The Commercial Appeal

What critics are saying about new Bruce Lee doc

- Hannah Yasharoff USA TODAY

Critics call ESPN’S new Bruce Lee documentar­y a “must-watch” for fans and soon-to-be fans of the late actor and martial arts great.

“Be Water,” which premiered Sunday on ESPN, is directed by Bao Nguyen and named after a saying Lee used to share: “Empty your mind, be formless, shapeless – like water. Now you put water in a cup, it becomes the cup. You put water into a bottle, it becomes the bottle. You put it in a teapot, it becomes the teapot. Now water can flow or it can crash. Be water, my friend.”

Jack Hamilton of Slate dubbed the documentar­y “nimble, nuanced, and at times even poetic” and ranked ESPN’S newest “30 for 30” installmen­t ahead of the buzz-worthy Michael Jordan docuseries “The Last Dance.”

Some critics said the film kept the lens too far back at times: “There’s so much Nguyen and his many interviewe­es want to talk about here, and many of them feel covered in too cursory a fashion to truly do them justice,” wrote Alan Sepinwall of Rolling Stone.

The documentar­y explores the racism that Lee, who died at age 32 in 1973, endured in trying to land lead roles in the entertainm­ent industry. NBC News’ Nadra Nittle wrote that it “leaves no doubt that Lee’s talent and charisma should have earned him lead roles in Hollywood – or how the industry’s history of marginaliz­ing people of color relegated him to playing sidekicks.”

Some may wonder why a documentar­y about a man largely known for his endeavors in entertainm­ent found a home on a sports network, but several critics argued that the physicalit­y and athleticis­m of Lee’s martial arts skills transcende­d his work in film.

“Bruce Lee isn’t an obvious fit for ESPN, beyond the fact lots of people enjoyed his action movies,” CNN’S Brian Lowry wrote. “Yet ‘Be Water’ proves an excellent addition to the network’s lineup of documentar­ies to fill the sports void, examining the martial-arts star’s legacy and the circuitous, discrimina­tion-marred path he followed to his tooshort stardom.”

Early reviews dubbed the documentar­y a timely look at a talent gone too soon, who spent his truncated career sharing his unparallel­ed talents while fighting for greater representa­tion in Hollywood.

The documentar­y “succeeds in going deeper where previous Lee profiles have trod only lightly: The context of his struggle against racism in America, and his emergence as a superstar in Hong Kong,” wrote Michael Ordoña for the Los Angeles Times. “For Lee fans, that makes ‘Be Water’ a must-watch. For the curious, it’s a fair introducti­on to the man who became a legend.”

 ?? VIDEO WARNER BROS. HOME ?? Bruce Lee in 1973’s iconic martial-arts film “Enter the Dragon.” “Be Water,” a new documentar­y on Lee, premiered Sunday on ESPN.
VIDEO WARNER BROS. HOME Bruce Lee in 1973’s iconic martial-arts film “Enter the Dragon.” “Be Water,” a new documentar­y on Lee, premiered Sunday on ESPN.

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