IMDb RATING
5.7/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
Unemployed Scottish miner Danny Scoular (Liam Neeson) is forced into bare-knuckle boxing to make ends meet.Unemployed Scottish miner Danny Scoular (Liam Neeson) is forced into bare-knuckle boxing to make ends meet.Unemployed Scottish miner Danny Scoular (Liam Neeson) is forced into bare-knuckle boxing to make ends meet.
Joanne Whalley
- Beth Scoular
- (as Joanne Whalley-Kilmer)
Johnny Beattie
- Beth's Father
- (as John Beattie)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaSir Billy Connolly (Frankie) said in a stand up comedy show that while filming the sex scene with Julie Graham (Melanie), Director David Leland urged him and Julie to be more enthusiastic, vocal, and vulgar. Billy said that he's not like that in real-life. Just "quietly grateful" that he's having sex.
- GoofsWhen Beth whacks Frankie with the shovel, just after she has hit him, she jerks it quickly and you can see by the way it wobbles slightly that it is made of rubber.
- Alternate versionsShortened and retitled for US release.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 72nd Annual Academy Awards (2000)
Featured review
Nobody ever claimed this was a great movie, but surely the fact that nearly 25 minutes were cut from the U.S. release (retitled "Crossing the Line" from original "The Big Man") explains why no one was enthusiastic about it over here. I finally got around to watching the cut version (still the only one available in the U.S., I believe), and it seems choppy and formulaic in a way that suggests the extras that often make all the difference-atmosphere, character background, nuance-were exactly what got cut. This results in a movie that should be better, particularly with this cast, but never rises above adequate.
The family's struggles in a tough Scottish economy, the criminal connections Neeson is lured into et al. aren't properly established before they're taken for granted by the narrative, giving them little force. In particularly, Whalley-Kilmer hardly has a character to play, though she and the kids are the entire reason Neeson's figure lets himself get sucked into the fighting he doesn't at all want to do save for the money. Hugh Grant turns up briefly, and in this edit, it's not even clear who his character is or why he's here.
When we finally get to a proper fight (opposite Rab Affleck, who'd been a champion boxer in real life before this movie started his acting career), it's powerfully brutal. Neeson fans will probably never have seen him in such spectacular physical condition before, and he's fully committed in acting terms here as well. The later parts of the film feel less truncated than the early progress, which presumably most of the American-release cuts came out of, so it does get better.
Yet in its U.S. cut, at least, this isn't exactly a good boxing, domestic or crime drama, but an underdeveloped muddle of all three. While it's still not a bad film, you can certainly tell they had something better in mind. The much higher regard it's held in by people who've seen the two-hour "Big Man" version makes it clear that that's the film to see, not "Crossing the Line."
The family's struggles in a tough Scottish economy, the criminal connections Neeson is lured into et al. aren't properly established before they're taken for granted by the narrative, giving them little force. In particularly, Whalley-Kilmer hardly has a character to play, though she and the kids are the entire reason Neeson's figure lets himself get sucked into the fighting he doesn't at all want to do save for the money. Hugh Grant turns up briefly, and in this edit, it's not even clear who his character is or why he's here.
When we finally get to a proper fight (opposite Rab Affleck, who'd been a champion boxer in real life before this movie started his acting career), it's powerfully brutal. Neeson fans will probably never have seen him in such spectacular physical condition before, and he's fully committed in acting terms here as well. The later parts of the film feel less truncated than the early progress, which presumably most of the American-release cuts came out of, so it does get better.
Yet in its U.S. cut, at least, this isn't exactly a good boxing, domestic or crime drama, but an underdeveloped muddle of all three. While it's still not a bad film, you can certainly tell they had something better in mind. The much higher regard it's held in by people who've seen the two-hour "Big Man" version makes it clear that that's the film to see, not "Crossing the Line."
- How long is Crossing the Line?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $59,227
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $5,248
- Aug 11, 1991
- Gross worldwide
- $59,227
- Runtime1 hour 33 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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