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Muhammad Ali's Greatest Fight

Muhammad Ali's Greatest Fight is a 2013 American television drama film about boxer Muhammad Ali's refusal to report for induction into the United States military during the Vietnam War, focusing on how the United States Supreme Court decided to rule in Ali's favor in the 1971 case of Clay v. United States. The film was directed by Stephen Frears, from a screenplay written by Shawn Slovo based on the 2000 book Muhammad Ali's Greatest Fight: Cassius Clay vs. the United States of America by Howard Bingham and Max Wallace. It premiered on HBO on October 5, 2013.

Cast
Christopher Plummer as Justice John Marshall Harlan IIFrank Langella as Chief Justice Warren E. BurgerEd Begley Jr. as Justice Harry BlackmunPeter Gerety as Justice William J. Brennan Jr.Barry Levinson as Justice Potter StewartJohn Bedford Lloyd as Justice Byron WhiteFritz Weaver as Justice Hugo Black (Weaver was himself a conscientious objector during World War II) • Harris Yulin as Justice William O. DouglasDanny Glover as Justice Thurgood MarshallBenjamin Walker as Kevin Connolly • Pablo Schreiber as Covert Becker • Ben Steinfeld as Sam Edelstein • Dana Ivey as Mrs. Paige • Kathleen Chalfant as Ethel Harlan • Lisa Joyce as Donna Connolly • Peter McRobbie as Erwin GriswoldDamian Young as Ramsey ClarkChuck Cooper as Chauncey EskridgeBob Balaban as Lawyer • Drew Gehling as Marshall's Clerk ==Reception==
Reception
The film has a rating of 38% in Rotten Tomatoes. Hank Stuever of The Washington Post commented that the film, focused as it was on the behind-the-scenes legal discussion of the Supreme Court's justices and law clerks, and depicting one of Harlan's law clerks (a character that was "a fictional composite of several clerks") as playing a central role in the court's decision to free Ali, was at times "too much like a substandard episode of The Paper Chase" and "more Wikipedia entry than story, as characters speak to one another in long paragraphs of legal exposition". The Post did have positive comments about the lead performances of Langella and Plummer. Mary McNamara of the Los Angeles Times also commented on the excellent performances of the cast, while concluding that "[t]he legal wrangling of eight old white men behind closed doors simply pales in comparison" to Ali's part of the story. Ali is not portrayed by an actor in the film, but instead Frears made repeated use of actual television news clips of Ali boxing, giving interviews, and performing. These clips of the actual Ali are mentioned in multiple reviews as among the best elements of the film. ==See also==
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