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Chasing Legends, dir Jason Berry (2010)
A stunning feature length cinema documentary on the 2009 Tour
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The appeal of watching sport is, in large part, not knowing what will
happen next. A film of a bicycle race that took place over a year ago
is, consequently, an unpromising prospect. That Jason Berrys Chasing
Legends had audiences on the edge of their seats for an hour and a half
in 52 sold-out cinemas the length and breadth of the UK and Ireland for
its premier, is testimony to the quality of the film that he has crafted
from the 700 hours of footage that he brought home from the 2009 Tour
de France.
He was lucky in choosing to follow HTC Colombia, of course. Mark Cavendishs
four stage wins and his disallowed stage win provided a succession of
high-octane triumphs and provided a back-up team who were generally on
a high. Fortune shone too in his selection of directeurs sportif to follow
in Brian Holm and Rolf Aldag. As Holm said after the premier: When
we heard that we were going to be filmed, I said to Rolf, great, we will
look like Keanau Reeves and Brad Pitt. We ended up looking more like Stan
and Ollie.
Their goofing, wise cracking partnership does much to leaven the race
coverage.
However, it is the cycling action, the inventive cinematography and
the rich diet of interviews that make the film. Berrys avowed aim
was to try and capture the entire Tour experience. He acknowledges the
impossibility of that, but what he has assembled, using 12 cameras and
ASOs helicopter coverage, is as good a picture of the many facets
of the event as has ever been assembled.
There are star interviews aplenty both current and past, but
there are also fascinating insights into smaller aspects of the rolling
circus that is the Tour. How Tour photographers work, for example. The
magic performed by soingneurs is also partially revealed. And there is
even a scene in six times Green Jersey winner Eric Zabel helps to clear
the teams bikes. Phil Liggett who narrates the film also comes over
as a lot warmer and funnier than he does in a compressed tv format.
My only beefs are the cheesy opening and closing sequences in which
a boy somewhere back in the mists of time watches the race pass his home.
It was also a little disappointing that those parts of the race that did
not concern HTC Colombia most notably the General Classification
were largely ignored.
Last nights premiers were a special event in a number of ways.
Simultaneous showings across these islands was a novelty, as was the beaming
around the country of a live discussion of the film with its stars and
director after the film. Not only did this work perfectly as least
in the fabulously comfortable Abbygate Picturehouse in Bury St Edmunds.
It also enhanced the film significantly. Fifteen years after the birth
of the DVD, cinema has caught on to the idea of bonus features.
TD Oct 10
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