Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson

2024

Action / Game-Show / Reality-TV / Sport

11
IMDb Rating 2.8/10 10 1609 1.6K

Director

Top cast

Charlize Theron as Self - Audience Member
Simu Liu as Self - Audience Member
Evander Holyfield as Self - Audience Member
Josh Duhamel as Self - Audience Member
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
2.76 GB
1280*720
English 2.0
NR
59.94 fps
5 hr 6 min
Seeds 4
5.67 GB
1920*1080
English 5.1
NR
59.94 fps
5 hr 6 min
Seeds 4

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by FOXTROTDESTROYER_PRODUCTIONS225 2 / 10

Senior Citizen Smackdown, The Fight That Shouldn't Have Happened (And Somehow Did): The Slap Heard Around the Internet

I swear, every once in a while a fight comes along that makes you question not only the sport of boxing, but your own life decisions for sitting down, grabbing snacks, and committing your precious time to watching it. The Mike Tyson vs Jake Paul "fight"-and I'm putting that in quotes the size of a skyscraper-was one of those events. I give it a 2/10, and honestly, that feels generous, like offering someone a participation trophy after they tripped over their shoelaces, fell on their face, and took you down with them. Because let's be clear: this wasn't a competition, this wasn't a clash of legends, and it definitely wasn't some "passing the torch" spectacle. It was an elaborate, multimillion-dollar disappointment with the emotional weight of a wet paper towel and the authenticity of a soap opera slap.You know what the worst part is? The whole thing had the audacity to pretend like it was real. Look, Mike Tyson is one of the most iconic fighters in history. The man is a walking monument to raw power and intimidation. But he is also, unmistakably, a senior citizen. A legendary senior citizen, yes, but still a man who should be at home relaxing, not out here being wheeled into a pay-per-view circus to throw slow-motion punches while everyone claps like we're watching our grandpa do a bench press for the nostalgia factor. Seeing Tyson step into the ring at his age didn't feel inspiring. It felt uncomfortable, like watching someone drag a vintage Ferrari into a demolition derby. You want to scream, "NO, STOP, PUT IT BACK IN THE MUSEUM!"And then there's Jake Paul. The only fighter alive who could be punched in the face and still somehow come across as the most annoying person in the ring. He strutted into this fight with that "I'm tough" energy that collapses the moment someone so much as messes up his hair. He talks like he's rewriting the history of combat sports. It's the same energy as a kid who starts a fight at recess and then cries when someone bigger, tougher, and younger pushes back. It gives "pick with someone your own size" vibes except it's basically "pick with someone your age" vibes. There's something uniquely talentless about being both a provocateur and a coward, yet somehow he nails the combination like it's his birthright.But let's go back to the "fight." If I can even call it that without laughing. The pacing was so stiff and strange that I kept checking if my stream buffer froze. Tyson's punches were slow, telegraphed, and-God bless him-looked like he was trying his best not to dislocate his own shoulder. And Jake's "defense" was basically: dodge, run away, grab Tyson, hesitate, repeat. The rhythm was just unnatural. It felt like both guys were pausing mid-action to remember the choreography. There was no flow, no energy, no danger, no suspense. Just two people in a ring acting like they're participating in a neighborhood theater performance of Rocky: The Retirement Edition.And BEFORE THAT-oh my GOD-there was "the slap." The slap heard around the world for all the wrong reasons. When Tyson "slapped" Paul, I genuinely thought the director yelled cut and they forgot to edit it out. That slap was so staged, so executed-with-care, so borderline theatrical, I'm convinced even soap operas would mock it. Tyson's hand practically hovered like a drone moving in to pretend-land on Jake's cheek without actually causing harm. Jake's reaction? A delayed, overdramatic staredown that could win an award for "Best Unconvincing Attempt at Pretending to Be Him." It wasn't a slap-it was a handshake in slap form. I've seen harder hits exchanged between kindergarteners fighting over crayons.And everyone knew. Everyone. You could hear the commentators trying to sell it with the enthusiasm of a hostage reading a prepared statement. You could see the audience blinking in confusion, trying to convince themselves they hadn't just witnessed the fakest moment in combat sports since the last influencer boxing event. That slap alone should disqualify the fight from being labeled as anything resembling professional.The production didn't help either. Everything was hyped to astronomical levels as if we were about to witness Tyson of the 1980s appearing in a burst of lightning while Jake Paul suddenly unlocks the powers of a real boxer. Instead, we got a carefully edited montage of old Tyson footage leading into two men gently tapping each other like they were trying not to set off a car alarm. The commentators kept telling us how "dangerous" Tyson still is-dude, I love Tyson, but he looked like he was trying not to aggravate his lower back. He was there for the money.The atmosphere felt hollow, too. There was no dramatic tension, no sense of rivalry, no spark that makes a fight-even a bad fight-fun to watch. Instead, it felt like the world's most expensive marketing ploy, the boxing equivalent of a clickbait title stretched into a full-length event. The entire fight had this strange, overly-scripted vibe, like it came pre-packaged with storyboards and a directorial vision but forgot to include real athleticism, real stakes, or real contact.And Jake Paul's victory celebrations (or whatever weird thing he tried to pass off as hype) added a final layer of cringe. The man celebrated beating an elderly legend like he climbed Everest with his bare hands. He wanted people to take him seriously as a fighter because he stepped in with Tyson-but everything about the fight felt engineered to keep him from looking bad. If he wants to be respected, maybe, I don't know, fight someone who isn't old enough to have watched Muhammad Ali box in real time?Watching Mike Tyson step into that ring at his age wasn't just uncomfortable - it was downright stressful. It felt like watching someone rev up a classic antique car and try to take it drag racing. You don't cheer, you don't get hyped, you just grip the couch cushions and pray nothing falls off. Tyson is a legend, but he is also unmistakably a senior citizen, and the whole fight felt like I was witnessing a beloved grandparent being pressured into a schoolyard brawl for the amusement of strangers. Every slow, deliberate movement he made had this painfully self-aware quality, like he was fighting not an opponent but his own joints. It was less "fight night" and more "I hope he doesn't pull something." The whole experience was so uncomfortable that it took me out of the hype entirely - instead of watching two boxers, I felt like I was watching a man fight to keep the AARP from sending him wellness checks.And Jake Paul... look, there's trash talk, and then there's a pattern. His entire fight résumé is starting to look like a guided museum tour of "Men Old Enough to Remember the Cold War." It's impossible not to notice the trend: he keeps aiming for opponents whose best years happened before he was even born. It's like he's allergic to fighting someone his own age. For example he is in his late 20s. The average age of his opponents? About 35. I genuinely think Paul is a coward in the boxing sense - he talks big, he flexes big, he markets big, but when it comes to picking opponents, suddenly he turns into a bargain hunter looking for "gently used, historically significant, minimal mobility." He acts like fighting a 50+ legend is somehow equivalent to fighting a prime athlete in his era. No, it's not brave. It's like challenging your uncle at Thanksgiving, bragging when you win, and pretending the turkey had nothing to do with it.At this point, I honestly wouldn't even be surprised if Jake Paul tried to push the concept further - like full comic-book absurdity levels. I half expect him to show up in a trench coat with a shovel, pull a full "Deadpool digging up Wolverine," and challenge Muhammad Ali himself just so he can put "Beat Ali" on a merch hoodie. With the way his matchmaking works, it's not even unrealistic in spirit. He'd probably frame it like, "I'm honoring the legends by fighting them," while completely ignoring that the legends he's "honoring" can't exactly say no. And of course the announcers would still try to sell it with a straight face: "Amazing athleticism from Paul tonight as he takes on his toughest opponent yet... gravity and moral decency." At this stage, the only thing left is for Jake Paul to announce he's fighting historical figures via séance. And knowing his brand? I'd believe it.The 2/10 is honestly because the lighting looked good and Tyson still has charisma even when he's clearly holding himself together with the athletic equivalent of duct tape and nostalgia. Everything else? A circus. A pageant. A staged spectacle that didn't even have the decency to be entertaining in a dumb, over-the-top way. It was slow, awkward, painfully artificial, and had all the intensity of a pillow fight where both participants are scared of getting feathers in their eyes.This fight didn't just waste time. It wasted potential. It wasted talent. It wasted the legacy of one of boxing's greatest figures by pushing him into a contrived event designed to make Jake Paul look legit, and failed spectacularly at even THAT.So yeah, 2/10. And that's me being nice. If the slap had been any faker, I might've dropped it to a 1.
Reviewed by JamesEdwardAnthonyFoster 4 / 10

"Came to see a battering didn't get much of one"

First of all the commentary was just flat out awful was every one of those guys on the table Mike Tyson haters constantly mentioning his age was really disrespectful. But wop he's 58 years old not 90. I didn't watch all of it but the fight between Katie and Amanda was hands down the best fight of the night just an absolute brawl. Then there was the technical issues my screen kept duffering even a few times but only briefly in the main event I thought my WiFi was dodgy and even had to turn it off but other people had similar problems. Not good for a first time Netflix boxing PPV the first round was my favourite Mike Tyson got some good punches in there. But lost the momentum later on part of me believes this was set up (okay Mike go nuts on the first round but after that do nothing got it). And lastly after the fight Mike saying he'd like to fight Jake and Jake Paul saying "m*********** I'd kill you" yeah okay junior your brother couldn't even knock him out. Such a stupid and insulting thing to say Netflix really screwed us over with the main bout such a disappointment CAN WE STOP SCRIPTING FIGHTS! I wanted to see Mike drop Jake that's was the point for most people hoping to see a good fight. I hope we don't have these technical issues when WWE is on Netflix.
Reviewed by Zooha-47207 3 / 10

A cash-grab at the expense of real boxing

This so-called boxing event was nothing more than a money-making scheme disguised as a fight. The matchup between Jake Paul, a YouTuber-turned-boxer, and the legendary Mike Tyson was built on an avalanche of media hype and shallow promotional tactics, but it delivered almost nothing of substance.The fight lacked authenticity, skill, and any semblance of genuine competition. Tyson, though a boxing icon, seemed more like a shadow of his former self, and Jake Paul's performance felt more about sustaining his celebrity status than showcasing real boxing prowess.What makes this event even more infuriating is the ripple effect it's had on the boxing world.In the Netherlands, we're now seeing personalities like Manoeuf and Dave Roelvink attempting to replicate this kind of spectacle, feeding off the manufactured drama for personal gain. This trend is reducing boxing to a mere sideshow, overshadowing the discipline, dedication, and legacy that true fighters bring to the sport.
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