Mad Bull

December. 21,1977      
Rating:
5.8
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Trailer Synopsis Cast

An embittered professional wrestler, convinced that his life has no meaning outside the ring, meets a beautiful woman. Unlike most of the women he has known, she seems to be interested in him for himself rather than his fame or his money, and he finds himself becoming attracted to her.

Alex Karras as  Iago 'Mad Bull' Karkus
Susan Anspach as  Christina Sebastiani
Elisha Cook Jr. as  Sweeper
Tracey Walter as  Coley Turner
Eddra Gale as  Queenie
Ernie Hudson as  Black Bart
Regis Philbin as  Raymond Towne
Nicholas Colasanto as  Duke Sallow
Steve Sandor as  Jack 'The White Knight' Braden
Laurie Heineman as  Delia

Reviews

PodBill
1977/12/21

Just what I expected

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Listonixio
1977/12/22

Fresh and Exciting

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Console
1977/12/23

best movie i've ever seen.

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ActuallyGlimmer
1977/12/24

The best films of this genre always show a path and provide a takeaway for being a better person.

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Marco Nevsky
1977/12/25

The 2 best parts: 1. Ridiculous disco-infused ending to the cage match. It's like they're trying to go for some epic Rocky vs Apollo Creed melodramatic fight vibe but failed miserably and with hilarious results.2. The absolutely ridiculous way in which the stalker is killed. If you are going to kill the bad guy in a movie full of wrestlers, that's basically the perfect way to do it!

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Phill-13
1977/12/26

Alex Karras' portrayal of Iago "The Mad Bull" Karkus is not great, but is really okay. He plays a professional wrestler grappling with his conscience over losing his wife and son because of his career choice. During his soul-searching, he meets and falls in love with Christina Sebastiani (Susan Anspach), a fellow Greek. She doesn't like his chosen profession any more than his ex-wife, but she does try to understand him. Meanwhile, he is stalked by a demented killer (Tracy Walter). Will he win Christina's love and find the killer, or lose both her love and his life? Karras has several moments of really great acting in this film. His greatest moment is a tender scene at his brother's bedside who took a bullet meant for him. Karras has done better movies, but all in all, not a bad character study.

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