A documentary on the rise and fall of cult wrestling federation ECWA documentary on the rise and fall of cult wrestling federation ECWA documentary on the rise and fall of cult wrestling federation ECW
- Abdullah the Butcher
- (archive footage)
- Elektra
- (archive footage)
- Bill Alfonso
- (archive footage)
- Mike Awesome
- (archive footage)
- Kurt Angle
- (archive footage)
- Sika
- (archive footage)
- Scotty Anton
- (archive footage)
- Bob Artese
- (archive footage)
- Konnan
- (archive footage)
- Steve Austin
- (archive footage)
- Nicole Bass
- (archive footage)
- Jazz
- (archive footage)
- 'Wildman' Sal Bellomo
- (archive footage)
- Chris Benoit
- (archive footage)
- Dances with Dudley
- (archive footage)
- Bam Bam Bigelow
- (archive footage)
- Eric Bischoff
- (archive footage)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
It features many of the former employees along with owner Paul Heyman and producer Ron Buffeon speaking on the promotion and what it stood for. They cover all of the things that made ECW famous such as the great story lines, the hardcore brutality, and the outstanding scientific wrestling, as well as Lucha Libre. As well as that, they shoot on the not-so-appreciated and controversial aspects of the promotion such as the defiant and counter-culture angles and incidents such as the infamous Mass Transit Incident and the storyline with Raven and Sandman.
It also talks about how it was before ECW was bought by Heyman and went "extreme." I learned a lot about the era when it was owned by Tod Gordon. I hadn't even previously known that ECW hadn't started off as being a hardcore promotion.
Another aspect of this documentary that I liked is how they take the time to split up the first section of it into taking time to talk about all of the company's most famous wrestlers, such as RVD, Raven, Sabu, Terry Funk, Sandman, Mick Foley and many others.
They talk about the Monday Night Wars and the Invasion angles as well, and I found it very interesting to hear the different sides of the story from WCW's Eric Bischoff, WWF's Vince McMahon, and ECW's Paul Heyman.
This is 320 minutes, but I would say the documentary itself minus the bonus matches lasts around 265 minutes. That may seem like a very long time, but I watched this in one sitting, and it was a 4 and a half hours that felt like 2.
This also had a great moral and a very conclusive ending, so it's well worth the time spent. Long live the original ECW!!!!!
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaRaven's Nest crucifying the Sandman took place at "ECW High Incident" on October 26, 1996. The show was released on home video, though the crucifixion was not included, and the footage went unseen until it was included here.
- GoofsTrisa Hayes (Beulah McGillicutty) had posed for Penthouse Magazine sometime prior to arriving in ECW. However, because of WWE's business relationship with Playboy at the time of this DVD, Tommy Dreamer had to say that she was a Playboy Playmate. For the record, Tommy Dreamer, real name Thomas Laughlin, is married to Trisa Hayes in real life. Yes, WWE made Dreamer lie about what magazine his wife had appeared in prior to her ECW debut.
- Quotes
Tommy Dreamer: When Taz broke his neck in Florida, he finished his match. And he just kept on saying "Damn, my neck is... my neck his hurt." I walked him into the hospital. And... we just, you know, we would always travel together and... they asked him "How'd you get in here?" He's like "I walked." And, uh... they're like "There's no way you walked in here." He was like "Yeah, I did. I walked in here." And they're like "Well, sir, you have a broken neck."
Taz: I was out for, actually, about nine months. And Paul paid me every single week of our agreement in my guarantee. I didn't have no contract with the man. I had a handshake with the guy. And he stuck to that, and I will never, ever forget that.
- ConnectionsFeatures ECW Ultra Clash '93 (1993)
Details
- Runtime6 hours
- Color