Bill Simmons’ HBO documentary of Andre the Giant aired last night. It has all of the aesthetics and beauty of anything HBO has produced over the last two decades. Andre the Giant was given a stunning visual film filled with archived footage and a rolling audio bed that never stopped. The music helps keep the film moving and the dramatic music gives rise to a sense of impending doom. The impending doom of course was Andre’s early death which we knew was coming.
Another thing completely missing from the film was Andre’s career in Japan which is glossed over a footnote. Andre was enormously famous in Japan as big as he was in the United States. In fact at the end of his career he spent two years continuing to wrestle in Japan as he was ushered off WWE TV screens. These perspectives were sorely missed as were a lot of the now-deceased characters from his life. I only wish we could’ve gotten an interview with Bobby Heenan in the film.
There were tremendous aspects of the film however Tim White, Andre’s handler and friend shined as I knew he would. His relationship with Andre really drove the emotional content of the show. David Shoemaker’s commentary was what pushed the factual content of the film and Shoemaker did a tremendous job explaining pro wrestling.
While the film leaves out some important aspects of Andre’s career, it was incredibly well made and delivers the pathos of the life of Andre the Giant in a serious manner. I’m sure it would’ve been impossible to satisfy an Andre the Giant biographer like me, the film gives a strong understanding of the legend of Andre the Giant.
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Box Brown is comic artist living in Philadelphia. His book Andre the Giant: Life and Legend spent three weeks on the New York Times Best Seller List. His new book Is This Guy For Real?: The Unbelievable Andy Kaufman, about Kaufman’s short but influential wrestling career is out now. Follow him on Twitter @boxbrown and Instagram @boxbrown.