The Smashing Machine
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The Smashing Machine

"The unforgettable true story of a UFC legend."

2025 2h 3m ★ 6.5 (447 votes) Released

In the late 1990s, up-and-coming mixed martial artist Mark Kerr aspires to become the greatest fighter in the world. However, he must also battle his opioid dependence and a volatile relationship with his girlfriend Dawn.

Director

Benny Safdie

Screenplay

Benny Safdie

Rating
6.5
Runtime
123 min
Budget
$50.0M
Revenue
$21.1M
Profit/Loss
-28.9M

Production

A24 A24
Seven Bucks Productions Seven Bucks Productions
Out for the Count
Magnetic Fields Entertainment

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Audience Reviews

C
CinemaSerf
★ 6/10 Oct 9, 2025

Mickey O’Rourke had a go in 2008 and Orlando Bloom earlier this year in “The Cut”, so now it’s the turn of Dwayne Johnson to bulk up and out to deliver a biopic of UFC pioneer Mark Kerr. This is all set at a time when he can make a living for himself and girlfriend Dawn (Emily Blunt) but there are no Ferraris and swimming pools for them. For that he has to win the Grand Prix in Japan and that involves his embarking on the ultimate in fitness and endurance regimes, aided by his own chemical romances that frequently seem to render him little better than catatonic. Domestic dysfunction ensues as he has to face up to his responsibilities and settle his priorities before what he has comes crumbling down. It’s a true story, but it just didn’t engage me at all. Johnson comes across well as the amiable and dedicated athlete, but a film about any sport that requires a rule change to ban eye gouging was probably never really going to work for me. The fight scene are sparing, occasionally graphic, and they do convey just how brutal this mixed martial arts combat can be, but the characterisations here are just all too sterile to engage. Whilst Kerr comes across as a decent human being, Blunt’s performance doesn’t really make anything like enough impact as it trundles along without much from the dialogue to make me care. Tangentially, it does quite enjoyably poke some fun at the inanity and banality of sport’s broadcasting punditry and I didn’t hate it, but I’ll probably never watch it again.

Keywords

sportsdrug addictionboxerbiographybased on true storymixed martial arts (mma)price of fameboxing1990sboxesports dramadepressedself awarenessbiographical drama

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