In the same vein as The Rise and Fall of WCW, The Best of Monday Nitro, Starrcade: The Essential Collection, and The Best of The Clash of the Champions...the WWE provides us with yet another stinker in their WCW DVD release catalog.
Easily one of, if not the worst documentaries they have produced on a topic. Legitimately, nothing of substance. Lots of re-hashed, old interview footage. Very little in regards to new interviews. Lots of interview time with, of all people, Cody Rhodes, who gives his perspective as an 11 year old on EVERYTHING. Nothing substantial from Nash or Waltman (two of the only members of the nWo that they actually get new-ish perspective on.
The documentary basically is a rudimentary biography of the nWo. With lacking key interviews from key players and lacks any kind of in-depth topics discussed or anything substantial behind the scenes.
The only little bits of entertainment were Ted Dibiase saying Eric Bischoff purposely stole the spotlight as the mouthpiece of the nWo from him, when that is exactly what he was bought in and paid for.
Otherwise, you get Cody Rhodes who tries and gives perspective as an 11 year...I guess it has its part, but perhaps because he had so many soundbites, he is in the film way too much. Joe Hennig is in the film for a little bit, too. Most notably giving his input on Curt Hennig's time in the nWo for a brief segment. You get very little from the always in-character Arn Anderson...Booker T chimes in with nothing substantial...Bill Demott, Dusty Rhodes, et al provide nothing.
There is nothing discussed in regards to the downfall of WCW and the nWo being one of the major reasons why. They briefly touch on Sting. NOTHING in regards to Goldberg. They basically wax poetically for most of the film and them quickly talk about the group growing, the Wolfpack being lame, and then quickly move on to the quick WWE incarnation of the nWo, which bombed. Nothing in regards to the politics of the nWo outside of Nash saying "well, we kept renegotiating and getting paid more...and, well, sooner or later you stop caring what they have you go out there and do."
They were able to get Vince Russo for a few soundbites, and sadly, he is a guy you want to hear more from, but alas, nothing. There is also nothing in regards to how the WWF reacted to the nWo (DX, the birth of "Attitude", etc.).
Overall, possibly one of the worst documentaries they have ever done. It is really bad.
The extras...they are ok...but, the WCW main event scene really sucked during this era...there aren't any matches you would want to go back and watch. They are also missing some key match moments, too.
The BluRay extras disc might be the best part of the set...it has the Legends Roundtable, that discussed the nWo at length with Nash, Dillon, Hayes, and JR. It is more informative and in-depth than the documentary for Christ's sake.
Overall...F.
Sad, too, coming off an epic CM Punk DVD.