Ready to Rumble


Ready to Rumble is a 2000 American buddy sports comedy film directed by Brian Robbins and written by Steven Brill, which is based on Turner Broadcasting System's now defunct professional wrestling promotion, World Championship Wrestling. The film stars David Arquette, Oliver Platt, Scott Caan, Bill Goldberg, Rose McGowan, Diamond Dallas Page, Joe Pantoliano and Martin Landau.
The film draws its title from ring announcer Michael Buffer's catchphrase, "Let's get ready to rumble!", and features many wrestlers from WCW. Ready to Rumble was produced by Bel Air Entertainment, Outlaw Productions and Tollin/Robbins Productions and released by Warner Bros. on April 7, 2000. The film received negative reviews from critics and was a box office bomb, grossing $12.5 million against a $24 million budget.

Plot

Sewage workers Gordie Boggs and Sean Dawkins watch their favorite wrestler, undefeated and undisputed WCW World Heavyweight Champion Jimmy King, get cheated out of the title by Diamond Dallas Page, promoter Titus Sinclair, and DDP's wrestling stable at a Monday Nitro event. After the match, the duo expresses their rage while driving in their septic truck, resulting in a car crash which they survive.
Gordie starts believing that the crash was supposed to happen and that they should make Jimmy King once again the WCW World Heavyweight Champion. Looking for King, they travel to his hometown of Atlanta, hitching a ride from singing nuns with flatulent problems, and find his parents and estranged wife. King's parents tell Gordie and Sean that King borrowed their mobile home and never returned it. During this time, they learn that King's entire wrestling bio was fabricated. The duo later finds King residing in a mobile park. He has completely given up on wrestling, and they provoke him until he attacks them. This attack prompts a change of heart for King, and his passion for wrestling returns.
King, Gordie, and Sean go on a road trip to the next Monday Nitro taping in New York City. Gordie and Sean arrive disguised as septic workers and meet Nitro Girl Sasha. When DDP mocks King on camera, King comes out of the port-a-potty and attacks him. Sinclair then declares a Title vs. Career Steel Cage match for the WCW World Heavyweight Championship plus a $1 million cash prize. Sasha is impressed by Gordie, and they later go to her apartment to have dinner. Sasha attempts to have sex with Gordie, who reacts like it is a wrestling match and pushes her off of him. Gordie sends letters to his father, a police officer who wanted Gordie to follow in his footsteps. Gordie writes that he will not join him in the force and that he lost his virginity.
King is out of shape for the match, so he, Gordie, and Sean head to the residence of retired wrestling legend Sal Bandini, who agrees to be King's trainer. The trio heads to a gym, where King meets his former partner, Bill Goldberg. King asks Goldberg to help in the upcoming match, but Goldberg turns him down, saying that King has no chances of winning. That night, Sid Vicious and Perry Saturn attack Sal and hospitalize him and are injured themselves in the process. At the hospital, Gordie overhears Sasha at a phone booth and learns that she is working as a spy for Sinclair. Realizing their relationship was a sham, Gordie breaks up with her.
The trio head back to Georgia to visit King's wife, who kicks him in the crotch for giving her crabs and abandoning her and their son. The couple eventually reconciles on her porch. King's teenage son then comes out, revealing that he has bad teeth. King vows to win the money and get him a good dentist. As the trio returns to Gordie and Sean's hometown of Lusk, Wyoming, to continue training, they recruit new members to King's wrestling stable, while Gordie's father forces him to abandon his wrestling aspirations and join the police force. Sean and King try to convince Gordie to get out of becoming an officer, but he refuses. He does, however, hold a party for King and wishes him luck in the Steel Cage match, while Sean hooks up with Wendy, a fast-food drive thru employee.
On the night of the match at the Royal Bash Pay-per-view in Las Vegas, King and DDP face off in a 3-layer steel cage with the title belt hanging on a wire at the top, and King is once again outnumbered by DDP's goons, including King's own son. King receives help from Goldberg, Booker T, Billy Kidman, Disco Inferno, Sting, and Gordie, who rides in on a police motorcycle, debuting his new gimmick as "The Law". During the match, Sasha attempts to reconcile with Gordie. King wins the match by dropping DDP from the top of the cage to the floor of the ring and retrieving the belt. As King comes up victorious by regaining the WCW World Heavyweight Championship, Sinclair gets beaten up by Sean and Gordie. Goldberg later asks King to re-team with him, but announces his new partner will be Gordie, and their manager will be Sean "Suga Daddy" Dawkins.
Sean later tells the local kids "dreams can come true" at a convenience store, where Gordie, Goldberg, and King teach the clerk a lesson for being mean to kids by hurling him out on the street. The heroes then ride off in a limousine, together with a fully-recovered Sal, in a hot tub with two of the Nitro Girls.

Cast

The character of Sal Bandini is based on wrestlers Lou Thesz and Stu Hart. Oliver Platt accidentally struck Randy Savage in the face during the filming of a fantasy scene. The footage of the incident, which was shot over Savage's shoulder, can be seen in the blooper reel shown during the closing credits. Chris Kanyon was Platt's stunt double, and Shane Helms was David Arquette's stunt double. The character of Titus Sinclair is based on WCW President and Executive Producer Eric Bischoff, who was originally planned to star in this movie as a fictionalized version of himself, but was fired from WCW before filming began.

Publicity

Following the release of the movie, WCW decided to generate publicity for the company by running a storyline in which David Arquette, a legitimate wrestling fan, became WCW World Heavyweight Champion. The storyline was reviled by wrestling fans, and Arquette himself reportedly believed it was a bad idea, as he felt that it would damage the value of the WCW World Heavyweight Championship he held in such high regard. While in WCW, he aligned himself with Diamond Dallas Page and agreed to drop the title to him. He eventually lost the title in the main event of Slamboree involving the three-tiered cage seen in Ready to Rumble, pitting himself against Page and Jeff Jarrett, which ended when he turned on Page and allowed Jarrett to win. Arquette later donated all the money WCW paid him to the families of deceased wrestlers Owen Hart, Brian Pillman, and Brian Hildebrand and to wrestler Darren Drozdov who was left paralyzed due to an in-ring accident a year prior.
The Triple Cage was used by WCW only twice: first, at Slamboree 2000, Jeff Jarrett beat Diamond Dallas Page and David Arquette to win the title. In this match, Chris Kanyon was thrown from the roof of one of the cages, "paralyzing" him. The other, taking place on the September 4, 2000 episode of WCW Monday Nitro, was the 2000 edition of the WarGames match.

Reception

Box office

The film grossed $12.5 million against its $24 million budget, making it a box-office failure. During its release, WCW was struggling in ratings and revenue, due in large part to creative and financial missteps as well as the creation of the Attitude Era in the World Wrestling Federation, which lead to the WWF's dominance over their rival promotion. While this film did not necessarily contribute to the demise of WCW, many thought of Ready to Rumble as a failed last-ditch effort to try and save WCW. Most of WCW's assets, except for the corporate subsidiary itself, were purchased by the WWF nearly a year later on March 23, 2001.