sports film, as you follow the journey of a professional boxer recovering from a brain injury. It is difficult to watch at times and can get emotional, and this is driven by brilliant performances from the two leads. There isn't a whole lot to the plot, don't be expecting a sudden burst of excitement, but it is a slow build testing the depths of a man and his relationship with his family.
Very moving film brilliantly acted and directed by Paddy Considine.
The story begins with World Champion Matty Burton (Considine) and the build-up to his fight with brash, unbeaten and mouthy prospect Andre Bryte (Anthony Welsh). Supporting Burton is his wife, Emma (amazing Jodie Whittaker), and the two have a young child together. The opening montage establishes Burton's life showing he has everything to fight for including: family, friends, pride, career and community.
After the fight in the ring Considine and Whittaker take centre stage in a deeply moving portrait of a family coming apart due to tragic circumstances. Their performances as two characters battling to stay in love, together and just fighting to keep going is remarkable. There are so many startling scenes and moments which punch and wind you; this story moved me beyond words.
The story begins with World Champion Matty Burton (Considine) and the build-up to his fight with brash, unbeaten and mouthy prospect Andre Bryte (Anthony Welsh). Supporting Burton is his wife, Emma (amazing Jodie Whittaker), and the two have a young child together. The opening montage establishes Burton's life showing he has everything to fight for including: family, friends, pride, career and community.
After the fight in the ring Considine and Whittaker take centre stage in a deeply moving portrait of a family coming apart due to tragic circumstances. Their performances as two characters battling to stay in love, together and just fighting to keep going is remarkable. There are so many startling scenes and moments which punch and wind you; this story moved me beyond words.
Did you know
- TriviaPaddy Considine and some of the crew visited a centre run by UK brain injury charity Headway in 2016 while preparing for and researching the role. Paddy spent time talking to their clients about their lives, both pre and post brain injury in order to grasp how their brain injuries had affected them. In the film, Matty displays some mannerisms that Paddy observed during the visit. They also made a donation of £500 to the charity.
- ConnectionsFeatures The Jeremy Kyle Show (2005)
- SoundtracksShutdown
Performed by Skepta
Licensed courtesy of Boy Better Know
Written by Joseph Adenuga and Daniel Mukungu
Licensed courtesy of Warner Chappell Music Ltd (PRS) and Domino Publishing Co Ltd, (PRS)
- How long is Journeyman?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Джорнимен
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Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $220,353
- Runtime1 hour 32 minutes
- Color
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