I watched the Rise of Jordan Peterson, a documentary charting Peterson's path from obscurity to international fame and notoriety. There's extensive access to Peterson, his wife, children and parents, and his home, walls literally covered in artwork. There's also a fair amount of interviews and coverage allotted to his critics and detractors. Overall, it feels like a fairly balanced portrayal of a divisive public figure.
Strangely, the filming started in 2015, when Peterson was still a relative nobody. The film makers just seemed to get lucky and happened to be in the right place at the right time. It's kind of tragic in a way, seeing a happy and healthy Peterson spending time with his family in 2015, and then gradually becoming visibly gaunt and haggard under the stress of his journey, culminating in a scene where he's picking at a meal, looking pretty dreadful, and then checking his schedule to find he has another three interviews to get through, starting with Ben Shapiro... It's also pretty depressing knowing the health problems in store for Peterson and his family in the period following the documentary.
Strangely, the filming started in 2015, when Peterson was still a relative nobody. The film makers just seemed to get lucky and happened to be in the right place at the right time. It's kind of tragic in a way, seeing a happy and healthy Peterson spending time with his family in 2015, and then gradually becoming visibly gaunt and haggard under the stress of his journey, culminating in a scene where he's picking at a meal, looking pretty dreadful, and then checking his schedule to find he has another three interviews to get through, starting with Ben Shapiro... It's also pretty depressing knowing the health problems in store for Peterson and his family in the period following the documentary.