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ARTS AND CULTURE

Film compounds real life drugs tragedy

  • 17 July 2014

All This Mayhem (MA). Director: Eddie Martin. Starring: Tas Pappas, Ben Pappas. 104 minutes.

The story of the Pappas brothers is a tragedy, and not only in the ways that the makers of All This Mayhem would have you see it. 

Ben and Tas Pappas, from Melbourne’s working-class north, took the skating world by storm in the 1990s. Martin, the director of this documentary, knew them as audacious teenagers when they were busy re-invigorating the discipline of vert skateboarding at a suburban skate ramp.

He clips together amateur video footage from those heady early years, with archival footage from the pro circuit, and talking head interviews with Tas and the brothers’ peers, to chart their journey to America, the skating mecca, and their erstwhile global domination of the sport. Among other entertaining subplots, the film portrays their fiery rivalry with skating superstar Tony Hawk.

And it doesn’t skimp on the drugs-and-sex-addled reality in which they found themselves, fuelled by massive sponsorship dollars and the anarchic skating culture. But this is a cautionary tale, and it makes no bones about the role this lifestyle played in the downfall that both Tas and Ben eventually experienced.

Taken at face value, this is an excellent film; frank, frenetic and compelling. However its treatment of some of the details of Ben’s ‘downfall’, in particular, is deeply problematic. While these are on the public record, the film is best enjoyed with little prior knowledge. For that reason, consider this a SPOILER ALERT.

In 2007, eight years after a conviction for drug smuggling had put an end to his professional career, Ben committed suicide. Eight days earlier, his girlfriend, Lynette Phillips, had suffered a violent death. Drugs, and Ben’s deep depression, were factors in both deaths.

Meanwhile, Tas’ own professional career was severely impeded by a conviction and prison sentence for drug related offences. Despite this, for Tas, All This Mayhem ends on a note of fragile hope and possibly even redemption.

Herein lies the problem. After scuppering another filmmaker’s previous attempt at telling Ben’s story, the Pappas family authorised this version and retained some control over the content. This may account for its questionable treatment of some of the material, notably its sketchy treatment of the figure of Phillips.

Phillips was reportedly a recovering addict who had suffered violence from Ben, and had an intervention order against him. At the time of her death she was studying to become a drug and alcohol counsellor.