As is known, or perhaps unknown, free wrestling is not a sport by sports law; it is more in the entertainment category than sports, because it is based on written text and drawn movements, and a predetermined outcome, not competition among wrestlers or even their merits.

For example, there is a difference between counterfeiting and determining the result in advance. The first is cheating, and the second is based on a purely recreational decision. In other words, we see a film that is known to end since it was written on paper.

If you put the truth above in your mind, you might be more likely to watch Fighting With My Family, and you will not see it, of course, because you saw the famous American wrestling star, Dwyane Johnson, known as The Rock, in the promotional video of the film Triller, Because his picture on the film poster. It is true that it is a product but it only appears for minutes and not a hero as the weak marketing campaign of the film suggests.

In this comedy film, an autobiography as well, we see the British Saraya (Florence Bogg) the free wrestling champion known to her fans as Beige. Before winning the Grand Prix in the United States, Big is the youngest winner of 21-year-old women's wrestling, where she grew up in a family that loves wrestling in Norwich, England.

The family story in this film is derived from the documentary film "Wrestlers: Brawl with My Family" in 2012, but this film is carefully detailed to match the specifications of the comedy films, thus gaining the general public satisfaction, to some extent with boxing and other sports. Cinema.

The writer and director, Stephen Merchant, is based on real feelings of his story and characters, and Mercant has helped to have actors like Lena Hiddie (star of the Arush game) in the role of Julia and Nick Frost as father Ricky Knight, creating a kind of warmth in the story. As a father and mother we were able to turn free wrestling into a family business, though not as profitable as required.

Their eldest son is in prison, but the other two, Zach (Jack Luden) and Big, are both enthusiastic participants in the family-owned gym, as well as in the training school. Zack and Bigg have a dream of star-studded wrestling free entertainment, and this point is precisely what the filmmakers rely on to pet the dreams of the public.

Zack and Big are invited to a performance test under the guidance of a cynical, unassuming coach named Hatch (Vince Vaughn), who explains to the test participants that it is more than physical strength, attractive and personalized clothing and a captivating scenario to succeed. His name, but he personally calls the spark. After the tests, Hatch decides that Beige is the only one with the spark to qualify for the next stage.

Beige travels to Florida and enrolls in a rigorous training camp that leads her to a step away from surrendering one step. She is overwhelmed by the lack of self-confidence due to the attractiveness of other trainees, and her comments about her appearance and personality, from Hash and others, inside and outside the ring.

In this section highlights the performance of the bog, which moves from layer to layer of emotions, all compelling. The external rift gradually shatters to show the inner weakness of the personality. This weakness, in turn, hides the answer to an important question: exactly from Beige? How can she broadcast a true version of herself in a sport that requires some form of representation or inspiration?

In the midst of all of this, Zack is psychologically crushed by the rejection of all his repeated attempts to join his sister, to his hometown and trying to complete his life, and look at any path that follows after the crash of his dream. Luden (who performed well in Dunkirk and Mary Queen of Scots) broadcasts slightly different feelings from Bogg, who is ashamed of failing to qualify as more convincing than his sister in performance tests.

Zach gradually accepts the fact that he has lost his only dream, and we do not need to say that the success of his younger sister has never diminished his psychological state. "I feel ashamed when my sister steals the only dream I've ever had since I was 13," Big says. "I did not steal anything, so the rules of the game are the ones that do not steal anything. Your dream has been stolen.

The most funny scene was the meeting between the Zack and Big family with Zack's fiancé family, where the director Mirchant played the role of the father of the girl. We see two families from the working class, the first one using the language of Shawari in the modern and the second more educated and extended, choose silence and absorb the shocks of the words he receives. Depends on showing the reactions of the family of Christine Zack's fiance, to reflect the dilemma of the situation in which it occurred. After this particular scene, Mr. Merchant's biggest challenge is: How does the progressive path of the main character emerge in an industry or sport based on prior agreement? Part of Merchant's solution is not to neglect Zach's character when he loses his dream, while increasing the dose of drama in the part that shows Beige's weakness, especially through Hatch's comments and comparing them to others. Another scene that supports Merchant's scenario in showing Beige's weakness is her unsteady standings in the ring before the defending champions face a huge crowd.

The difference in the performance of actors between free wrestling and cinema is very interesting. Beige is required to be herself without re-enacting other characters, while Bogue has left her personality to sink into the depths of Beige's psyche in front of the camera. In other words, the performance of the cinema exceeds the representation of wrestling.

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The film is carefully detailed to match the specifications of the comedy films and to win the general public satisfaction.

Free wrestling is not a sport by sports law, it is more in the category of entertainment than sports.

The writer and director, Stephen Merchant, is based on a real feeling of his story and characters.