Three Rounds
Genre: Drama/Sports
Director: Jeff Nichols
Writer: Holden Abbott
Cast: Lucas Hedges, Nick Robinson, Boyd Holbrook, Ray McKinnon, Isabela Merced, Lily Rabe
Plot: Snow clings to the gutters of Scranton as we focus on Danny (Boyd Holbrook), Mikey (Nick Robinson) and Tommy Braddock (Lucas Hedges), jogging in silence through barren streets, their breath rising in vapor clouds. Their sneakers slap the icy asphalt in perfect rhythm. Ray (Ray McKinnon) Braddock, their father, stands outside the gym, arms crossed, stopwatch in hand. He doesn’t shout encouragement - he just watches. As they pass him, he clicks the timer, one nod for Danny, a curt glance for Mikey and nothing for Tommy, he lights his cigarette with mechanical precision.
The family gym is a rusting relic - with posters peeling and punching bags frayed. Upstairs, in their living quarters, they are cramped and cold. A boom box plays muffled rock music beneath the buzz of fluorescent lights. Danny kneels on a padded bench, wrapping Mikey’s hands with care worn into his fingers. Mikey cracks jokes, bouncing on the balls of his feet, feeding off the energy. Tommy laces up gloves slowly, avoiding his own reflection. Ray barks at them to get moving, voice echoing like a hammer in an empty church. As Mikey heads back downstairs we see the ring sits at the center like an altar.
Later the same morning, Danny swings a sledgehammer at a demolition site, each hit reverberating through his spine. A co-worker offers him water—he shakes his head. Later, Mikey struts into a greasy diner, bruised eye and bandaged hand on full display. A waitress flirts with him and he eats it up, buying shots for the line cooks before slipping out the back. Meanwhile, Tommy sits on his bedroom floor, hunched over a sketchpad. He draws Lena, his girlfriend, from memory—lips parted, one shoulder bare, light catching her collarbone. He stops suddenly, as if ashamed, and rips the page out. Downstairs, the heavy thud of punches echoes through the floor like thunder.
The three Braddock boys sit around a wobbly table, a crockpot of stew sits in the middle of the table. Danny at the head, Mikey slouches at the table and Tommy sits straight-backed and silent. Ray walks in late, dirt under his nails. He pours himself a glass of milk and says nothing. Tommy’s backpack sits near his chair, partway unzipped. Ray notices a corner of paper sticking out, pulls it free. A charcoal sketch of Lena’s face, gentle and intimate. He frowns. Flips the page. The next is her nude—artful, not obscene, but raw. Ray rips it in half without hesitation and throws it in the trash. Mikey chuckles. Tommy’s face burns. Danny freezes mid-bite. No one says a word. The silence afterward cuts deeper than anything spoken.
Night falls and the house dims. Danny sits on the couch staring at a static channel, his fingers twitching. Tommy walks into the bathroom, towel over his shoulder, and finds Rose’s old scarf hanging behind the door. He lifts it gently, breathes in the faint scent of lavender, and holds it to his face. In a flash, a memory: her hand on his cheek after a childhood fall, her whisper—“You’re softer than them. That’s not a weakness.” He shuts the closet door. Back downstairs, Danny opens an old album on his lap. A photo from a county fair—Rose (Lily Rabe) laughing, Danny and Mikey play-fighting, Tommy hanging off her arm. He runs a thumb over her face. Behind him, the gym lights buzz on by themselves—on a motion timer, but it feels like something else.
At the gym the next day, Mikey spars without headgear. His opponent tags him hard. He staggers, spits blood, then smirks and charges forward. Ray watches from the corner, pride with an underlying panic in his eyes. Danny steps in, furious, pulling Mikey off. Mikey shrugs him off. “Don’t babysit me,” his eyes say. Tommy, watching from the edge of the ring, quietly tapes his wrists, then pulls the gloves off and leaves without speaking.
Night. The house is dark except for the glow of an old television. Danny sits on the floor, a VHS tape humming in the player. Footage flickers across the screen: a teenage Danny in the ring, young and fast, Ray shouting from the sidelines—“Left! Again!”—and Rose clapping softly in the background. The tape jitters. A moment freezes on young Danny smiling through a bloody nose, raising his arms. He was proud once. Behind him now, the living room is in ruin—empty beer bottles, a broken lamp, Mikey’s gym bag left open. Danny hits pause. The silence feels heavy. He leans back against the wall, tears in his eyes, and whispers, “I could’ve made it.”
It’s snowing outside the high school gym. Inside, under yellow lights, Tommy stands in his corner, bouncing nervously. His opponent is older, heavier, with a look that says “this is just another paycheck.” Ray leans in, voice low and fast: “Braddocks don’t run.” Tommy nods, eyes wide, heart pounding. The bell rings. The first round is rough. Tommy eats punches, stumbles, but keeps moving. In the second, he catches the other guy with a blind uppercut—more instinct than skill. The crowd roars. He wins on a decision. Ray lifts his arm, triumphant, but Tommy barely reacts. In the locker room after, he stares at his reflection, hands shaking. Lena (Isabela Merced) meets him outside, kisses his bruised cheek. “You alright?” she asks. He doesn’t answer.
Back in his room, Tommy opens his sketchbook again. The page is blank. He grips the pencil like it’s a weapon. He starts to draw—not Lena this time, but his brothers. Mikey’s crooked smirk, Danny’s tired eyes, Ray’s scowl. He tears out the page and burns it in the kitchen sink. Smoke curls around him. Upstairs, Mikey stumbles in drunk, singing a half-remembered fight anthem. He sees the smoke, chuckles, slaps Tommy on the back, and heads to his room. “We’re all artists, huh?” he mutters before disappearing down the hall. Tommy watches the last of the ashes swirl down the drain.
Late. Danny smokes on the front porch in silence. Tommy joins him, hoodie pulled tight, hands in pockets. They don’t speak for a while. Across the street, a streetlight flickers, then dies. Tommy finally says, “Do you think she’d be proud?” Danny doesn’t answer. Just stubs out his cigarette and heads back inside. Tommy stays behind, staring at the dark sky. Behind him, through the window, the gym lights flicker on—the motion sensor again.
The local paper arrives before dawn. A front-page spread shows Tommy mid-swing, glove cutting through the air, eyes sharp. The headline reads: “Youngest Braddock Storms Local Circuit.” Ray reads it with satisfaction, sipping his black coffee in the kitchen. He pins it to the gym’s corkboard under Mikey’s old photo, now faded and curling at the edges. When Mikey walks in, he pauses mid-step. His photo looks like a ghost. The new one—Tommy’s—is bright and clean. Mikey doesn’t say anything, but the smile fades from his face.
Later that night, Lena shows Tommy the paper again at her apartment, circling his name with a red pen. “You made it real,” she says. Tommy smiles, but it doesn’t reach his eyes. She asks what Ray said. Tommy shrugs. “He pinned it up. That’s enough.”
Midday at the gym. The air is thick and warm. Ray calls for sparring, and Mikey volunteers to go a round with Tommy. Danny protests—it’s too soon after Tommy’s last fight—but Ray ignores him. Gloves are laced, headgear strapped. It starts friendly. Then Mikey lands a hard hook. Tommy blinks. The second shot is worse. The rhythm breaks. Tommy stumbles back, arms loose. Danny shouts to stop it. Ray just watches. Mikey steps in with another clean shot—too much. Tommy drops his gloves and turns away, breathing hard. “You wanted to be one of us,” Mikey says, smirking. Tommy storms out of the ring. Lena’s standing just inside the gym entrance, having come to surprise him. She watches him walk past, fury and shame wrapped tight around him. She doesn’t follow—not yet.
News of the spar must have reached the streets as a local promoter stops by the gym during open hours, flashing teeth and business cards. He lays out the idea: a Braddock vs. Braddock exhibition bout—“a family grudge match with a legacy twist.” Ray listens intently. Danny is silent. Mikey says, “You serious? I’d drop him in two.” Tommy keeps his eyes on the floor.
That night, Lena and Tommy sit in her car outside the house. She hears it in his voice before he says a word. “They want us to fight. For real.” She turns sharply to him. “That’s not family,” she says. He looks straight ahead. “It’s the only way I know how to speak to them.” Lena grips the wheel, then his hand. “Then maybe it’s time to say nothing.”
The gym becomes a war zone of silence. Ray starts putting together posters—cheap, black-and-white mock-ups with “Braddock v Braddock” in bold red letters. Tommy trains early in the mornings. Mikey shows up late, running drills like punishment. Ray splits his coaching, but favors Mikey—the sharper hitter, the louder legacy.
Danny watches all of it through a fog of pain. He meets Lena outside after her shift, asks her to talk to Tommy. She nods.
The next morning, she shows up at Tommy’s run and jogs beside him, silent for a few blocks. When they stop to catch their breath, she puts her hands on his shoulders. “You’re still drawing. I saw the sketches. That’s your voice, not this.” Tommy looks away. “Not to them.”
Back in the gym, that day. Tommy and Mikey stand apart, watching Danny as he tries to repair a broken punching bag chain. No one speaks. Tension hangs like smoke. Ray walks in with papers—contracts for the exhibition match. He drops them on the workbench. “Main event. Braddock vs. Braddock. Sellout crowd.” Mikey grabs a pen and signs without hesitation. Tommy looks at Danny, then at the photo of Rose still taped to the fridge. He signs. Lena enters just as he finishes. She sees the paper, sees the ink. “You don’t have to do this,” she says. Tommy replies quietly, “I already did.”
Later, Lena finds the drawing he left behind on her nightstand—a pencil sketch of herself, sitting on the steps of the gym, looking back at him. She stares at it, then folds it in half, carefully, as if it might break.
Danny stands on a back porch, drinking coffee in the cold. As he drinks he collapses. Snowflakes fall on his face as he tries to speak but can’t. Tommy and Lena find him first—she rides with him in the ambulance while Tommy follows in silence. At the hospital, under harsh fluorescents, a doctor explains the internal bleeding is chronic, worsened by years of head trauma.
In the waiting room, Lena holds Tommy’s hand. Ray paces like a caged animal. Mikey isn’t there. Danny wakes briefly, eyes scanning until he finds Tommy. His voice is barely audible: “Don’t become him.” Tommy doesn’t answer. He just watches the monitors beep and blink.
Back at the gym, Ray tapes a full-size poster to the front window: “Braddock vs Braddock – One Night Only.” Tommy passes it without slowing down. Inside, Mikey grins at a group of kids asking for autographs. He signs quickly, relishing the attention, the momentary validation. He is then confronted by Tommy, the two push and shove, he yells at Mikey, asking why he wasn’t beside their brother while he lay in the hospital. “I was training.” “Who gives a shit about training he is our brother, our blood, does that not mean anything to you!” Mikey laughs and walks off as Ray watches.
Ray starts leaking clips of old fight tapes online—Danny in his prime, Mikey as a teenage prodigy, Tommy’s recent wins. It garners attention. Comments pile up. Locals buzz about the fight. “Real family drama.” “Braddocks built different.”
Mikey doubles down in training, doing hill sprints in the snow, punching tree trunks wrapped in duct tape. Lena watches him from her car as he finishes one session—he catches her eye but doesn’t wave. Just stares, jaw clenched.
Meanwhile, Tommy walks through the now-empty high school art room. He runs his hand across a table he once sketched at. He finds a discarded brush in a drawer, holds it like a foreign object, then slips it into his jacket pocket.
The weigh in is being held in the gym - press, camera flashes, hype. Ray stands between them like a proud general. Mikey stares Tommy down. Tommy barely looks at him. Their fists touch for a photo. Danny, out of hospital, watches from the back, eyes full of dread. He sees it in Mikey, this isn’t a match, it’s going to be brutal.
Under the moonlight, Danny meets Tommy at their mother’s grave. He begs him not to do it. “There’s nothing left to prove.” Tommy listens but doesn’t speak. He’s trembling. He looks at the scar on Danny’s face, then down at Rose’s grave. “I can’t fight him. But he needs to be stopped” Danny pulls him in, a hug, silent, meaningful.
The night before the fight. It’s snowing again. In the garage, Tommy sits at the workbench, hands trembling, staring at the contract still in his coat pocket. He pulls it out, stares at the ink like it’s cursed. Lena enters quietly. She doesn’t speak at first. She just kneels beside him and lays her head against his shoulder. “You don’t need to hurt to be loved,” she finally says. He nods. After she leaves, Tommy takes down the family photo still pinned to the back wall—Rose, smiling between the three boys. He flips it over, scribbles something on the back. Then he lays his right hand flat on the workbench. We cut outside. The garage window fogs. Then—CRACK. We hear a muffled animalistic cry. Inside we see Tommy doubled over, blood pouring from his broken hand. The sledgehammer lies beside him.
Fight night. The gym is packed. The anticipation rises as the prelims are taking place. Ray storms over to Mikey saying he hasn’t seen his brother anywhere, he best be here soon. Mikey laughs it off, calling it a stunt.
The garage door creaks open slowly, Danny steps in, he calls Tommy’s name once - quietly, no answer. Then he sees it. Tommy is slumped agains the wall, knees pulled in, cradling his right hand - mangled, purple, slick with blood, bones coming out. The sledgehammer lies beside him, handle cracked, drops of blood splattered across the cement floor like a crime scene. Tommy looks up. Eyes glazed. Shame, relief, and pain in his expression. Danny rushes over, drops to his knees. He reaches for the hand, then stops, hands trembling, not knowing whether to comfort or scold. He just holds Tommy’s good arm tightly. “Jesus Christ,” he mutters, over and over. Tommy leans his head into Danny’s chest. No words. Just breathing. For a long time, they stay like that—two broken brothers, curled in the garage where they once fixed bikes, where they learned to throw punches, where they were never allowed to be boys. Finally, Danny says: “I’ll take care of it. You don’t go to that ring.” Tommy closes his eyes.
It’s time for Braddock vs Braddock. Mikey stands in his corner, bouncing on his toes, gloves tight, head low like a predator pacing in a cage. He’s lean, cut, breathing heavy through his nose. Ray moves back and forth outside the ring, barking orders to no one in particular. “He’s coming. He’ll be here.” But his voice betrays it—he’s unsure. The murmurs start in the back. “Where’s Tommy?” “He ain’t coming.” “You hear what happened?” The room begins to shift. Danny enters quietly, no coat, Tommy’s gloves hanging from his fingers like a flag. He walks up to Mikey, eyes swollen, tears. “He broke his own hand,” Danny says softly. Mikey freezes. His mouth opens. Nothing comes out. The bell never rings. Ray storms toward them, veins flaring in his neck. “Get back in there,” he growls, pointing to the ring. “We’ve got a crowd. You fight.” But Mikey doesn’t move. He looks at Ray like a child who’s just seen through a magic trick—shame, betrayal, pity. Then he climbs out of the ring. Steps down. Walks across the gym without a word. He pushes open the side door. Cold light spills in. Outside, it’s snowing. Mikey walks out into it and disappears.
The gym is empty now, lights humming in the stillness. The folding chairs have been left half-collapsed. The ring rope sags like an abandoned net. Ray stands alone under the lights, shirt damp, sweat frozen on his skin. He throws a lazy combination at the heavy bag—thud, thud, pause. “Braddock,” he whispers to himself after each punch. “Braddock. Braddock.” Like he’s trying to summon meaning from the sound. He misses the bag, stumbles, catches himself. Stands again. Hits harder. The name cracks on his tongue. Upstairs, the house smells like bleach and winter. Danny stands over the bathroom sink, holding the bloodstained towel Tommy used to bind his hand. He stares at it like it’s an artifact from a war no one admits they fought. He walks to the fireplace in the living room, feeds it in. The towel curls, smokes, disappears. The fire crackles. There are no more fighters in the house of fighters.
Mikey runs, days after the fight was supposed to happen. Mikey stops running and walks down an empty back road. From behind him—footsteps. He turns. Tommy stands there, one hand in a sling, the other holding a coat he forgot to wear. They don’t speak at first. Their breaths form plumes between them. Mikey breaks the silence. “You really broke it?” Tommy lifts the bandaged hand, flexes it slightly. Winces. Nods. Mikey looks away, jaw tight. “You could’ve just said no.” Tommy shrugs. “You wouldn’t’ve heard it.” The two pause. Mikey’s voice lowers. “I would've hit you too hard.” Tommy lets out a little laugh saying he knows. They start walking side by side. Slowly. The town around them is quiet. After a long pause, Mikey speaks again—“I ever tell you I was jealous of you?” Tommy laughs once under his breath. “You were the one winning titles.” Mikey shakes his head. “You got out.”
A VHS tape whirs to life. The screen shakes for a moment, then settles. Footage flickers: three boys in oversized gloves, sparring in a backyard ring made of garden hose and lawn chairs. Ray’s voice barks off-camera. “Keep your guard up! Don’t let him inside!” Rose steps into frame, laughing, swatting playfully at Ray’s shoulder. She walks to the boys, breaks up the scuffle, kisses each of them on the forehead. Mikey grins through a bloody nose. Danny hugs her waist. Tommy looks straight into the camera and waves. The tape stutters. Glitches. Her face freezes. Then the screen cuts to black.


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