Cannes 08: RT Meets Mike Tyson
Iron Mike on the new doc about his life, his fave films and his regrets.
Standing toe-to-toe with Mike Tyson is not as scary as it sounds. Iron Mike has padded out around the waist since he retired from the ring and is now soft-spoken and gentle. He walks slowly but surely and although the lisp is still there everything he says is measured.
Cannes are used to stars but no one could have expected the reaction which greeted the retired boxer when he entered the cinema before the screening of James Toback's documentary about him, Tyson. In a departure from normal etiquette the Cannes crowd gave him a five-minute standing ovation just for being there.
The boxer disappeared as soon as the curtain opened and the candid documentary did not disappoint the expectant crowd. The next day Tyson reappeared in a hotel room and spoke about why he decided to reveal all to Toback.
RT: Did the fact that you'd known director James Toback and had appeared in his film Black and White help you decide to make this documentary?
Mike Tyson: That made it pretty easy, yes.
RT: What did you think of the final film?
MT: I haven't watched the movie; it's too personal for me. I might watch it one day in my room, but I don't know when.
RT: Are you a fan of cinema?
MT: I like horror movies. Nightmare on Elm Street is my favourite. I even get scared a little bit watching horror.
RT: Do you watch boxing films?
MT: I watch boxing movies as well. Gentleman Jim starring Errol Flynn is my favourite. Raging Bull is a good film as well although Toback thinks it's s**t.
RT: This film forced you to think back on your life. Do you have any regrets?
MT: There are not many regrets that I have. There are a few things that I wish I'd changed in my life, but they are not so dramatic that I'd go out of my way to change them. But I go back and think about my life so far periodically in my head.
RT: What was the high point of your career?
MT: I never look at a high point in my career. Everyone thinks about the Spinks fight, but that fight only lasted 91 seconds, so it's hard to say it defined my career.
RT: What was the hardest part of making this film?
MT: Hardest part was going back and doing retakes. I was in rehab and sometimes the guys wouldn't let me go, it was against my curfew so I had to explain and talk to them and say I had to do retakes.
RT: Why do this documentary now?
MT: I didn't have a reason. James said lets do this movie and I never really thought that it would make me seem like a better person to the world. I don't know, in the United States I don't think that if I won a Nobel peace prize that it would change how I'm viewed.
RT: Will you get involved in boxing again?
MT: I'm not getting involved in boxing at all, at least at this point in my life.
RT: What's it like watching yourself box?
MT: I hate it because even though people see the knockouts, I see all the mistakes that I've made. Sometimes I have my hand down low, or I don't move my head and if the opponent wasn't intimidated then maybe they could have beaten me. If I was fighting myself, I always say that I would kill Mike Tyson but then again I don't know how hard a punch Mike Tyson can take and I don't know how hard Mike Tyson's punch is. I don't know. For me looking at me, I think I can beat me.
Cannes are used to stars but no one could have expected the reaction which greeted the retired boxer when he entered the cinema before the screening of James Toback's documentary about him, Tyson. In a departure from normal etiquette the Cannes crowd gave him a five-minute standing ovation just for being there.
The boxer disappeared as soon as the curtain opened and the candid documentary did not disappoint the expectant crowd. The next day Tyson reappeared in a hotel room and spoke about why he decided to reveal all to Toback.
RT: Did the fact that you'd known director James Toback and had appeared in his film Black and White help you decide to make this documentary?
Mike Tyson: That made it pretty easy, yes.
RT: What did you think of the final film?
MT: I haven't watched the movie; it's too personal for me. I might watch it one day in my room, but I don't know when.
RT: Are you a fan of cinema?
MT: I like horror movies. Nightmare on Elm Street is my favourite. I even get scared a little bit watching horror.

RT: Do you watch boxing films?
MT: I watch boxing movies as well. Gentleman Jim starring Errol Flynn is my favourite. Raging Bull is a good film as well although Toback thinks it's s**t.
RT: This film forced you to think back on your life. Do you have any regrets?
MT: There are not many regrets that I have. There are a few things that I wish I'd changed in my life, but they are not so dramatic that I'd go out of my way to change them. But I go back and think about my life so far periodically in my head.
RT: What was the high point of your career?
MT: I never look at a high point in my career. Everyone thinks about the Spinks fight, but that fight only lasted 91 seconds, so it's hard to say it defined my career.
RT: What was the hardest part of making this film?
MT: Hardest part was going back and doing retakes. I was in rehab and sometimes the guys wouldn't let me go, it was against my curfew so I had to explain and talk to them and say I had to do retakes.
RT: Why do this documentary now?
MT: I didn't have a reason. James said lets do this movie and I never really thought that it would make me seem like a better person to the world. I don't know, in the United States I don't think that if I won a Nobel peace prize that it would change how I'm viewed.
RT: Will you get involved in boxing again?
MT: I'm not getting involved in boxing at all, at least at this point in my life.
RT: What's it like watching yourself box?
MT: I hate it because even though people see the knockouts, I see all the mistakes that I've made. Sometimes I have my hand down low, or I don't move my head and if the opponent wasn't intimidated then maybe they could have beaten me. If I was fighting myself, I always say that I would kill Mike Tyson but then again I don't know how hard a punch Mike Tyson can take and I don't know how hard Mike Tyson's punch is. I don't know. For me looking at me, I think I can beat me.
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on May 22 2008 08:32 AM He's Gentle? HA HA HA HA ha ha ha ha ha HAhah ha HAH Thoughts in his mind don't sound so much gentle as they do deranged. "If I was fighting myself, I always say that I would kill Mike Tyson but then again I don't know how hard a punch Mike Tyson can take and I don't know how hard Mike Tyson's punch is. I don't know. For me looking at me, I think I can beat me. " (Reply to this) |
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on May 22 2008 09:29 AM "...so it's hard to say it defined my career." At least he's got that right. (Reply to this) |
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on May 22 2008 09:36 AM I see what he's saying about beating yourself. I think I can beat me, too. In fact I beat myself all the time. (Reply to this) |
on May 22 2008 10:34 AM C'mon guys. I'm no huge Tyson fan, but the guy admits he makes mistakes (not just inside the ring), and recognizes that no matter what he does, he'll always be viewed in a negative light. Leave the man alone. (Reply to this) |
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on May 22 2008 11:38 AM In reply to this comment (#1745067) Yeah, yeah, me too. (Reply to this) |
on May 22 2008 12:02 PM In reply to this comment (#1745185) agreed. He had a bad past, it probably wasnt easy for him. You cant say he was never tooked advantage of. (Reply to this) |
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on May 22 2008 12:18 PM Bygones, I say. The past is done. One should not be condemned in the present for it. Especially one who ponders and seeks to learn from it. One who condemns others for the past is himself condemned. There's the rub. Besides, Mike Tyson jokes stopped being funny a long time ago. A fan of good documentaries, I look forward to seeing it. Loved HBO's recent Joe Lewis doc. (Reply to this) |
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on May 22 2008 01:23 PM Everyone deserves a chance at forgiveness because all of us make mistakes, even if some mistakes are more signifcant than others. Some people get on their high horse and talk smack about others just to make themselves feel better. As someone once said, let he who is without sin cast the first stone. That said, I'll be checking out this doc as soon as it'a available. (Reply to this) |
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on May 22 2008 01:25 PM Everyone deserves a chance at forgiveness because all of us make mistakes, even if some mistakes are more signifcant than others. Some people get on their high horse and talk smack about others just to make themselves feel better. As someone once said, let he who is without sin cast the first stone. That said, I'll be checking out this doc as soon as it'a available. (Reply to this) |
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on May 22 2008 08:53 PM RT, you guys are great. When are you doin Ali? (Reply to this) |
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on May 23 2008 06:52 AM I saw this at Cannes last week and I thought it was great. Tyson comes across as sympathetic and apologetic. He is very honest and his story is quite compelling. (Reply to this) |
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