By Ray Bennett
     CANNES (Hollywood Reporter) - When he's not pounding very 
large men to the ground, ex-fighter Mike Tyson speaks directly 
to the camera in James Toback's film "Tyson," and it's hard not 
to flinch. More a testimony for the defense than a documentary, 
it's a sympathetic portrait of a complex man driven by an anger 
that still bubbles beneath the surface.    
 The former world champion's eyes, which were as devastating 
as his piston-fast fists in the boxing ring, reveal little, but 
his self-serving words tell everything. His candor appears 
sometimes unwitting, but the result is a powerful film that 
will appeal to sports fans and those who respond to the 
visceral clamor of the fight world.    
 Using split screens, overdubs and a mixture of interior 
closeups and exterior long shots, Toback allows the boxer to 
portray himself as a gentle soul born on mean streets where 
constant bullying forced him to employ his brute strength to 
survive. A broken home, crime, correction facilities and 
finally the boxing ring -- it's a familiar tale.    
 Not so familiar were the fighter's extraordinary 
dedication, steeped in the lessons of the great champions, and 
his unflinching impulse to drive toward and destroy his 
opponent. Toback shows nearly all of Tyson's knockouts and 
tracks his rise to the big titles, big money and world fame, 
and then the falls from grace, including failed marriages, a 
spell in prison on a rape conviction and ultimately the loss of 
his titles and most of his money.    
 In every circumstance in his life, Tyson believes himself 
to be the innocent party. He became a ferocious fighter to 
avoid being humiliated. His marriage broke down because they 
were both kids. His rape charge was "false" and the victim was 
"a wretched swine of a woman." A big-time boxing promoter was 
"a slimy reptilian mother----er." He bit opponent Evander 
Holyfield's ear off because the man kept head-butting him and 
made him insane in the ring.    
 But Tyson says he made sure his six kids got some of all 
that money; he found Islam in prison; and he's been through 
rehabilitation. Now, he says, his anger is directed only toward 
himself. "I'm not an animal anymore," he says in his 
high-pitched lisp staring at the camera through a dramatic 
Maori facial tattoo.    
 For some reason, Toback never mentions Tyson's voice, not 
that you can blame him.    
 Reuters/Hollywood Reporter