THE PROGRAM
Director : Stephen Frears
Cast : Ben Foster, Chris O’Dowd, Guillaume Canet, Jesse Plemons, Lee Pace, Denis Menochet, Dustin Hoffman
Genre : Drama/Sport
Run Time : 103 mins
Opens : 19 November 2015
Rating : NC16 (Some Drug Use And Coarse Language)
We all remember Jeff Goldblum muttering to himself “must go
faster, must go faster”, while being pursued by dinosaurs (and later, aliens). What
happens when a man lives his life solely in the pursuit of going faster, at any
cost? Lance Armstrong (Foster), having defeated cancer and becoming the darling
of the professional cycling world, is admired and adored the world over, both
for his multiple Tour de France championship titles and his charity work. David
Walsh (O’Dowd), a sports journalist with the Sunday Times in the UK, begins to suspect that Armstrong may be
using performance-enhancing drugs, despite Armstrong’s repeated and empathic
claims to the contrary. Sports doctor Michele Ferrari (Canet) has devised “the
program”, a sophisticated doping regimen that Armstrong and all the cyclists on
his team are put on. The illicit drug use is enabled by Armstrong’s agent Bill
Stalpleton (Pace) and the team’s directeur
sportif Johann Bruyneel (Menochet). This weighs on the conscience of Floyd
Landis (Plemons), a promising cyclist recruited onto the team, as Walsh gets
ever closer to uncovering the devastating truth.
The Program is inspired by David Walsh’s
book Seven Deadly Sins: My Pursuit of Lance Armstrong. The
film’s approach is that of a David vs. Goliath tale, with an honest journalist
battling the odds to expose the deceit of a nigh-untouchable superstar athlete.
As such, it is as much an “uncovering the scandal” thriller as it is a biopic,
with sports in place of politics. Seeing as that’s the starting point, this was
never going to be a particularly objective or balanced account of Armstrong’s
life, and to an extent, that’s fine. Director Stephen Frears, whose recent
credits include The Queen and Philomena, is an experienced filmmaker
and The Program is assembled with
style and panache. As a takedown of a false idol, it is aggressive and damning,
but as a thoughtful investigative drama, it lacks clear-eyed credibility.
The movie’s
pacing is appropriately brisk, Valerio Bonelli’s editing making it all quite a
heady trip. Screenwriter John Hodge ensures events unfold coherently and
efficiently. Even if one isn’t into pro cycling, The Program is likely to hold one’s attention and it’s a dynamic,
even thrilling film. However, it doesn’t take much to step back and go “wait a
second, just how Hollywood-ed up is this thing?” The Lance Armstrong story has
all the elements that make for a compelling true story: deceit, betrayal and
conspiracy on a very public stage, but all those elements feel drummed up and
slightly inauthentic here. Furthermore, it’s all ground that’s already been
covered in Alex Gibney’s documentary The
Armstrong Lie. This reviewer was hoping the film would explore the effect
that Armstrong’s deception had on his family and others close to him in more
detail, but The Program trundles down
a different path. Armstrong meets his wife Kristin Richard (Chloe Hayward),
marries her in the next scene, and she’s never actually seen again, since that
would slow things down.
Armstrong
as portrayed by Foster isn’t just a villain, he’s a supervillain. The film’s depiction of the cyclist is a man seduced
by and obsessed with victory, a master manipulator and a detestable,
unrepentant fraud. With an inspiring, carefully-constructed public persona
hiding sneering malice, giving rousing speeches and comforting children in
cancer wards while threatening any and all who would give away his secret, Armstrong
is basically Lex Luthor. Foster puts in an electrifying, passionate
performance, but it is one almost entirely devoid of nuance and altogether too
difficult to take seriously. On hearing of Walsh’s accusations, Armstrong
bellows “I am Lance Armstrong and he is f***ing no-one!” as he strides down a
grand staircase in his mansion. Doing a spot of method acting that we’ll
neither condone nor condemn, Foster actually took performance-enhancing drugs
under medical supervision to better get under Armstrong’s skin.
O’Dowd’s
Walsh is a standard-issue “dogged reporter” hero, dedicated to his family and
to his profession, persistent in hunting the truth to the bitter end. The
character is so idealised that it’s impossible to overlook that the real-life
Walsh’s account of events was the primary source for the film, and if Armstrong
is a supervillain, then that must make Walsh a superhero. O’Dowd is likeable
without trying too hard, and for an actor better known for playing the goofy
schlub in many a comedy, he puts in a solid dramatic turn.
Canet is spectacularly
over the top in this, playing Dr. Michele Ferrari like a mad scientist in a monster
movie, exaggerated accent and all. “No longer confined to the earth, now we can
learn to fly,” he intones, squirting droplets of Erythropoietin from a syringe.
Plemons, truly coming into his own as a capable character actor, is very
sympathetic as Floyd Landis, who was raised a devout Mennonite and whose father
strongly discouraged his pursuit of cycling. Dustin Hoffman makes a brief
appearance as Bob Hamman, the founder of SCA Promotions who sought the
repayment of $10 million in prize money after discovering Armstrong was doping.
In what is likely a sly reference to The
Graduate, The Lemonheads’ cover of Simon and Garfunkel’s song Mrs. Robinson is used in the film.
There’s a fun,
bitingly cynical scene in the film, in which Armstrong and his teammates are
having the performance enhancing drugs administered to them and are discussing
who might play Armstrong in a movie. Matt Damon is out and Jake Gyllenhaal,
whose name Armstrong mispronounces, is in. It’s a good thing Hollywood waited. The Program isn’t all that incisive or
searing, more an entertaining diversion than awards contender prestige pic, but
it is a rip-roaring ride.
Summary:
Slick and entertaining but ultimately superficial, Ben Foster’s delicious albeit
obvious lead performance keeps this biopic on track.
RATING:
3 out of 5 Stars
Jedd Jong
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