Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson (2004) (imdb)

Ken Burns: The story of Jack Johnson, the first African American Heavyweight boxing champion.
From the celebrated director of Academy Award-nominated "Brooklyn Bridge" and "Statue of Liberty," UNFORGIVABLE BLACKNESS: THE RISE AND FALL OF JACK JOHNSON follows Jack Johnson's remarkable journey from his humble beginnings in Galveston, Texas, as the son of former slaves, into the brutal world of professional boxing, where, in turn-of-the century Jim Crow America, the heavyweight champion was an exclusively "white title." Despite the odds, Johnson was able to batter his way up through the professional ranks, and in 1908 he became the first African-American to earn the title Heavyweight Champion of the World.
*actualización*
Cirlot avisa al, otro extremo del hilo, que el ripeo de SoSISO se ha quedado sin fuentes, y apunta este otro:
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ed2k:
Código: Seleccionar todo
Unforgivable.Blackness.The.Rise.And.Fall.Of.Jack.Johnson.2004.DVDRiP.XViD-SoSISO
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▓═╬═▓ Released ........01/03/2006 Video Format ......... XviD ▓═╬═▓
█ DVD Date ....... 01/11/2005 Video Bitrate .... 854 kb/s █
▓ Genre ..........Boxing/Docu Video Resolution .. 512x272 ▓
█ Runtime ..........210.5 Min Subtitles .............(No) █
█░█ Frame Rate ...... 29.97 FPS Audio Format .......... Mp3 █░█
█▓═▓█ Aspect ............. 1.88:1 Audio Bitrate ......128 kbs █▓═▓█
█░█ Archives .............. 2CD Files .......... 2X 49x15 █░█
█ IMDB Rating ............8.6 Filename.......sosjjub1.rar █
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█ ▓═╬═▓ MOVIE INFORMATION ▓═╬═▓ █
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Jack Johnson ù the first African-American Heavyweight Champion of
the World, whose dominance over his white opponents spurred furious
debates and race riots in the early 20th century.
Director Ken Burns, whose past films , The Civil War, Baseball, JAZZ,
are among the most-watched documentaries ever made, shows the gritty
details of Johnson's life through archival footage, still
photographs, and the commentary of boxing experts such as Stanley
Crouch, Bert Sugar, the late George Plimpton, Jack Newfield, Randy
Roberts, Gerald Early and James Earl Jones, who portrayed Johnson
in the Broadway play and film based on Johnson's life,
"The Great White Hope."
At JUST over 210 minutes, theres an arguement this could be 3CD's,
but it's mostly black and white photo's, very few moving shots, so
I think you'll agree it came out in premium quality on just 2.