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I dismissed this movie until I read a review of it in The Toronto Star. And most shocking of all, the review was by Rosi DiManno!
Thanks for that link, barbtoob! I've never mastered how to do that.
BINGO! If the fear is that such a subject for a movie would be too 'humdrum', what about some personal stories (Joannie Rochette competing two days after her mother died, Elizabeth Punsalan dealing with the news of her younger brother murdering their mother) that have that something extra? There were TV movies about the 'Orphan' Oksana Baiul, the Duchesnays, it's a sad state of affairs when scandal is the easiest road to big ratings.
It was excellent, IMO.The review mentions The Price of Gold documentary from a few years back -- has somebody seen it? Is it worth hunting down?
Not necessarily. The event is part of our collective cultural psyche so you see the offhand reference to it here and there (usually as an analogy to some other point) and when a documentary or play or book comes out, it gets some publicity. But we haven't heard anything from Tonya in ages (she used to be in the news regularly around the time of US Nationals to the point where it became a joke) and Nancy is only in the news when she is promoting something, like when she was on Dancing with the Stars.I haven't bumped into a lot of Tonya/Nancy stuff in the non-skating media over the last decade or so (I'm not in the US; it's probably different for the folks over there?)
I've read some DiManno articles in the past where she displays a pretty advanced combination of cherry picking and concern trolling so originally I wasn't even going to read the article... but your post made me curious so I clicked the article link and...To get back to the article, I was annoyed at the ending. (...) Talk about cherry picking to mislead!
Really. ELIMINATED CONTESTANT! Oh, the tragedy!And the aftermath?
Oskana sank into alcoholism, drunkenly crashing her car into a tree three years later.
Kerrigan battled an eating disorder. Just this past season, she was an (eliminated) contestant on Dancing With the Stars.
To get back to the article, I was annoyed at the ending. They made it seem like Tonya and Nancy's lives were shattered and they were failures. Nancy very clearly has moved on from this event. She has had numerous success gigs, is married and raising a family and seems happy. But her blurb was "battled an eating disorder and didn't win Dancing with the Stars. Talk about cherry picking to mislead!
I am quite curious to see this movie. I hope we get a trailer soon, though I guess that just depends on whenever the movie will be released.
was also probably judging against the low bar I've set for DiManno.
It's been picked up for distribution to theatres. http://deadline.com/2017/09/i-tonya...al-allison-janney-craig-gillespie-1202164919/
It's even getting some Oscar buzz!
Sorry, you are right. I should have italicized it instead.Why did you put orphan in quotes as if there was some doubt?? She was abandoned by her father as a small child and she lost her mother to ovarian cancer in 1991 when Oksana was just 13. Her father is dead too now so she is an orphan in every sense of the word.
LOL. All but one of them is eliminated. What a silly thing to point out. Nancy is a true survivor when you consider the impact (no pun intended) of something like that on the life of a young person. I'm proud of NancyReally. ELIMINATED CONTESTANT! Oh, the tragedy!![]()
G*d, you guys are bitching about DiManno's review as if it is the main event.
And, yes, Nancy is fine despite being wacked for figure skating, Tonya is fine despite being wacked for everything else, and Oksana is a hot mess.
The review mentions The Price of Gold documentary from a few years back -- has somebody seen it? Is it worth hunting down?)
I laughed my a** off when I clicked on the link! Then I watched the entire thing!Here is a preview.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FdE5vIG92B8
Ok, i did not start Baiul conversation, but for the record:Why did you put orphan (Orphan' Oksana Baiul) in quotes as if there was some doubt?? She was abandoned by her father as a small child and she lost her mother to ovarian cancer in 1991 when Oksana was just 13. Her father is dead too now so she is an orphan in every sense of the word.
To get back to the article, I was annoyed at the ending. They made it seem like Tonya and Nancy's lives were shattered and they were failures. Nancy very clearly has moved on from this event. She has had numerous success gigs, is married and raising a family and seems happy.
IIRC she was married, but I don't recall whether she had had any children.
Ok, i did not start Baiul conversation, but for the record:
...technically Oxana is not an “orphan” even today, and her father did not “abandon” the family when she was 2. She still has a living step-father who “fathered her” when he married her mother. Her biological father did not pack up and leave, the Mother kicked him out for drinking.
Her parents married very young. He was a mechanic at a factory in Dnepropetrovsk. Like many in his circle, he drank, a lot. Came home late, very drunk, and brought his drinking buddies with him. Oxana’s mother, like most women in that situation in Russia/USSR, started locking him out of the apartment. He slept on a landing on the staircase, or went to his buddies’ homes, and DRANK more. Eventually Mother gave the standard ultimatum “chose: Vodka or Family”. He kept drinking, she filed for divorce. He became desperate, drank more, got fired from his job, and left town to live in a small town or village with his parents.
Mother knew where he was, but wanted nothing to do with him, rightfully so. She told Oxana “he abandoned/betrayed us” meaning “chose drinking over family”. Father’s mother and father (Oxana’s paternal grandparents) were still visiting Oxana on regular basis, brining candy and toys, visiting Oxana in parks and kindergarten.
Shortly after the divorce Oxana’s mother remarried, Oxana has a step-father, who she likes very much, Anatoly Direktorenko, and as far as I know still keeps contact with (info as of few years ago).
When Oxana’s mother died, Oxana’s biological father and grand-parents came to the funeral. At that time Oxana remembered mother’s view “that he valued booze more than family” and was not friendly to him. After the funeral she lost all contact with this side of the family. In later years she reconsidered and decided to find him. She could not locate him at first, made many phone calls, and finally asked her step-father Anatoly for help. Anatoly somehow kept contact with Oxana’s father, and found him immediately.
Oxana met her bio-father with a new attitude, very happy to have found him. Two years later he died, and Oxana buried him in a grave NEXT to her mother, saying “at least in death they will be together”.
Oxana did not mind the orphan-image, she said “American Press liked to give me Cinderella image, I guess it was good for PR”.
I might just go see I, Tonya because it is good for skating to get buzz despite telling myself I would never want to see another Tonya-Kerrigan TV expose.
It is also rare that skating movies gets such good reviews.
ETA: This clip from the movie is something else. Oy, if Tonya actually talked to the judges that way, then I get the perspective of some the real skating officials that are actually on this board from time to time who have commented on their personal interactions with Tonya.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vLaajUKAxQg
Btw, in the Latin (or Roman alphabet if you prefer) Baiul spells her given name as Oksana with a K not Oxana with an X. She's spelled it that way since she was a kid.
As was mentioned, she has a son. I would say that for a long time after The Whack, she was getting into trouble constantly and making poor decisions. So a "where is she now" that was sweetness and light wouldn't be accurate either. But she seems to have eventually moved on at some point and that would be worth mentioning.And Tonya too moved on and found happiness. I recall either a news clip or a documentary (think it was the latter) showing Tonya working as a landscaper, and she said she loved it because it was a very physical job, like figure skating. IIRC she was married, but I don't recall whether she had had any children.
At least part of the dialog was something she was known to have said at some event. Not the sucking my d*ck part but one of the earlier phrases. (I can't go back and quote it because the clip is gone.)Would Tonya really have said that in practice ice with other people around?