Director: Mike Tolin
Varsity Blues
Coach Carter
Big Fat Liar
Radio
One Tree Hill
All That
Keenan and Kell
Synopsis
The film follows the rise and fall of the USFL,
an upstart spring football league which folded after trying to go head
to head with the NFL in the fall. The league appeared like a legitimate
challenger to the NFL, signing Heisman trophy winners Herschel Walker,
Doug Flutie, and Mike Rozier as well as future hall of famers such as
Reggie White. The USFL included 150 future NFL players and 15
pro-bowlers in its' ranks. The piece pays particular attention to the
impact of New Jersey Generals owner and celebrity icon Donald Trump, who
spearheaded the move to the fall which ultimately doomed the USFL. In
1986 the league won a key court decision against the NFL but were not
awarded damages which would have kept the NFL afloat. The league folded
before it could play a single fall game.
Thoughts
The film
plays a brief interview with Donald Trump right off the bat. Despite how short and really
empty a lot of the interview is, this is the best part of the ocumentaryd.
This film identifies its' villain right away and the interview with
Donald contains everything you want to cement the films' vision. Unlike
the first two films, which don't completely or correctly identify the
bad guy, this one creates a big, Las Vegas style sign that points at him
the entire film. What's more, even though Trump really doesn't say
much during the interview, his answers, his tone, his body language,
everything makes you want to punch him in the face. He is every bit the
self centered, ego maniacal jerk the film wants him to be.
It is hard to cast a better villain in Donald Trump (though Peter
Pocklington in King's Ransom certainly presents a more dynamic
antagonist than the rather cliche inhumane rich guy we get with Trump)
which is part of the reason this film succeeds. The other reason is
that there is no reason to question the wisdom of the late John
Bassett. The NFL has a notriously nasty history of crushing leagues
which try to match against it and only one alternate football league has
found some level of success against the NFL, and that was the AFL which
was led by Kansas City Chiefs owner Lamar Hunt who managed a merger
with the older league (most teams in the AFC are old AFL teams). Spring
football was new but the early returns were promising. In hindsight,
if the USFL had grown alongside cable and if owners had the fortitude to
withstand the massive early losses (which totaled over $160million when
it folded) it might still exist.
The narrative spun by the film is pretty accurate and the stories are
fantastic. Rick Neuheisel's bit about racing his teammates across Texas
highways to make sure their checks would clear is hilarious and does a
fantastic job of demonstrating the financial realities several owners
were facing. The interviews are captivating and the variety of
perspectives really paints a complete picture of the USFL.
My only complaint is this. The film could have done more to flesh out
the owners who sided with Trump. He certainly wasn't alone in wanting
to challenge the NFL (though he was the most vocal). Eddie Einhorn, now
a minority owner in the Chicago White Sox, was the owner of Chicago's
USFL franchise and a vehement supporter of the Trump invective. Where
are those interviews? We get Burt Reynolds, who co-owned the Tampa Bay
Bandits with John Basset, but it would be really interesting to hear how
the owners' side of this a little more. This was, after all, a
management decision, why not have more of their voice?
It is possible a lot of owners would be too embarrassed to go on camera
to discuss what, in hindsight, looks like a major mistake, but we don't
know that.
Also I need to mention that this film has by far the best Bonus Features
of the first disk. The extra interviews are fantastic and really do a
great job of reinforcing the overarching theme of the film.
Review
This is easily one of my favorite 30 for 30 films and it is easy to see
why. The facts in the documentary actually seem to fit the narrative the author puts over them which is a bit of a relief after the first two films. I would like more on Trump's reasoning that the USFL was small potatoes. As I said before, there were owners who sided with Trump and it is hard to believe everyone who fell in line the idea that they needed to challenge the NFL was just a lemming. What exactly swayed them? Was it really just Donald's overwhelming personality as the film suggests or was there something more? The film manages the narrative well but leaves this part out in order to construct Donald Trump as the arrogant villain.
I am mixed on my opinion of the director's decision to introduce himself
into the film. On one hand it shows some gumption and some honesty to
admit his bias at the outset and to show how that he has a personal
connection to the subjects who were interviewed in the story. On the
other hand it gets a little over bearing at times and the only real
scene where it is tangible is him handing the check for $3 which
constituted the entire sum of the damages the USFL received from its
lawsuit against the NFL to Reynolds and Trump. I like some of it but I
could do without the constant personal pronoun references.
No comments:
Post a Comment