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Fallen Champ: The Untold Story of Mike Tyson
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Directed by Barbara Kopple
Barbara Kopple's film, made for network television, covers the early (and most fascinating) portion of boxer Mike Tyson's career. Shot while Tyson was serving a prison sentence in the wake of his 1991 rape conviction, the film considers how a fighter with such ferocious skills could allow personal demons to bring him down. Tyson's turbulent youth on the mean streets of Brooklyn (he was arrested at age 13), his tutelage by legendary trainer Cus D'Amato (who literally took in the abandoned teenager), his sympathetic management by Jim Jacobs, and his attempts to control his temper are amply documented. In 1986, at the age of 19, Tyson became the youngest heavyweight champion ever, but with success came an almost Shakespearean slide into disgrace. The flamboyant Don King stepped in to take over Tyson's career, and in 1988, the young man's support system took a big hit with the death of Jacobs from leukemia. Though successes followed for a time, Tyson's fragile psyche was a time bomb waiting to explode. The film gathers familiar coverage of the fighter's ring career as well as revealing footage of Tyson's struggles to channel his aggressions into positive conduct. Kopple conducts interviews with many Tyson associates, most importantly D'Amato. It's a departure for the filmmaker, whose previous work (the Oscar-winning films Harlan County, U.S.A. and American Dream) focused on labor issues. ~ Tom Wiener, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
Shot at a crucial time in the life and career of heavyweight boxer Mike Tyson, Fallen Champ will likely stand as the definitive document of his early, mostly brilliant career. When the film was made, Tyson was in the midst of serving three years for raping a beauty queen in his hotel room, and what has followed his release from prison was a long slide into near oblivion: more confrontations with the law, uninspired fights with second-rate boxers, the infamous 1997 fight with Evander Holyfield during which Tyson bit his opponent's ear and was disqualified. Filmmaker Barbara Kopple gathers all the footage you'd want of the young Tyson and then some; particularly revealing is a guarded moment after an amateur bout when a frustrated Tyson is consoled by a manager who clearly understands just how fragile this teenager's psyche is. Once Tyson became the youngest heavyweight champion, his fate was sealed: Don King, a bottom-line man with no regard for the welfare of his fighters outside the ring, moved in, and Tyson's important network of trainers and managers who understood him as a person, were jettisoned. Mike Tyson beat the streets to become, for a time, the toughest man on the planet, but as this film (and his life since its release) ably demonstrate, the success that he craved has proved to be his undoing as a man. ~ Tom Wiener, All Movie Guide
 

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