ā€˜Untold: Hall of Shameā€™ Review: Cheaters Never Prosper

by Pelican Press
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Why would an athlete use performance-enhancing drugs? ā€œUntold: Hall of Shame,ā€ a documentary about a high-profile doping scandal in the early 2000s that shocked the world of competitive sports, offers a persuasive reason: because every other athlete is taking them.

Victor Conte Jr., a self-taught sports nutritionist and trainer who provided several sports stars and Olympians with steroids through his Bay Area firm Balco, insists in ā€œHall of Shameā€ that performance-enhancing drug use in pro sports is ā€œrampant,ā€ to the extent that using them is all but necessary to win. He frames the decision to dope as one between unethical victory or noble failure. ā€œShow me an athlete not on steroids,ā€ he says, ā€œand Iā€™ll show you a loser.ā€

With compelling verve, ā€œHall of Shame,ā€ from the director Bryan Storkel, tells the story of Conteā€™s ignominious rise and fall. It draws you into the addictive thrill that his athletes felt as they were winning medals and breaking records, and although itā€™s somewhat slight on the whole, the film makes clear why elite competitors such as Marion Jones, Tim Montgomery and Barry Bonds were willing to compromise themselves for a taste of elite glory.

Both Jones and Bonds declined to appear in the film ā€” and both have denied ever knowingly taking performance-enhancing drugs ā€” but Montgomery, candid and vulnerable, opens up about his reasons, to dramatic effect. ā€œI donā€™t care if I die,ā€ he describes having told Conte, in dope-boosted pursuit of the world record for 100-meter dash. ā€œI want to see what it feels like to be the greatest.ā€ He broke the record in 2002; it was invalidated two years later. As ā€œHall of Shameā€ makes clear, if you win by cheating, greatness is not what you achieve.

Untold: Hall of Shame
Not rated. Running time: 1 hour 15 minutes. Watch on Netflix.

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