Quiet Storm: The Ron Artest Story (2019) Poster

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9/10
Watch it
tahoe32731 March 2020
No matter if your into sports or not I recommend this film
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7/10
VIEWS ON FILM review of Quiet Storm: The Ron Artest Story
burlesonjesse530 September 2021
Warning: Spoilers
In 2019's Quiet Storm: The Ron Artest Story, the "quiet storm" refers to Artest himself. Ron Artest (now known as Metta Sandiford-Artest) played in the NBA for 18 years. He won a title with the LA Lakers in 2010, was Defensive Player of the Year in 2004, and was a one-time All-Star. At almost two hours, "Quiet Storm" tells Metta's story and tells it chronologically. We're talking from growing child age till present day.

So yeah, "Quiet Storm" is a documentary about an NBA player who had moderate success while also exhibiting a volatile nature. Remember the Malice at the Palace? Well Artest was there and it caused him to be suspended for the remainder of the 2004-2005 season. Metta went into the stands and punch a spectator. He also got a couple more slugs in when another spectator got onto the court.

Quiet Storm: The Ron Artest Story is an effective if not conventional documentary. It would be more conventional had it not been for title cards featuring words of wisdom from Metta's never seen shrink. Now is "Quiet Storm" a platform docu for Metta to gain sympathy for his past incidents? Sure it is. Artest had problems on court with fighting and what not. Also, he was arrested for domestic violence in 2007. Is "Quiet Storm" a manifesto for Metta to get himself consideration for the NBA Hall of Fame? I mean it feels like it but I don't believe he's an actual Hall of Famer (he had a decent career though).

All in all, Quiet Storm: The Ron Artest Story gets the job done by garnishing all the standard docu checkmarks. The archive footage is solid, the interviews are real, the editing is streamlined, and you get some concrete attestation concerning the Metta you thought you knew. The con is that "Quiet Storm" doesn't jump off the screen (no pun intended) like this year's Tina and The Bee Gees: How Can You Mend a Broken Heart. It firstly goes through the motions as to not fully laud Metta's pseudo self-serving journey. It does however, give the dude some sprinkled redemption. Imperfect "storm".
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10/10
Surprisingly touching
witigurl15 June 2019
This was an extremely eye opening documentary in which the notoriety of the NBA takes a backseat to the importance of mental health. I love the game, and knew very little about Ron Artest/Metta World Peace before this. But now I truly respect him as a survivor and advocate of an issue that normal is coupled with shame. I would suggest that this story be replayed in communities (schools) in which young men are struggling with this same issue with no outlets for help.
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10/10
Riveting look into a devastating disease
We've been conditioned to look at the MSM narrative of troubling and/or 'thug' behavior through a cyclical lens, rather than the prism of mental illness- now that certainly doesn't excuse poor behavior, however when we start to realize that no matter the level of 'fame', income, socioeconomic situation, etc., and view the person as a person, rather than placing ridiculous expectations onto someone who is incapable of living up to said expectations, we might begin to see those struggling be able to seek out help, and grow into their capabilities. Ron Artest is a perfect study of the effects of the psyche being directly related to a world view that's self-destructive, self-loathing and completely destroys any future their talents may escalate them to. This man's struggles and his subsequent rise to success are the epitome of the absolute power to overcome inner demons and become the person you are meant to be. I'm a Bulls fan by nature, but having watched Artest from his St Johns days, I've never been so happy to see someone win a championship as I have when he finally was able to see that psychological and psychiatric help CAN work, and does work, if you're willing to put the work into it. Thanking his psychiatrist and psychologist was the epitome of seeing someone finally being happy in the skin he's in, he acknowledged his failures regarding the Pacers, because he realized he made poor choices, and was able to rise above. I'm so pleased with this documentary and the raw truth this lays open- mental illness affects many people, and it's up to us to try to understand and extend some empathy for others, rather than castigate someone for behavior we know nothing about, other than the short sound byte the media wishes to drive- pushing a false narrative that only pushes others into a deeper hole. It's not hard to root for his continued success, and this film is a wonderful example of having courage to talk about this still stigmatized illness and I will be recommending this to others enthusiastically. Well done. Continued success to Mr Artest, and I'm happy to see him not only thriving but genuinely happy.
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6/10
Keeping it Real
dansview20 April 2021
I expected to hate it, but I liked it. Because it doesn't really make apologies for him. He admits that he couldn't control himself, blames mental health to a degree, but also blames himself significantly.

Most importantly, people seem to be speaking truthfully, including him. I believed him. He seemed genuinely embarrassed by his life, and his team mates seemed earnest about wanting to give him the benefit of the doubt, while retaining some resentment.

The footage is great, the interviews just long enough, the editing excellent, and the arc effective. The best part is when he finds redemption with a championship and admits to the world that he let down his former Indiana teammates in the worst way.

I was amazed that the guy who threw the cup of soda was willing to appear. Although I didn't really get a sense of whether he felt remorse. But at least he admitted what he did, and it's role in the whole thing.

Even Kobe tries very hard to be fair and not arrogant. It kept my interest, and that's not an easy task.
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10/10
Awesome!
prizzy-3032928 June 2019
A bright light shown on a very difficult subject many don't understand.
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10/10
Best Showtime Sports doc
DocWatcher1111111120 February 2023
A fantastic film that deals with a very difficult subject matter. I was hesitant to watch it at first since the majority of Showtime's sports docs are not really docs, just PR films where the athlete's clearly have editorial control. But this film, Disgraced and Outcry clearly stand out from the rest of their library. It's beautifully shot and paced and Artest doesn't hide from anything from his controversial career. The most eye opening person in this is Jermaine O'Neal. You feel his pain from Artest's destructive path that cost him not only multiple championships but legal issues as well. Great film.
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10/10
METTA IS MY HERO!
lolly6728 September 2020
Warning: Spoilers
What an awesome story! I believe what Ron talked about after getting in touch with John years after the cup hit him.....you never know what is going on in another person's life that one second you interact with them. I was told by the counselor who convinced me to go into rehab the very first time, that if I didn't deal with how I felt about things that had happened in my childhood it would affect how I acted or reacted the rest of my life without me even knowing why. So with Ron working on himself, not for someone else, and admitting he had an illness, that was the best thing he could have done for himself. What a change he has made in his life and the lives of other people.

He is definitely not only talking the talk, but most inspiringly waking the walk....which is the hardest to do. Ron may have fallen down, but he never stayed down. The staying down is easy, the hard part if getting back up and making living amends, I believe he is doing that every day. I am very, very glad I watched Ron's story. I love that he says he lives a simple life now....he never says it's easy. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
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