George Best: All by Himself (2016) Poster

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7/10
The Best of times, the worst of times
Lejink22 June 2017
Had to mark this the same number as Georgie's shirt number didn't I?

I once met George Best at a Sportman's Dinner in Glasgow a few years before he died and still have the picture to prove it. For me, he was and always will be the best footballer I'll ever see, above Pele, Maradona, Cruyff and certainly the overrated superstars of today like Messi and Ronaldo. As a player he had the lot, dribbling skill, two good feet, fine in the air, brave as a lion and an eye for goal. This unauthorised biography uses vintage footage of his life and times, combined with retrospective comments by fellow footballers and voice overs by the man himself. The story is ultimately a lonely at the top tragedy as the shy young Irish boy who ran away back home to his native Belfast after his first day of training as a 15 year old teenager with the mighty Manchester United only to return to play his first match at age 17 and quickly establish himself as the hottest new talent in the Football League. By the age of 22 he'd won the League, European Cup and been player of the year in England and indeed Europe.

If I was judging this film on George's peerless talent alone I'd give it a ten. Rarely seen archive footage tells the story in back to front fashion although by the halfway point, pretty much all the football action is over, bar one miraculous goal only he could have scored for the San Jose Earthquakes in America, which means much time is spent documenting his later battle against his addiction to drink until his sad death at only 59, although you actually wonder he got that far so excessive appears his off-field behaviour.

I'd have preferred to see more of the great goals he scored in his heyday and a little bit more of a salute to his fabulous skills on the field as opposed to his tribulations off it. I'd have also appreciated some reference to the famous partnership he formed up front with Law and Charlton, neither of whom hardly get a look-in. I also personally didn't think the Munich Air Disaster of 1958 was a necessarily important factor in his emergence as is perhaps made out here.

Best undoubtedly paved the way for latter-day multi-media superstars as Beckham, Ronaldo et al. but as is said repeatedly throughout he lacked the support he'd surely get today from media savvy back-up teams at the top clubs.

Now he's passed on, Belfast Airport is named after him and he'd still walk into any world best 11 football line up you'd care to mention. Although remembered as much sadly for his early retirement from the game at only 26 and his dissipation as a person over the rest of his life, I truly hope he'll be better remembered for his incredible sporting talent.

It's sad but true to say he was better with the ball than the world at his feet.
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7/10
A worthy look at the best of the Best.
RatedVforVinny16 December 2018
Warning: Spoilers
A fitting tribute to the true, first superstar of football. Mixes some historic, live action with iconic photographic stills. Also like all true greats of any walks of life, the crushing downfall that rapidly ensued. With George Best though it was not a gradual decline but such a quick and sudden free-fall; although his genius moments as a player had already cemented him as a living legend. He was out of United before his best (excuse the pun) playing days could ever be realized. His later life played out almost like a tragic joke, until his drink related death in 2005, received almost a state like funeral. A missed opportunity (i feel) not to have had Bob Charlton involved in the project, despite the well documented facts about their cold relationship (off the field of football).
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6/10
George Best: All By Himself review
JoeytheBrit22 April 2020
An examination of the life of Northern Ireland's (and arguably the world's) most mercurial footballing talent that is absorbing only because he's a fascinating symbol of the self-destructive tendencies that reside within many geniuses. Unfortunately, it's light on fresh insight and refers only fleetingly to his darker side (brawling and wife-beating). And any documentary that relies so heavily on talking heads rather than investigative journalism is likely to be distorted by the interviewees understandable tendency to paint themselves in a positive light.
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6/10
ESPN 30 for 30 is the Best...but
rmgaspar-49er9 August 2021
I love the sports documentaries of the ESPN series, they tend to be great, not just good. Here you great great images, goals, a serious account of his career. But I couldn't avoid being extremely irritating of so many excuses from the people interviewed, to justify his off-field very poor decisions.

"Oh it was the 60's..."; "Why wouldn't he drink, he had money!"; "He was just 19..."; His family didn't have the greatest of structure, the pressure is to great, people expect him to play well every week... yada yada. If you want to tell the story of a guy like Best, you have to tell it like it is, no concessions.

Maybe, just maybe, he was a bas***d off the field, maybe he had his demons, mental issues that nowadays are better understood, but it won't work well. I think there is an attempt to justify what you don't have to.

It's an objection to the angle taken here, it doesn't discredit the documentary, well produced and rich in material. Many might not be bothered by what bugged me, I can certainly see that.
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9/10
A tragedy in microcosm
paul2001sw-13 April 2020
George Best was the most naturally gifted footballer of his generation. But his was also a life that peaked young, as the pressures of celebrity led him into alcholism, an early retreat from top flight football, an subsequent story that included wife-beating, a prison sentence for drunk driving, and a liver transplant, and finally an early death. This documentary focuses mainly on his playing career, but nonetheless feels weighed down by sadness from the very beginning: Best was, by all accounts, a genuinely nice young lad, but one who could never cope with his extraordinary gifts. One has to say that the modern press is a terrifying institution, and, as with many others who have ultimately died from their demons, one gets a sense that a life lived in perpetual public view is a near impossible one to live. One also gets the sense, however, that in a fundamental sense, Best gave up trying (or at least was utterly defeated) by at a relatively young age. Our sports stats carry so many of our hopes and dreams; but some cannot manage it. For all his genius, this is not a happy tale, although it's well-told, sympathetic but never hiding from the grim truth.
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