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A look at the life, success and scandals of golf legend Tiger Woods.A look at the life, success and scandals of golf legend Tiger Woods.A look at the life, success and scandals of golf legend Tiger Woods.
- Awards
- 1 win & 2 nominations total
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After watching the first episode, and being a big Tiger fan myself, I can say the documentary is very insightful with new info about the backstory of Tigers upbringing and very well made. HBO does documentaries right!
I get that real Tiger Woods fans might find it intrusive, but for me, someone that doesn't watch golf I thought it was amazing. A true look at America's fascination with creating a star so they can destroy it. Tiger winning another major in 2019 makes for a true Hollywood story. I'm curious who will play him in a narrative one day?
"Tiger" (2021 release; 2 parts; 190 min.) is a documentary about the life and times of golf legend Tiger Woods. As the first part opens, we see Tiger's dad Earl Tiger reflect at the 1996 Haskings Collegiate Award: "The world will be a better place to live in with him", yea, modestly was not lost on Earl. We then go back to "1978" as two (!) year old Tiger is on a TV show with Bob Hope, and swinging away. More troublesome, as Tiger grows older, he asks his school teacher to talk to Earl to let him play other sports as well. (Did you notice that Tiger couldn't even ask his dad himself?) Earl refuses outright... At this point we are 10 min. into the documentary.
Couple of comments: this documentary is directed by Academy Award nominee and Emmy-winning filmmaker Matthew Heineman ("Cartel Land") and Emmy nominee Matthew Hamachek. In other words, no slouches or amateurs. The picture they paint of Tiger is a complicated one: on the one hand his golfing talent is immense, perhaps the best golfer ever, but on the other hand Earl and his wife to a lesser degree are so overbearing that young Tiger doesn't stand a chance to develop into his own. The film makers interview tons of people that were (are?) close to Tiger. Of particular interest is Tiger's very first serious girlfriend Dina, who provides a ton of insights on how things were back in those days. "There is fame and then there is mania", she comments on the crushing social and other pressures on Tiger. Part 1 concludes around 2006, a year with lots of upheaval and change for Tiger. Can't wait to see Part 2!
Part 1 of "Tiger" premiered this weekend on HBO and is now available on HBO On Demand and other streaming services. Part 2 is scheduled to air this coming weekend. If you have any interest in Tiger the person and/or Tiger the golfer, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.
Couple of comments: this documentary is directed by Academy Award nominee and Emmy-winning filmmaker Matthew Heineman ("Cartel Land") and Emmy nominee Matthew Hamachek. In other words, no slouches or amateurs. The picture they paint of Tiger is a complicated one: on the one hand his golfing talent is immense, perhaps the best golfer ever, but on the other hand Earl and his wife to a lesser degree are so overbearing that young Tiger doesn't stand a chance to develop into his own. The film makers interview tons of people that were (are?) close to Tiger. Of particular interest is Tiger's very first serious girlfriend Dina, who provides a ton of insights on how things were back in those days. "There is fame and then there is mania", she comments on the crushing social and other pressures on Tiger. Part 1 concludes around 2006, a year with lots of upheaval and change for Tiger. Can't wait to see Part 2!
Part 1 of "Tiger" premiered this weekend on HBO and is now available on HBO On Demand and other streaming services. Part 2 is scheduled to air this coming weekend. If you have any interest in Tiger the person and/or Tiger the golfer, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.
To watch this on the draw of random happenings one night (thanks Dad), was amazing.
I'mso glad I watched this and invested my time into it.
It was an investment. For the thing I learned in it was amazing.
Besides the incredible craft of Tiger, the accolades, the events, the ups and downs, there was a beautiful battle of the internal in this one.
To literally watch someone work through their own turmoil and trauma in this mini- series (which was so well edited), gave me such a high spirit when watching and now whe reflecting.
The way Tiger had to overcome his head to head battle with Mickelson in the '08 Masters and the way golf is played entirely, was like a mini-course on life - as Tiger had to do the same in life itself when coming back from being down.
He was patient and understanding with himself. He hurt himself along the way and others too. Many changes. Many sacrifices. Many bad swings (metaphorically that is). To have regained himself and to be better for his kids (who kept him accountable just by being his kids), is courageous and a true showing of strength.
Tiger. I give you love from here. Peter McDaniels, as well. Everything you said in your interview for this mini-film was spot on.
I'mso glad I watched this and invested my time into it.
It was an investment. For the thing I learned in it was amazing.
Besides the incredible craft of Tiger, the accolades, the events, the ups and downs, there was a beautiful battle of the internal in this one.
To literally watch someone work through their own turmoil and trauma in this mini- series (which was so well edited), gave me such a high spirit when watching and now whe reflecting.
The way Tiger had to overcome his head to head battle with Mickelson in the '08 Masters and the way golf is played entirely, was like a mini-course on life - as Tiger had to do the same in life itself when coming back from being down.
He was patient and understanding with himself. He hurt himself along the way and others too. Many changes. Many sacrifices. Many bad swings (metaphorically that is). To have regained himself and to be better for his kids (who kept him accountable just by being his kids), is courageous and a true showing of strength.
Tiger. I give you love from here. Peter McDaniels, as well. Everything you said in your interview for this mini-film was spot on.
The tragedy of this man's life starts with his father's domination of him before he was even 2 years old. I speak from experience -- having had a "stage mother" who was determined to make me a child movie star -- ballet lessons that deformed my feet from toe dancing, performing at every school, club, and social event she could enter me during my entire childhood. So, I know what Earl was doing to his child because I have been there.
Children do what their parents want from them in order to (1) please them and (2) because they are virtually dependent on them for food and shelter. But a lot of the "interviewees" got in wrong in this "Tiger" series: You are watching child abuse and its results. The father's obsession stunted the child's development. Tiger had no childhood. He was taught to do tricks for the audience. Like a trained dog or seal. To perform. That's not good parenting -- it's child abuse.
Note: I thought Ms. Uchitel's altered lips were going to explode on camera. She thinks this series makes her famous again; it makes her infamous. She doesn't know the difference.
Did you know
- ConnectionsReferenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 784: News of the World + Psycho Goreman (2021)
- How many seasons does Tiger have?Powered by Alexa
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- 1h 30m(90 min)
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