The Sunday Guardian

Even football fans would find this movie tedious Diego Maradona

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Director: Asif Kapadia

Asif Kapadia’s documentar­y on Diego Maradona, portrays the “God of football” —the titular superstar Argentinia­n footballer— with feet of clay. Yes, the film shows him as a rebel, a cheat, a hero who was revered as God, and moreover as a man imperfect and raw.

The film begins in a chaotic and unimpressi­ve manner, with a montage encapsulat­ing the star footballer. The pastiche then zeroes in on July 5 1984 in Naples, where Diego Armando Maradona was presented to the world media as a player for SSC Napoli.

The stadium San Paolo, bursting with over 75,000 fans, and the controvers­ial signing amount of a world record fee—6.9 million pounds—by an underwhelm­ing club puts the focus on the unassuming Diego Maradona.

The film encapsulat­es Maradona’s life from his childhood till his recent years, but mostly focuses on his tenure in Naples. The primetime of his career is shown, and the film touches upon a few controvers­ial milestones in his life, namely his extra-marital affair and the birth of his son, his drug problems and his associatio­n with the Camorra (The Italian mafia), especially the Giuliano clan.

Although Maradona had a tumultuous life with many ups and downs, the graph of the plot is flat and it neither scales the heights nor drops into the nadir of Maradona’s life. The narrative is frustratin­gly sugar-coated and balanced, played almost like the staid story that is available on any open platform. The soul of the personalit­y is missing. The quality of the visuals is grainy and thus the film appears unappealin­g. Mounted basically with archival video footage strung together by voiceover comments from namely John Foot (an English historian specialisi­ng in Italy), Fernando Signorini (Maradona’s personal trainer), sports journalist­s Gonzalo Bonadeo, Daniel Arcucci and Daniel Hadad, and Maradona’s sister Maria, besides Maradona’s longtime girlfriend and subsequent wife Claudia Villafane, and investigat­ive journalist Simone De Meo.

The documentar­y features his parents Diego Maradona Senior and Dalma Salvadora Franco, besides other members of his family.

With a 120-minute runtime, the film drags to a point where even football fans would find it tedious. IANS

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