Filmtipp: John Walker – The 3.49,4 Man

Vorschau

Weiter geht es mit eine Dokumentation über 1500m Olympiasieger 1976 und Weltrekordler Sir John Walker.

On the eve of the 1976 Olympics, this Keith Quinn-scripted NZBC profile traces the career of champion athlete John Walker from a training averse teenager at the Manurewa Harrier Club to his world mile record triumph in Göteborg, Sweden. Walker still smarts from his second place to Filbert Bayi in the 1500m at the 1974 Commonwealth Games, but what are euphemistically referred to as „political implications“ (NZ sporting ties with South Africa) have prevented further match-ups — and will ultimately remove the Tanzanian from the race so keenly anticipated here.

NZonScreen | John Walker – The 3.49.4 Man Television – 1976

Dokumentation – John Walker – The 3.49.4 Man

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Und hier noch John Walker im Jahr 1985 in „This is your Life“.
NZonScreen | This is Your Life – John Walker
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Filmtipp: Black Gold

NZonScreen – Black Gold

Der etwas andere „Black Friday“ und noch dazu alles gratis für alle Neuseelandfreunde. 😉

For a small country from the edge of the world, achievements on the Olympic stage are badges — silver fern-on-black — of national pride: precious moments where we gained notice (even if it was Mum’s anthem playing on the dais). This legacy collection draws on archive footage, some rarely seen, to celebrate the stories behind Kiwis going for gold.

NZonScreen | Black Gold

Filmtipp: Remember ’74 (1990)

Vorschau

In this TVNZ doco — made for the 1990 Auckland Commonwealth Games — Keith Quinn looks back at the last time the Games were hosted in New Zealand: Christchurch 1974. Largely an on-field survey peppered with Kiwi athletes’ memories of ‘The Friendly Games’, moments featured include Dick Tayler’s 10,000m victory sprawl, weightlifter Graham May’s face-plant, and the epic 1,500 race between a long-haired John Walker and Tanzanian Filbert Bayi. The NZBC coverage showcased colour television, which had recently launched in New Zealand.

NZonScreen | Remember ’74

Remember ’74

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Filmtipp: The Right Track (1984)

Vorschau

This instructional film for runners — fronted by Olympic 5000m silver medallist and world record holder Dick Quax — looks at implementing the techniques of coach Arthur Lydiard. From fostering world champions on Waitakere hills, Lydiard’s method evolved into a system of building stamina to complement speed. Quax, Dr Peter Snell and other Lydiard protégés look at the science and practice, from training — the high mileage mantra, fartleks, catapults — to race-day strategy: front-running and ‚the kick‘ (with John Walker’s 1976 1,500m Olympic win used as an example).

NZonScreen | The Right Track

Dokumentation – The Right Track

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Filmtipp: On the Run

Vorschau

Hier noch eine 20-minütige neuseeländische Dokumentation über die Schützlinge von Arthur Lydiard.

This film showcases legendary running coach Arthur Lydiard’s training methods through the example of his acolytes, including reigning Olympic 1,500m champ John Walker. ‚Arthur’s boys‘ (Snell, Halberg, Magee) scored attention by winning unheralded medals (two golds and a bronze) at the 1960 Rome Olympics. Lydiard later led the ‚flying Finns‘ to similar success. His method revolves around building stamina to complement speed, and was influential in popularising jogging globally. Beautifully filmed, a doco highlight is Jack Foster’s exhilarating scree slope descent.

NZonScreen | On the Run, Short Film – 1979

Dokumentation

Filmtipp: Peter Snell, Athlete (1964)

Vorschau

Für echte (Mittelstrecken-) Fans der Leichtathletik ist der dreifache, neuseeländische Olympiasieger Peter Snell (2x800m, 1x1500m) und Schützling von Arthur Lydiard natürlich ein Begriff. Unten gibt es eine ca. 22 minütige Dokumentation, die kurz vor seinem Doppeloylmpiasieg in Tokio 1964 gedreht wurde.

This NFU classic tells Peter Snell’s story up to just prior to his triumph at the Tokyo Olympics (he had already won 800m gold in Rome and held the world record for the mile). Snell’s commentary — focused, candid — plays over footage of training and racing. „It always gives a feeling of exhilaration to run in the New Zealand all black singlet.“ He offers insight into the methods of coach Arthur Lydiard (15 miles a day, 100 miles a week). Includes priceless footage of Snell running in the Waiatarua hills, through bush and leaping farm fences.

NZonScreen | Peter Snell – Athlete Television – 1964 Sport Documentary
Runningtimes | How Peter Snell Trained for a WR 1:44.3 on Grass in 1962

Dokumentation

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5 teilige Dokumentation „This is your Life“ über 86 Minuten:
This is Your Life – Peter Snell

Interviews / Olympiasiege