Anyone else seen or remember this old BBC 2 documentary?
I picked up a copy on a DVD from a local charity shop a few weeks ago and finally sat down to watch it tonight.
It's interesting as it's from the era of the Monday Night Wars and so when Theroux visits the WCW there are moments of seeing guys like Randy Savage, Roddy Piper and Goldberg backstage and at the other end of the scale he spends time with a small-time outfit calling itself the AIWF, who wrestle in local community centres and end up with a bloodbath when they mistakenly buy the "wrong kind" of barbed wire for their main event.
A large portion of the documentary is spent in the WCW's Power Plant training facility (which I never imagined would look like such a dump) after one of the trainers makes the all too familiar point of reacting to a question about kayfabe by claiming to know nothing about the subject and then putting him through a particularly vicious session of workouts and routines in order "correct his lack of respect" for the "sport". The sequence couldn't help but remind me of David Schultz and his style of defending the same thing and make me wonder if people on the inside of pro-wrestling have finally managed to deal with this massive issue that some of them have towards perceiving any discussion about the worked nature of the business as being disrespectful, as those who behave in this manner never come off looking anything other than paranoid and vicious.
Another highlight is when Theroux bumps into Scott Levy and Alex Wright in a departure lounge and seems to wind the former up by firstly not knowing who he is and then openly admitting that he didn't research his subject before embarking on the documentary. Though this is explained as a part of his film-making style, that he approaches his subjects in this manner in order to maintain the status of an outsider and react as a member of his audience might, it interested me as Levy is known to have reacted positively in the past to people who refuse to buy into his status as a cult figure in wrestling circles. Greg Lambert recounts an incident in which one of his colleagues at his Morcombe promotion was driving Levy around and had the wrestler demand to know what he thought of him. When the guy said that he thought Levy was less than stellar in his opinion (I won't quote his exact words here), the reaction he got was a knowingly positive one and a thanks for not kissing his arse like everyone else did. I just find it interesting to see the different aspects that people show when there's a camera present and when there's not.
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Anyone else seen or remember this old BBC 2 documentary?
I picked up a copy on a DVD from a local charity shop a few weeks ago and finally sat down to watch it tonight.
It's interesting as it's from the era of the Monday Night Wars and so when Theroux visits the WCW there are moments of seeing guys like Randy Savage, Roddy Piper and Goldberg backstage and at the other end of the scale he spends time with a small-time outfit calling itself the AIWF, who wrestle in local community centres and end up with a bloodbath when they mistakenly buy the "wrong kind" of barbed wire for their main event.
A large portion of the documentary is spent in the WCW's Power Plant training facility (which I never imagined would look like such a dump) after one of the trainers makes the all too familiar point of reacting to a question about kayfabe by claiming to know nothing about the subject and then putting him through a particularly vicious session of workouts and routines in order "correct his lack of respect" for the "sport". The sequence couldn't help but remind me of David Schultz and his style of defending the same thing and make me wonder if people on the inside of pro-wrestling have finally managed to deal with this massive issue that some of them have towards perceiving any discussion about the worked nature of the business as being disrespectful, as those who behave in this manner never come off looking anything other than paranoid and vicious.
Another highlight is when Theroux bumps into Scott Levy and Alex Wright in a departure lounge and seems to wind the former up by firstly not knowing who he is and then openly admitting that he didn't research his subject before embarking on the documentary. Though this is explained as a part of his film-making style, that he approaches his subjects in this manner in order to maintain the status of an outsider and react as a member of his audience might, it interested me as Levy is known to have reacted positively in the past to people who refuse to buy into his status as a cult figure in wrestling circles. Greg Lambert recounts an incident in which one of his colleagues at his Morcombe promotion was driving Levy around and had the wrestler demand to know what he thought of him. When the guy said that he thought Levy was less than stellar in his opinion (I won't quote his exact words here), the reaction he got was a knowingly positive one and a thanks for not kissing his arse like everyone else did. I just find it interesting to see the different aspects that people show when there's a camera present and when there's not.