Lynch: A History (2019) Poster

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10/10
No idea how someone can rate this 1 star
bayoucasuals22 March 2024
As someone who has long admired Marshawn Lynch, even as (or maybe even because) he soundly destroyed my team in the 2012-13 playoffs, this film was of great interest to me. I was at first taken aback by how unusual the style of this documentary was, and then became thoroughly engrossed within a couple of minutes. The anarchic style perfectly complements the anarchic NFL legend who is its subject.

The storytelling is not typical of the NFL player-documentary trope that requires a narrator and polished interviews and a soaring "heroic" score - nor should it be for someone like Marshawn, a man who famously eschewed interviews, and with good reason. (If I elaborated further, that might be a spoiler.)

Instead, this skillfully edited piece creates its narrative by knitting together clips that begin to make more sense as the film goes on. It's like an impressionist portrait that not only captures its subject, but also his environment - how he was influenced, how he in turn influenced others, the state of the media and the performative expectations when it comes to race, and the state of society as a whole. Much like that painting, you have to step back and look at this film as a whole, and you will learn something valuable from it if you're willing to.

Sit with this documentary for an hour, and let yourself be uncomfortable at times. If you can't do that, then put on something more palatable and mainstream.

But, if you really want to know Marshawn Lynch as a human being, and discover how influential and valuable he has been to the culture of the NFL - and why - then take this deep dive. If you really appreciate him as a person, or even just appreciate groundbreaking filmmaking, you are the audience for this.
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1/10
Lame - piece meal mashup of non Marshawn clips
scottggames31 January 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Worst trash of a so called documentary. There is about 15 minutes with of clips from talk shows, news segments and commercials he's done with a bunch of ridiculous cartoons and racial political clips that have nothing to do with him. I understand using these clips to highlight his feeling about the media or his home town of Oakland etc but the poetic license taken for this so called documentary was a fail. Marshawn deserves better than 10 minutes of Cat in the Hat filler.
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5/10
Entertaining but...
mgcawley-677339 April 2024
Wasn't really what you'd expect to see in the form of a documentary showing Marshawns life. Not really sure what they were trying to say actually but it seemed to be a whole lot of "poor me, I'm a black athlete and I'm being exploited.". So they make out that Marshawns preference for silence is some kind of noble fight against being exploited. Forget that without promotion and without fans, these highly rewarded athletes would just be another face in the crowd. It's almost a display of contempt for the people that make them what they are. Politics aside, it is chock full of clips of Marshawn making great plays. And in defense of the film maker, if you're making a film about Marshawn, there's no getting around the fact that politics and race issues come with the territory. It was still entertaining.
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