Iron Claw __link__ - The
The film ends on a note of fragile hope. The real Kevin Von Erich is still alive, living in Hawaii with his wife, Pam. He has four sons, none of whom became professional wrestlers. He remains estranged from the business that took his brothers.
He climbed into the ring. Across from him stood a man he’d wrestled a hundred times, a hired hand from Florida with a bleach-blond mullet and no idea what this meant. The bell rang. The Iron Claw
In interviews following the film’s release, the real Kevin praised Efron’s performance but noted the difficulty of reliving the past. "It’s like picking a scab off a wound that never healed," Kevin said. Yet, he also expressed relief that the world finally understands what his family went through. The film ends on a note of fragile hope
In the pantheon of sports history, few families are as legendary—or as cursed—as the Von Erichs. In the world of professional wrestling, they were Texas royalty, a dynasty of golden-haired, all-American boys who seemed to have it all. Yet, beneath the sheen of championship gold and the roar of the Dallas Sportatorium, lay a darkness that would make the House of Atreus look tame. He remains estranged from the business that took