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Lee
06-05-2018, 05:22 PM
Damn rights, I've been watching tons of documentaries with being off work ill.

The latest I watched was "The Jinx". I had tons of people recommend it to me and 2 episodes in I thought it was pretty dull but then it really picked up for 3 and continued the upward trend.

Has anyone else seen it?

mrluck_07
06-05-2018, 08:34 PM
Haven’t seen it. What's it about?

Lee
06-06-2018, 03:55 PM
A man is arrested for decapitating a body and asks the film maker to do an interview. The police have previously suspected him of two previous murders but don't have any evidence. It then unwinds.

Black Anaconda Vise
06-07-2018, 04:33 PM
I'm sure you've heard of it, but Dear Zachary is a fantastic documentary. If you haven't watched it, it's best to go in without knowing anything about the case. Good stuff.

Lee
06-07-2018, 05:22 PM
Cheers that's actually next on my list so I'll give it a watch. Don't know much about it as my friend said the same to me about it.

#AbsoluteUnit
06-07-2018, 07:55 PM
Are these available on YouTube?

Lee
06-10-2018, 12:45 PM
Are these available on YouTube?

http://watchdocumentaries.com/ is what I use or netflix, generally though dailymotion's your best place too.

smarkmouth
06-10-2018, 12:54 PM
Mostly off topic, but if you're into mockumentaries, American Vandal was better than it had any right to be.

#AbsoluteUnit
06-10-2018, 01:55 PM
Speaking of documentaries, considering this is a wrestling forum, who here has seen Wrestling with Shadows? Or Beyond the Mat?

Lee
06-10-2018, 02:00 PM
I'm sure you've heard of it, but Dear Zachary is a fantastic documentary. If you haven't watched it, it's best to go in without knowing anything about the case. Good stuff.

Shit that was amazing. Emotional wreck now mind.

Jack-Hammer
06-10-2018, 04:46 PM
Speaking of documentaries, considering this is a wrestling forum, who here has seen Wrestling with Shadows? Or Beyond the Mat?

I've seen them both. Beyond the Mat was sort of a big deal for my friends and I because it was the Attitude Era and we basically lived for what would go down on Monday nights in order to discuss it all through much of the week. The internet was still pretty young and we didn't really keep close tables on the dirt sheets or really any wrestling website, or publication really, and I think it's one reason why we enjoyed it so much.

Beyond the Mat didn't really tell me anything I didn't already know, or at least had some good sense about, but Jake Roberts was the emotional center of the documentary for me. I'd heard a few stories here and there over the years how bad things had gotten with him and while the documentary didn't really show him at his lowers, such as showing him actually doing drugs or anything, I'm kinda glad that didn't happen as it would've seemed exploitative to me. The hardest part of the film was when they were filming Foley's wife and kids in the audience during the I Quit match he had with the Rock at the 1999 Royal Rumble. Foley's hands were cuffed behind his back and he legitimately took a good 20 unprotected shots to the head. His kids were screaming and crying, so was his wife and it was pretty tough to watch them go through that. You know that Foley, in his passionate yet, at times, unwise dedication to his craft, told Rock to go at him with that chair as if he'd just caught him raping his mother and that's exactly what the Rock did. Overall, it's a good documentary that shows that pro wrestling really isn't really all that glamorous and gave a lot of people one of the first real looks at how difficult it can be.

Wrestling with Shadows really changed my opinion of Bret Hart and the whole thing about the Montreal Screwjob. I didn't see it until probably around 2001 or so and, like a lot of people, I was firmly on Bret Hart's side but that changed once I saw this. Not that the Montreal Screwjob is exactly something for Vince to be proud of, but I saw that it wasn't remotely the one sided deal I'd once thought. I thought Bret Hart came across as someone that was pretty full of himself and thought he was above Shawn Michaels. I get that he didn't like him, which may well have been quite understandable, but the fact that he didn't want to drop the WWF Championship to HBK while in Canada during his last match just struck me as hypocritical considering how much of a purist and traditionalist he proclaimed himself to be so often during the film. It'd always been tradition for someone to lose their last match when leaving a promotion, especially a championship match. Vince was getting his ass handed to him via the Monday Night War, Bret was leaving to go to the competition and Vince was worried that instead of showing up to Raw the next night to vacate the title, which both sides did agree to, he was afraid Bret would pop up on WCW Monday Nitro and pull a stunt with the WWF Championshp similar to what Madusa did with the WWF Women's Championship. It wasn't Vince's crowning moment but, as I learned, it wasn't really Bret's either and it most definitely wasn't the clear cut, black & white situation that many thought it'd been.

Big Nick Dudley
06-13-2018, 08:57 AM
Damn rights, I've been watching tons of documentaries with being off work ill.

The latest I watched was "The Jinx". I had tons of people recommend it to me and 2 episodes in I thought it was pretty dull but then it really picked up for 3 and continued the upward trend.

Has anyone else seen it?

The Jinx is fantastic. The rest of Durst's story is interesting, too. The Staircase is equally great.

Lee
06-19-2018, 09:34 PM
The Jinx is fantastic. The rest of Durst's story is interesting, too. The Staircase is equally great.

I just watched The Staircase, really interesting especially with it essentially being 3 parts so seeing how much things change in that time are weird. A few people I know thought it was a bit slow and long but it's essentially 3 in 1 documentaries (with the latest Netflix update).