The People's Fighters: Teofilo Stevenson and the Legend of Cuban Boxing

The People's Fighters: Teofilo Stevenson and the Legend of Cuban Boxing is a 2018 documentary film directed by Peter Berg and Diego Hurtado de Mendoza that aired on the Olympic Channel in the United States.[1] Narrated by Peter Berg, the documentary includes archival footage as well as interviews with other Cuban Olympic medal winners.[2]

The People's Fighters: Teofilo Stevenson and the Legend of Cuban Boxing
GenreDocumentary film
Written byDiego Hurtado de Mendoza
Jon Weinbach
Directed byPeter Berg
Diego Hurtado de Mendoza
Narrated byPeter Berg
Music byArturo Cardelús
Country of originUnited States
Original languagesEnglish
Spanish
Production
Executive producersFederico di Mojana
Yiannis Exarchos
Greg Groggel
Frank Marshall
Mark Parkman
Michael Tollin
Jon Weinbach
ProducerDiego Hurtado de Mendoza
CinematographyJon Aguirresarobe
Diego Hurtado de Mendoza
EditorJavier Dampierre
Running time87 minutes
Production companiesMandalay Sports Media (MSM)
The Kennedy/Marshall Company
Release
Original networkOlympic Channel
Original releaseMay 31, 2018 (2018-05-31)

Plot

With a population of just 11 million people, Cuba has produced the most Olympic boxing medalists of any country in the world, winning 73 Olympic medals including 38 gold medals in the past 50 years. The documentary examines Teófilo Stevenson's career as well as the phenomenon of boxing in Cuba overall.

Cast

Production

The film was produced as the second film in the Five Rings Films series.[2][3][4] Filming took place in the United States and Cuba.[5]

Broadcast

The film was broadcast on the Olympic Channel in the United States[1] on May 31, 2018.[5][3][6][7]

Reception

ESPN staff writer Nigel Collins wrote, "Those who have not seen the freakish power in Stevenson's right hand are in for a treat. The documentary celebrates his dominance with footage of Teofilo dispatching U.S. hopefuls Duane Bobick, Tyrell Briggs and John Tate with alarming ease." He continued, "One of major strengths of 'The People's Fighter' is allowing the story to be told from the Cuban point of view. Berg's narration is smooth and informative but never presumptuous. The opinions are those of the people on the ground, the ones that count, the real stars of the film."[8]

The International Sport Movies TV Federation called it "an in-depth look at Cuba’s overwhelming history of success in the sport of boxing."[9]

PR Newswire called it "an unprecedented look at Cuban boxing during a period of historic change".[5]

References

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