The Armstrong Lie
The Armstrong Lie | |
---|---|
![]() Film poster | |
Directed by | Alex Gibney |
Written by | Alex Gibney |
Produced by | Frank Marshall Matt Tolmach Alex Gibney |
Starring | Lance Armstrong |
Narrated by | Alex Gibney |
Cinematography | Ben Bloodwell Maryse Alberti |
Edited by | Andy Grieve Tim Squyres Lindy Jankura |
Music by | David Kahne |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Sony Pictures Classics |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 122 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $428,795[1][2] |
The Armstrong Lieis a 2013 Americandocumentary filmdirected byAlex Gibneyabout the cyclistLance Armstrong.Originally titledThe Road Back,[3]the film takes its name from"Le Mensonge Armstrong",the headline of the August 23, 2005 issue of the French newspaperL'Équipe.[4]The film was screened out of competition at the70th Venice International Film Festival[5][6]and in the Special Presentation section at the2013 Toronto International Film Festival.[7]
Synopsis
[edit]In 2009, director Alex Gibney set out to filmThe Road Back,a documentary on cyclist Lance Armstrong's comeback year after a four-year retirement from the sport. Three years later, in October 2012, adoping investigationled to his lifetime ban from competition and the stripping of his sevenTour de Francetitles, and the documentary was shelved. On January 14, 2013, three hours after his appearance onOprah,Armstrong went back to Gibney to set the record straight about his career.[8]
Cast
[edit]- Lance Armstrong
- Reed Albergotti
- Frankie Andreu
- Betsy Andreu
- Johan Bruyneel
- Alberto Contador
- Daniel Coyle
- Michele Ferrari
- George Hincapie
- Steve Madden
- Filippo Simeoni
- Bill Stapleton
- Bill Strickland
- Jonathan Vaughters
- David Walsh
The documentary includes footage fromLarry King Live,The Daily Showand theSouth Parkepisode "A Scause for Applause".
Reception
[edit]Reviews of the documentary were positive, with an 83% approval rating onRotten Tomatoesbased on 122 reviews, with an average rating of 6.90/10. The site's critics' consensus reads: "Smartly constructed and scathingly sharp,The Armstrong Liepresents an effective indictment of its unscrupulous subject -- as well as the sports culture that spawned him. "[9]OnMetacritic,the film has a weighted average score of 67 out of 100 based on 37 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[10]
In his review forThe Observer,Mark Kermodewrote: "Armstrong comes across as both admirably resilient and frighteningly selfish, his treatment of those who crossed him… tellingly callous, his refusal to be beaten bizarrely engaging", and gave the film a score of 4/5 stars.[11]Peter Howell of theToronto Stargave the film a score of 3/4 stars, writing: "Gibney gives the truth as full an airing as seems humanly possible, given that the subject is a world-class liar."[12]Peter TraversofRolling Stonealso gave the film a score of 3/4 stars, writing: "The movie rambles at two-plus hours, but the provocation never stops."[13]Kate Muir ofThe Timeswrote: "The tale is fascinating, not just for cycling enthusiasts, but connoisseurs of the human condition."[14]Boyd van Hoeij ofThe Hollywood Reportercalled the film "A quite absorbing but never riveting or revelatory overview of Armstrong's career and testy personality."[15]
Philippa Hawker ofThe Sydney Morning Heraldgave the film a score of 3/5 stars, writing: "This is not a story about doping, it is a story about power, someone observes; Armstrong exercised and abused it, with the complicity of many in the cycling world."[16]Peter BradshawofThe Guardiangave the film a score of 3/5 stars, describing it as "a striking but flawed documentary" and writing: "the slippery doper hedges his general admission with all sorts of hints that this matter wasn't quite what his accusers have said, and Gibney circles around his man, never quite going in for the kill."[17]Deborah Ross ofThe Spectatorwrote that the film was "fascinating as far as it goes but it may not go as far as you would like, and may not ask the questions you would like", and concluded: "As I said, it's entirely possible you can't get to the heart of Armstrong because there is no heart, but I'd like to have seen someone have a go."[18]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^"The Armstrong Lie".Box Office Mojo.RetrievedFebruary 10,2014.
- ^"The Armstrong Lie – International results".Box Office Mojo.RetrievedFebruary 10,2014.
- ^Lyons, Margaret (October 8, 2013)."The Armstrong Lie Trailer: Tour de Lance".New York Media, LLC.RetrievedApril 16,2014.
- ^"EN IMAGES. Retour sur l'histoire d'Armstrong et du Tour de France".20 minutes.RetrievedApril 16,2014.
- ^"Out of Competition".labiennale.Archived fromthe originalon July 28, 2013.RetrievedJuly 27,2013.
- ^"Venice film festival 2013: the full line-up".The Guardian.London. July 25, 2013.RetrievedJuly 27,2013.
- ^"The Armstrong Lie".TIFF.RetrievedAugust 15,2013.
- ^"Lance Armstrong movie title changes to" The Armstrong Lie "".WJLA-TV.November 7, 2013.RetrievedApril 16,2014.
- ^"The Armstrong Lie".Rotten Tomatoes.RetrievedOctober 14,2021.
- ^"The Armstrong Lie".Metacritic.RetrievedOctober 14,2021.
- ^Kermode, Mark (February 2, 2014)."The Armstrong Lie – review | Mark Kermode".The Guardian.RetrievedOctober 14,2021.
- ^Howell, Peter (November 28, 2013)."The Armstrong Lie further exposes disgraced cyclist's deceptions: review".The Toronto Star.ISSN0319-0781.RetrievedOctober 14,2021.
- ^Travers, Peter (November 7, 2013)."The Armstrong Lie".Rolling Stone.RetrievedOctober 14,2021.
- ^Muir, Kate (January 31, 2014)."The Armstrong Lie".The Times.ISSN0140-0460.RetrievedOctober 14,2021.
- ^van Hoeij, Boyd (September 2, 2013)."The Armstrong Lie:Venice Review ".The Hollywood Reporter.RetrievedNovember 6,2013.
- ^Hawker, Philippa (March 7, 2014)."The Armstrong Lie review: After the wheels fall off".The Sydney Morning Herald.RetrievedOctober 14,2021.
- ^Bradshaw, Peter (January 30, 2014)."The Armstrong Lie – review".The Guardian.RetrievedOctober 14,2021.
- ^Ross, Deborah (February 1, 2014)."Can Lance Armstrong squirm? We don't know because The Armstrong Lie doesn't make him".The Spectator.Archived fromthe originalon March 5, 2014.RetrievedOctober 14,2021.
External links
[edit]]
- 2013 films
- 2013 documentary films
- American sports documentary films
- Documentary films about cycling
- Documentary films about sportspeople
- Doping at the Tour de France
- Films directed by Alex Gibney
- Films produced by Frank Marshall
- Films produced by Matt Tolmach
- Films shot at Bovingdon Studios
- Films shot in Austin, Texas
- Films shot in California
- Films shot in Colorado
- Films shot in France
- Films shot in Italy
- Lance Armstrong
- Sony Pictures Classics films
- 2010s English-language films
- 2010s American films
- English-language documentary films