Who knew bowlers had such potty mouths?
HBOâs (sorry) ballsy five-part docuseries âBorn to Bowl,â which follows five professional bowlers as they chase strikes on the Professional Bowlers Association tour, is filled with cheeky humor, high stakes and so much yelling and cursing. All narrated by Liev Schreiber.
If the Ben Stiller-produced series feels like youâre watching a real-life version of âKingpin,â thatâs by design. Filmmakers James Lee Hernandez and Brian Lazarte cite the 1996 bowling comedy with Woody Harrelson and Randy Quaid as their inspiration. (Though Stillerâs involvement and the fact that it centers on a seldom-covered sport with undoubtedly give it comparisons to âDodgeball.â)
âItâs where I learned that if you pour sugar in a gasoline tank, it would kill a car engine. And I also learned not to try to hustle over a bowling center out in the middle of nowhere, because a priest might chop your hand off,â Hernandez says with a laugh.
For the two, their âKingpinâ fandom came full circle while filming the fourth episode, largely focused on Aussie bowler Jason âBelmoâ Belmonte. âOne of the most phenomenal things is art imitating life, in the sense that the US World Series of bowling happened in Reno, Nevada, in the bowling center that they filmed âKingpinâ in. So the big finale of going to Reno; we experienced that. For me, it was kind of mind-blowing to be there, having been obsessed with that movie for so long.â
Outside of Pete Weber, thereâs not many real-life bowlers that are household names. And whether itâs the âKingpinâ duo or John Turturroâs âBig Lebowskiâ character Jesus Quintana, most of the time bowlers are portrayed as a bit of a joke. Hernandez and Lazarte wanted to change that narrative.
âMost of what we associate with bowling movies and bowling TV shows are funny. And the key thing for us when we were making this series was that, yes, it can be funny, but weâre not making fun of the bowlers. Weâre not punching down,â Lazarte says.
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