When We Were Kings (1996)

Movie · 1996 · Documentary, TV Movie, History, Music · 1h 29m · PG · English

Curator score: 9.0/10 (43.1K ratings)

The untold story of the Rumble in the Jungle.

Overview

It's 1974. Muhammad Ali is 32 and thought by many to be past his prime. George Foreman is ten years younger and the heavyweight champion of the world. Promoter Don King wants to make a name for himself and offers both fighters five million dollars apiece to fight one another, and when they accept, King has only to come up with the money. He finds a willing backer in Mobutu Sese Suko, the dictator of Zaire, and the "Rumble in the Jungle" is set, including a musical festival featuring some of America's top black performers, like James Brown and B.B. King.

Ratings

Director

Leon Gast

Production

David Sonenberg Production, DAS Films

Cast

Muhammad Ali, George Foreman, Don King, James Brown, B.B. King, Spike Lee, Mobutu Sese Seko, Norman Mailer, George Plimpton, Malick Bowens, Lloyd Price, Miriam Makeba, Drew Bundini Brown, Odessa Clay, Howard Cosell, Wilton Felder, Wayne Henderson, Stix Hooper, Stewart Levin, Alan Pariser

Curator Review

Verdict

A landmark sports documentary that turns the 1974 Ali-Foreman fight into something larger: a portrait of charisma, race, politics, celebrity, and Black cultural pride. Even if you do not care much about boxing, the archival access, music, and Ali’s magnetic presence make it feel alive and historically essential.

Best for

  • sports-documentary fans
  • viewers interested in Muhammad Ali or boxing history
  • people drawn to race, politics, and cultural history
  • fans of archival nonfiction with strong personality
  • music lovers who enjoy concert footage and 1970s atmosphere

Skip if

  • you want a fast, modern-paced documentary
  • you dislike archival or interview-driven storytelling
  • you are only interested in the technical details of the fight
  • you prefer strictly neutral, detached nonfiction

Overview

When We Were Kings is one of those documentaries that feels bigger than the event it records. The Rumble in the Jungle is the spine, but the film is really about performance, identity, and power: Ali as athlete, poet, showman, and political symbol. It captures why he mattered far beyond boxing.

Worth noting

The archival footage has a raw immediacy, and the surrounding Zaire setting gives the film a vivid sense of place and history. The music festival material adds texture without feeling like a detour, turning the movie into a snapshot of a moment when sports, culture, and politics collided.

Bottom line

What makes it endure is Ali himself. He dominates every frame he’s in, but the film also understands the larger forces around him: media spectacle, Black pride, and the complicated machinery behind a global event. It is essential viewing for anyone interested in how documentaries can turn history into drama.

Top Letterboxd reviews

Daniel (4.5★) · 185 likes

"I have wrestled with an alligator. I done tussled with a whale. I done handcuffed lightning, thrown thunder in jail. That's bad! Only last week I murdered a rock, injured a stone, hospitalised a brick! I'm so mean I make medicine sick!" In 1974, boxer Muhammad Ali challenges the current undefeated and undisputed heavyweight champion of the world, George Foreman, to a championship match held in Zaire, hoping to win back the title. The documentary shows the preparations for the… more

Will Steele (3★) · 162 likes

Ali is a supreme athlete, an indelible cultural icon, but an even greater performer. He was a poet, dancer, provocateur, and politician all rolled into one. A sight to behold.

Deckk (3★) · 125 likes

100-word review: Capturing the historic 1974 Rumble in the Jungle between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman, When We Were Kings portrays sporting greatness and cultural significance. At its heart is Ali's magnetic charisma, which shines through as he prepares for the iconic boxing match. The film portrays Foreman in an unfair role as the villain, juxtaposing his formidable presence against Ali's poetic bravado. One of the documentary's standout features is its seamless integration of live music performances, notably B.B. King's soulful contributions. However, the title song feels oddly out of place amidst the historical backdrop, disrupting the film's otherwise authentic vibe.

Joe (5★) · 118 likes

"They speak English, French, and African. We can't even speak English good!" A great reminder that any major sporting event is never just about what happens in the ring or court or field, but a culmination of personalities, political and business interests, social subtext, and (in an Ali fight especially), protracted psychological warfare. This gives you a good sense of all of it, but the thing that makes it essential is Ali himself, who can safely be called a movie… more

🐱Andrew Chrzanowski🐱 (4.5★) · 114 likes

☆"Come get me sucka, I'm dancin'!"☆ Heralded by many as one of the best sports documentaries ever made, Leon Gast's When We Were Kings took over two decades to craft and edit. It was worth the wait, winning the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature, and remains a seminal piece of nonfiction on race, sport, and African sociopolitical commentary. Initially traveling to Zaire -- today, the Democratic Republic of the Congo -- Gast came to document a music festival accompanying… more

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Topics

sports documentary, boxing, 1970s, archival footage, race relations, political history, Black culture, music festival, celebrity charisma, historical nonfiction

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