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‘The Fire Inside’ Review🔴 : An Effortlessly Charismatic Pairing Anchors This Real-Life Olympic Boxing Tale✔ P B P Claressa’s story starts in 2006; we see a young girl running through a rundown neighborhood in wind and snow to a boxing gym on the other side of town. She is used to rejection (“We don’t train no girls”), but one of the volunteers takes pity on her and takes her through her paces. This is Jason Crutchfield (Brian Tyree Henry), a fatherly former boxer whose domestic life is in stark contrast to Claressa’s: Jason lives in a well-appointed suburban home with his wife, while Claressa sleeps three-to-a-bed with her siblings, eating cereal with water because her flaky but sympathetic single mother is so lax with groceries. Claressa’s motivation for fighting is set up pretty clearly from the get-go; as one character notes, “She’s probably trying to get away from that messed-up house.”
Five years later, Jason is training with Claressa (Ryan Destiny) on a regular basis, having earned the respect of the boys at the gym. “You represent out there,” says one. “You show ’em how we do it in Flint.” Jason is aware that she doesn’t have the reach of a naturally gifted boxer (the nickname “T-Rex” actually refers to her short arms) but knows that she has something potentially more powerful, the fire inside that gives the film its title. “I want you to take all that pain,” he tells her, “and turn it into something good.” The chance to showcase that talent comes along when Claressa gets a chance to try out at the Olympic trials, which Jason encourages her to attend, even though he can’t go himself. “You don’t get many chances like this,” he says. “And when you do, you go all the way.”