Tyson’s Life Has
Shakespearian Dimensions
“Tyson” is
not a documentary about the brutal lifestyle of a heavyweight champion. “Tyson”
is James Toback’s brilliant look into the terrifying world of Mike Tyson, a
muscular man of extreme contrasts who has captured the public imagination like
no other prize fighter since Muhammad Ali .
Now
playing at the Loft Cinema, 3233 E. Speedway Blvd., “Tyson” quickly proves the
film’s main miracle is that Toback has somehow
managed to win Tyson’s trust. Time and again the fearsome fighter drops his
guard, describing his conflicted emotions in terms that sometimes have the
innocence of a child. Imagine Frankenstein’s monster sitting on a big log
beside that lake, remembering the sweet little girl, talking about his dream of
becoming a high school science teacher. Imagine sitting within arm’s reach of
the monster, asking him embarrassing questions while the camera’s silent eye
looks on.
Tyson was
a fabled powerhouse in the ring but never had a chance to develop an
equally successful personality. The brain controlling that formidable mountain
of lightning-quick muscle was barely developed at all. In the heightened
strength of his youth, Tyson freely admits he lived in fear.
Realizing
he had been gifted with a magnificent body that was faster and stronger than
anyone else, he feared the anger always boiling inside. He also feared the
animal jungle of prison. Intuitively he didn’t even trust himself, certainly
not anyone else.
Another
mythic film figure that comes to mind is sad-eyed Lon Chaney as the Wolfman, who hated having the power to murder people. The Wolfman feared the full moon.
Although
the boxing ring saved Tyson from the street, and provided a place of sanctuary
where he could roam and rage at will for a few rounds, the ring also doomed
this awesome athlete.
Toback adds archive footage of Tyson’s youth, his early days
in the gym, his major fights, and his unfortunate melt-down. Brilliant cinema
edits and precise pacing are Toback’[s other
contributions.
The
emotional high-point is Tyson’s own brutal description of his anger in the ring
with Evander Holyfield. In this extreme environment, biting Holyfield’s ear
didn’t seem that irrational.
In the
end, you will leave “Tyson” with a deeper appreciation for the complexities of
human nature. The man – now in his 40s – dominated the physical world in his
20s, then became a tragic figure whose decline was the equal of King Lear and
Othello.