The next movie that I had on my DVR that's coming up soon on TCM is Tennessee Champ. That next airing is tomorrow, March 6, at 2:45 PM, so as always I watched it in order to be able to do a post on it here.
The nominal lead here, at least in terms of the actor getting the highest billing), is not the "Tennessee Champ" character, but a man named Willy Wurble (Keenan Wynn). As the movie opens up, he's in Vidalia, TN, playing fairly high-stakes poker. But just as he's about to win a big hand, violence breaks out, and Willy is forced to beat a hasty retreat in a rowboat across the river. He comes across another person affected by the violence, a man swimming in the river trying to get away named Daniel Norson (Dewey Martin). Daniel got in a fight with a man names Sixty Jubel and knocked the guy out, with Sixty hitting his head and dying in the fall, as Daniel tells Willy in the boat after Willy saves Daniel.
Willy's real job is as a boxing promoter, of a washed-up boxer named Happy (Earl Holliman). Happy is supposed to have a fight soon, but there's an issue with Happy's opponent. Willy gets an idea when Daniel runs into Willy and Happy in town the next day, which is to stage a fight between Happy and Daniel, even though Daniel knows nothing about Marquess of Queensbury-style boxing by the rules. Not even that Daniel knows much about fighting in general, to be honest. He's the son of a preacher man, and filled with the spirit of the God that pervades revival Christianity, which raises the question of how Daniel even got into that fight with Sixty in the first place.
But with the prospect of money coming in, Willy calls up his wife Sarah (Shelley Winters) and gets her to go on the road with him. This especially after Daniel knocks out Happy despite the staging supposed to be Happy letting the inexperienced Daniel hang around for several rounds before beating him. Sarah, meanwhile, realizes that Willy is back to his old ways of being dishonest with his boxers by not giving them a fair percentage of the take. Daniel, having won, gets christened the "Tennessee Champ", and vows to win enough money to be able to build a church of his own, since his real aim in life is to bring the spirit of the Lord that he feels to everybody else.
Not everyone is happy with this. Certainly not Willy, who sees his opportunity at a big payday about to go by the wayside. And not some of the other managers, who expect the fights to be more or less fixed. Daniel finds out that the fight game is fixed, and leaves, since he can't be dishonest. But there's still the question of getting the money to build a church. That, and Daniel's perceived need to atone for what happened to Sixty....
I mentioned MGM in the title of my post because Tennessee Champ is another of those movies where MGM could bring a lot of gloss to a subject, even when bringing that sort of gloss is exactly what this sort of movie doesn't need. Indeed, the whole religion angle turns the material into something that feels rather hokey. Plus, once again there's the question hanging over the story of how everything is going to be resolved in a way that satisfies the Production Code while also having a happy ending.
I do have to say, however, that Tennessee Champ isn't as bad as some of my comments above might lead you to believe. It's more something that could have been a lot better than it turns out being.