A film about Lance Armstrong’s cycling comeback, shot in 2009, but shelved when his doping denials began to unravel, had its own revival on Monday, offering fresh perspective on his lies.
Academy Award-winning director Alex Gibney was granted unprecedented access to Armstrong and his entourage for an entirely different sort of film, prior to the cyclist’s fall from grace.
By the time the planned film was finished in 2010, it was “no longer relevant,” Gibney said, in a turn of events that may have been fortuitous.
Taking a fresh look at the footage late last year, Gibney and producer Frank Marshall recognized that they had captured the incredible truth that had been “hiding in plain sight,” he said.
“We realized that we had all of this stuff that we didn’t know was so important then, but was now important,” Marshall said.
The film, minus Matt Damon, who narrated the original film, but was cut in the rejig, premiered at the Toronto film festival.
After years of denials, Armstrong, a cancer survivor who won seven Tour de France titles, finally cracked this January and admitted to Oprah Winfrey in a TV interview that he had used performance-enhancing drugs.
It was a devastating and public mea culpa for his fans and the cycling world, but his confession was also decried by critics for barely scratching the surface of one of the most shocking scandals in sports history.
Gibney’s documentary, The Armstrong Lie, looks to set that right.
“In this film, you see a portrait of an elaborate lie... and you see the mechanism of it, you see the anatomy of a lie,” he said.
“Particularly in film, when someone is lying to you... looking at the faces, looking at the way people talk, looking at the way all of this was reckoned with, it has a power... and [this film] goes in after the noise to be able to look at the quieter moments to see what we might have missed,” he said.
“One of the interesting things about the 2009 comeback was that Lance’s team and his group, in all of their arrogance, figured that there was nothing to be discovered and so they gave me access to certain people who’d almost not talked to anybody, like the famous Dr Michele Ferrari, who became known as Lance’s doping doctor,” he added.
In addition to the original footage, Gibney shot and added a bunch of new interviews, including with Armstrong himself, his former cycling teammate Jonathan Vaughters and Betsy Andreu, the wife of another former Armstrong teammate and early outspoken critic of Armstrong.
The film also raises troubling questions about doping regulations and spreads the blame, pointing to many people’s “wilful denial” that Armstrong could possibly be doping.
“You have the governing body, as Alex showed, so complicit, telling Lance how to get away with a positive so that it will pass muster, you have the US cycling federation, shame on them, you have the sponsors, you have the doctors, you have the fans, and you have the majority of people in the media which were complicit, they didn’t care,” Andreu said.
Vaughters added “that without the need for so many people to believe in this superhero, without the complicity of the governing body that oversaw the sport,” it might all never have happened.
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