By James Bowman on 5.20.09 @ 6:02AM
A disgusting documentary about a washed-up fighter.
Mike Tyson is no dummy, you know. He uses long and old-fashioned
words like "skullduggery" -- which he uses to mean something like
"head games" -- and he knows a lot about the history of boxing,
which is the area of human endeavor to which he has made his
great contribution and which, in return, has made him famous
enough to be the subject of a film documentary, Tyson,
by James Toback. Mr. Toback, himself a graduate of Harvard
College, told an interviewer last
year that Mr. Tyson was also a deep reader who
had spent long hours in solitary confinement reading works of
great philosophers. His favorites these days are Machiavelli
and Tolstoy. "Cool guys," Mr. Tyson said. "All these guys, for
some bizarre reason, all these guys are in some bizarre pain.
Machiavelli just wanted power. He wanted power and control. His
whole game was about manipulation. Tolstoy was all about
helping the poor. He was a Communist, while his wife was a
capitalist. And they had big fights over this."
He can also, as you see from the above, use the words "bizarre"
and "manipulation." Not to mention "wretched," as in, "that
wretched swine of a woman," Miss Desirée Washington, whose
evidence got him convicted of rape back in 1992, and so provided
him with the opportunity for all that reading.
Impressive as these intellectual attainments are, the best
argument for Mr. Tyson's high intelligence is that he knows
exactly how to manipulate Mr. Toback (perhaps he learned it from
Machiavelli), not to mention those who will come to watch his
movie on the assumption that they are being thus be let into the
secret of the real Mike Tyson, the Mike Tyson nobody
knows who is not only intellectual but sensitive, thoughtful,
introspective, scared, insecure and capable of a self-pitying
tear when his long dead mentor, Cus d'Amato is mentioned. In
short, the real Mike Tyson, is society's victim. He doesn't have
to make the claim to victimhood, and can even take upon himself
some small portion of responsibility for the ill-deeds and
ill-luck of his life and career, rather in the spirit of Jimmy
Buffett singing:
Some people claim that there's a woman to blame,
But I know
it's my own damn fault.
Not for the rape, however, does he take any responsibility, nor
the assault for which he was sent back to prison some years
later, which he never mentions. The set-up of the documentary
itself prepares us to excuse its subject, simply for being the
hero of his own story.
Mr. Toback's documentary exploits this structural expectation to
the hilt, and he gives his film only one voice, the voice of Mike
Tyson. At times this voice is multiplied, but it's still all just
Mike. For, by dipping into the film-maker's black bag, Mr. Toback
also produces contrapuntal versions of his voice so as to give,
on at least one occasion, a simulation of incipient insanity --
making us hear along with Mr. Tyson voices in our heads, even
though they are all the same voice. That there are times when he
imagines the balance of his mind is disturbed is just one of the
claims he makes upon our sympathy. Frequent use of split-screen
imagery of Mr. Tyson's striking face, now framed by a Maori (or
"Mao-ey," as he puts it at first) tattoo also creates the
impression of multiple identities, while on the bottom horizontal
we see a lonely figure -- Mike again! -- walking thoughtfully
along a beach at sunset.
And let's not forget that other Mao-ey tattoo, the one of Mao
Tse-tung, the well-known Chinese mass murderer who passed away
peacefully, surrounded by his fellow gangsters, when Iron Mike
was ten. Also the one of Che Guevara, which must be meant to
align the street smart ex-champ with the oppressed college boys
of the world. These two tattoos, he tells us, he got after being
sent to prison for rape, thanks to the "wretched woman." The
injustice of his conviction had led him to conclude that, as he
puts it, "I had no faith in my government." He doesn't say
whether or not he's got any faith in his government back since
then. He also became a Muslim in prison, perhaps for the same
reason, though we don't hear so much about his religious beliefs
anymore either. It's all part of the "mystery" in which, at the
end of Mr Toback's film, he enshrouds the fascinating question of
what he will do next. Likewise, he kicks the whole thing off by
observing: "The first question is, 'Who am I?'"
No, the first first question is, Who cares? Now reduced
to palookahood ("I don't have the fighting guts anymore," he said
after being knocked out by Kevin McBride in his last fight, in
2005), Mr. Tyson still, nevertheless, possesses a remnant of that
undeniable charisma that is so apparent in the film's file
footage from his heyday in the ring, now 20 years in the past. To
my eye, his attempt to affiliate himself with society's victims
only diminishes this magnetic quality further. Having lost the
estimated $300 to $400 million he earned in the ring to a
combination of his own profligacy and the creative accounting of
various "leeches," as he no doubt rightly calls them, he is just
another celebrity huckster trying to scrape a living by doing a
public fan dance with what he imagines to be his endlessly
fascinating human vulnerability. How much more interesting he
would be if only he made the pretense of taking responsibility
for his actions -- at least some of them -- into a reality for
all of them. But then neither he nor Mr. Toback are likely to
lose any money by betting that I'm in the minority on that one.