Filed under: MMA Media Watch, UFC, News
“Like Water,” the documentary film about UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva, is like martial arts itself, a focus on journey as much as destination. The film follows Silva during arguably the most turbulent time of his fighting life, from just after his baffling performance against Demian Maia last April through his career-defining moment in a fifth-round comeback win against Chael Sonnen four months later.
The film, which just had its world premiere at the renowned Tribeca Film Festival, is a step forward not only for Silva, but for mixed martial arts, which too often depends on manufactured drama as a selling point for its main events. Director Pablo Croce strips away any pretense and gives a three-dimensional look at the human side of one of MMA’s signature athletes. In a sport that is often depicted as cartoonish or dismissed as a B-level fad by surface-grazing mainstream media, it is one of the first layered, mature examinations of a top fighter and his world. For some, it might come as a revelation that fighters are real people with real lives.
Central to the drama is Silva as a family man. For the Sonnen camp, he left Brazil for two months to live in Los Angeles and train with Team Black House. To do that, he leaves behind his family — his wife, three sons and two daughters — and spends much of the time pining for them. At one point before the Sonnen fight, he is asked what his goal is. “To come back home in one piece,” he says without hesitation. For a champion at the top of his game, in the midst of a record title run, it’s a candid admission, one rooted in his love of family, noting that to them, winning or losing is not important. “To them, I will always be champion,” he says.