Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru

Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru

2016 "Our entire life changes in a moment."
Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru
Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru

Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru

6.6 | 1h55m | en | Documentary

Granted unprecedented access, Berlinger captures renowned life and business strategist Tony Robbins behind the scenes of his mega seminar Date with Destiny, pulling back the curtain on this life-altering and controversial event, the zealous participants and the man himself.

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6.6 | 1h55m | en | Documentary | More Info
Released: July. 15,2016 | Released Producted By: RadicalMedia , Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

Granted unprecedented access, Berlinger captures renowned life and business strategist Tony Robbins behind the scenes of his mega seminar Date with Destiny, pulling back the curtain on this life-altering and controversial event, the zealous participants and the man himself.

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Cast

Tony Robbins

Director

Robert Richman

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Reviews

Romeo Mihalcea It's a promotional movie, nothing objective in it, no questions are being asked, nobody sets back to analyze anything.He's picking people from the crowd and bullies them into doing what he says or face shame from the other in the room that drank too much Kool-Aid.I'm surprised of the rating of this movie here.
chuckcoulter Don't trust the pointless, academic negativity you see here. Directed by Joe Berlinger of critical darling "Paradise Lost," "TONY ROBBINS: I AM NOT YOUR GURU" is a powerful piece of vérité about a most unconventional, controversial man. The naïve negative reviews you see here for this film are simply bad because the reviewers are reviewing the "man," and not the film. There are pointless accusations that Robbins believes he is "cool," because he uses foul language. What, on earth, would that simplistic point, an inference, no less, mean in a documentary? Maybe he should have created a less complex portrait by cleaning up his language for the first- graders who saw this by accident. There are pointless slams about his lack of psychological education, when that entire industry—has anyone seen the mental gymnastics it took to explain the latest, wildly wrong- headed DSM by a psychiatric and psychological community who have expressed embarrassment about the discipline's lack of direction—and, again, this has nothing to do with the film. Neither does denying that some individual could experience cathartic change from the oddness of the Robbins event put under a microscope in this film—from its planners and facilitators to the bizarrely American come-from-nothing story of Robbins himself, a man who knows the significant abuse many of his followers have come to share (we are talking genuine abuse: murders; rapes; abandonment—not tiny things). The film, in a sense, poses a question can someone articulate, a genuine communicator, who has suffered and risen above enormous pain—is someone like that, even when that individual becomes a cottage industry onto himself—better than an academic who has only sat outside true pain and does his or her best to understand what that other, the patient who has endured the unspeakable, has gone through? For a strong portrait of a uniquely individual American, see it; if you're a die-hard skeptic—I double welcome you. But grade the film—not the man or what you believe is possible.
Alex Ellis I give it a 2 because it was entertaining at first. The suicidal guy lifted up, cool scene, entertaining. Tony saying the F word, shocking and funny. Learning that they paid $4,000 per ticket? Wow. The man can speak, he can make them cry, he can make you think positive but he can't possibly cure your issues. The woman made to break up on the phone with her boyfriend, lol funny and weird. talk about pressure. Hey it's those peoples money and they can spend it how they want but less than halfway through, it got old. Netflix brought me here. I don't think it was investigative enough or showed the bad side. Tony has been around forever though, he knows how to hustle that is for sure.
John Duffy Was a big fan of Tony Robbins going in. Not so much after this. Thought this was going to shed more light on his life coaching, lessons for success. Instead it shows that Robbins fancies himself a pop psychologist (with none of the training). He even has a woman call her boyfriend in front of a room full of strangers and break up with him! How humiliating for the woman and the man. Who is Tony Robbins to be breaking up relationships after talking to someone for 2 minutes? No relationship is perfect. Jesus, he'd break up every relationship.He is also VERY profane. He rarely says a sentence without dropping an F bomb. It's over the top crude.I still like his message of choosing to be the kind of person you want to be, that the only thing you have control of are your own choices in life, etc. But that's not original. All of that goes back to a guy named Napolean Hill. You can see his stuff on YouTube. There's also a lot of feel-goody talk about "love". No, life isn't about love, it's about mental toughness and grit and focus on goals. That's what the better life coaches have taught, like Hill. Feeling all lovey dovey with everyone doesn't pay the bills.Tony is a salesman. He got into the self-help racket when he was a young guy, saw that people liked his act and that he could make a living doing it. That's fine, but now he's some kind of preachy, self-ordained cult leader, pretending he can solve all of your problems after talking to you for 2 minutes. No. 1, I don't care about his pseudo-psychological diagnoses of people; and No. 2, people's lives are more complicated than that. This reeks of a spectacle more than something meaningful to these people.So, overall, hugely disappointed in this documentary and in the man.