"30 for 30" Slaying the Badger (TV Episode 2014) Poster

(TV Series)

(2014)

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8/10
Wow...I never realized just how cutthroat this all was...
planktonrules6 January 2015
One thing I should point out about this film. It was produced for ESPN and I wonder if the same angle would have been taken had it been made by a French company or one from outside the US. As is, the film seemed to have a strong bias against the French champion, Bernard Hinault.

Apparently, back in the 1980s, the tradition of the Tour de France was that you'd have various teams and each team would designate one person as the leader--THE person who could win for the team. And, the rest of the racers were considered 'domestiques'--men who would set him up for the win and forgo trying for the championship. This strategy was explained in the 1985 Tour when the Hinault was injured but his teammate, Greg LeMond, held back to give Hinault the victory. LeMond was, according to LeMond and some teammates, promised that because of this selfless act that he would be the leader and have his chance for winning in 1986. However, after the race began, it seemed that the team's captain and Hinault had other ideas--to have Hinault NOT be one of the domestiques but fight hard for the victory yet again! The film is mostly about LeMond's sense of betrayal and anger that he'd been apparently tricked by his own team! Yet, despite this, he was able to rise to the occasion and win despite the odds.

In addition, the film touches on a few other topics at the end--but only briefly. For example, although LeMond was a HUGE and vocal opponent about performance enhancing drugs, his opposition to Lance Armstrong and others seems a bit minimized--and it doesn't exactly revel in the truth that LeMond was apparently speaking--as folks (especially Armstrong) WERE cheating. The other topic mentioned was LeMond's comeback after getting shot in a hunting accident! Yikes!

Overall, this is a very interesting and very well made installment in the series. But, as I mentioned above, I still wonder if the film might have taken a different tact--especially had it been made by French folks who might have seen the whole Hinault/LeMond controversy differently.

By the way, if you wonder about the plastic brace LeMond is wearing in the film it's because of his recent car accident in which he broke his back. However, apparently he is just fine now and the brace was only for a few months.
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8/10
Excellent look at the LeMond-Hinault rivalry
paul-allaer30 July 2019
"Slaying the Badger" (2014 release; 71 min.) is a documentary about the professional relationship between two now-legendary road cyclists, American Greg MeMond and Frenshman Bernard Hinault. As the film opens we get snippets from the (in)famous 1986 Tour de France, the Tour being the grandest and hardest cycling spectacle in the world. We then go to Gerge LeMond's early days, growing up in Nevada and how he turned to cycling at an early age, in those days a traditional bastion of mostly continental European cyclists. LeMond's talents are undeniable, to the point where the team of Bernard Hinault, then the uncontested "boss" of the peleton, signs LeMond ....

Couple of comments: I am a lofe-long fan of professional cycling, having grown up in Belgium (home of the very best cyclist ever, Eddy "The Cannibal" Merckx), and I could tell within minutes of watching this documentary that the film makers of "Slaying the Badger" totally "got it". The key premise of this documentary is that after the 1985 Tour, Hinault and LeMond struck a deal whereby LeMond would be the team leader for the 1986 Tour, and Hinault would help him win it. In reality, Hinault did everything he could to try and win the 1986 Tour himself, screw LeMond. Amazingly, the film makers were able to interview Hinault, who then claims with a straight face that he lived up to the words of the deal. Absolutely amazing. Along the way, we get lots of archive footage from what professional road cycling was like in the 1980s (before doping ravaged the sport starting in the 90s and culminating of course with Lance Armstrong's Big Lie).

I have no idea how an average viewer who might not be as familiar with the intricacies of the world of professional road cycling, would experience this documentary. I can only say that I absolutely loved this film (originally made for ESPN's excellent 30 For 30 sports documentary series).
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