Tread (2019) Poster

(2019)

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8/10
Scary Look Into One Man's Thinking
chrisbrooks-1925926 August 2020
I don't know if what the man said about the people in the city was true, partly true or not true at all. These small cities owned by mostly one family are known to yield a lot of power. If it is true or partly true, what this man was saying, it just shows us that hurting people has consequences. I tend to believe what the man is saying was partly to mostly true.

It is a shame that our courts and laws do not protect us from people in power being able to take advantage of another.

With great power comes great responsibility!
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8/10
"Falling Down" in real life
imdb-202123 August 2020
Just like the Michael Douglas movie "Falling Down", this tragic documentary presents the viewer with an average guy who gets kicked repeatedly and eventually has enough.

I don't think they did a very good job in this documentary exploring the aspect of what, if any, actual corruption was involved in the town's actions against Marv, which is an unfortunate omission. They just interviewed a few of them and we should take it on faith that these people are on the up and up, apparently. Anyone with a cynical eye towards our dear leaders know better than that.

One could only wonder what the narrative would be like in 2020 with rampant protests across the US. Would Marv be viewed as a "peaceful" protester, "peacefully" destroying a city while "peacefully" shooting at cops and "peacefully" trying to murder people he disagrees with? Is he an anti-hero in today's anti-cop/anti-government context?

Had the documentary been produced in the midst of today's (summer of 2020) news cycle, maybe they would have spun it different? Makes you think.
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8/10
Another talented life lost...
timmermanwoodcraft10 August 2020
When watching this very well 'crafted' documentary one question kept springing to mind....what about his long lost girlfriend...the one he loved so much..

Even though this is a gripping insight into a man and his fight against an unjust system it could have been perfected with some more 'unbiased' interviews from family and friends...in the end this docu slanted towards 'he was mad..' but I believe he wasn't...

even in a grown up society where we should all be able to thrive, the bullies still exist.. And Marvin Heemeyer fell victim to this...and to his own demons..

Watch it....
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bizarre, amusing, true.
JohnDeSando30 July 2020
"When you visit evil on someone, believe me, it will be visited on you." Marv Heemeyer

And so, you get to see the most bizarre documentary this year at a time when you may have had just enough of formulaic dramas on demand. Netflix brings us Marv, who is so pissed at the small town of Granby, Colorado, that he outfits a giant Kubota bulldozer like a tank and wrecks a serious number of buildings.

We don't remember this tragic and sometimes amusing incident from 2004 because we were grieving the day after for Ronald Reagan. Now, however, we can relive the bizarre event and give it its just due in Paul Solet's magnetizing documentary called Tread, for obvious reasons. I've lived in a small town like that (pop about 2000) where life can be unforgiving with slights remembered, rumors deadly, and good ol' boys rule not always to a working stiff's benefit.

It's not important to know who is right or wrong. Rather it is discouraging to know that neither side is right and that provincialism thrives as could be expected in blue collar enclaves where zoning and sewage district decisions are not made by God but by petty bureaucrats, who can change a modest welder's life to their advantage and his distinct outrage.

After setting the scene of growing acrimony, Solet shows original footage and voiceovers to chronicle the tank's journey, helicopter and drone shots, and a few restaged moments to try to replicate the eccentricity of the event. Marv's cassette tape testimony is the most interesting, for he barely reveals his rage in favor of his apocalyptic predictions. No one can stop the giant as it targets the buildings and homes of Marv's perceived enemies.

Working-class outrage does gets lost in sheer wonder at the forbidding destroyer, perhaps echoing our own numbed inability to stop a pandemic or a destructive political machine. Yet, as almost low-key as this revenge is, it is nonetheless true, and a bit of our outrage rides inside with Marv.

Tread seems to hold our abiding struggles as if in a nightmare where we tread on our perceived enemies and forget the lessons of tolerance our parlous times demand of us.

You'll not move from your seat in disbelief. It makes being cooped up worth while for 89 minutes.
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7/10
revenge by bulldozer
ferguson-627 February 2020
Greetings again from the darkness. If not so tragic, this story might fit best in Ripley's Believe it or Not. What better description is there for a small town welder who builds an armored bulldozer, weaponizes it, and then takes it on a rampage of revenge, destroying the buildings, homes, and businesses of those he believe 'wronged' him? This actually happened in Granby, Colorado in 2004, and that welder's name was Marv Heemeyer.

Filmmaker Paul Solet begins the film with a recording of a 911 call and news clips of the actual events of June 4, 2004. Solet then proceeds to lay out the backstory of Heemeyer, and how things escalated to the point where destruction and suicide seemed like the only logical step to him. Solet cleverly utilizes Heemeyer's own self-recording (via audio cassette) as a framing structure for the film. Heemeyer's voice tells us what his plan was, and why he had reached this level of desperation.

Interviews are key, and we hear from law enforcement officers who were on the scene that day, Heemeyer's ex-girlfriend Trisha MacDonald, his best friend, a younger man from his snowmobile club, brothers from a family that had supposedly targeted Marv, and a newspaper reporter, Patrick Brower, who also wrote a book on Heemeyer's rampage. Actual news clips and reenactments are used to show us what those being interviewed tell. In this case, it's an effective approach.

It's particularly interesting to hear that Marv was mostly a likable guy who just bumped up against local town and county politics a couple of times. Marv was not part of the 'good old boys club' and admits to needing to "teach a lesson" to those he perceived has gone out of the way to make life difficult for him. His bulldozer was a way for him to dole out the justice that was otherwise going unserved.

This is a story of revenge told in a somewhat sympathetic manner towards Marv Heemeyer, a man who considered himself "an American Patriot." The audio tape is clearly a confession of what he planned (and later carried out), and it was clear he knew this was a suicide mission. Listening to his rants, we assume some form of mental illness was involved, and his best friend describes him as a man who 'spent too much time alone."

The video clips of the carnage, and of the many law enforcement officials on the scene - all of whom were helpless to stop the bulldozer - are captivating and difficult to watch. Fortunately, after the fact, we know that no one died that day other than the man who was responsible. Marv, a man of "righteous anger", had his day of serving justice and rare 'Bulldozer Rampage' headline knocked off the front page one day later by a much bigger story.
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6/10
What Did I Just See? Something's Missing.
AudioFileZ26 October 2020
This documentary probably doesn't begin to tell the reality of both sides that came to a tragic head when Marv Heemeyer enacted the ultimate "payback". To truly get a picture of what the dynamics at play were we need to have some more folks who knew Marv and have his backstory meticulously fleshed out. Why not? The whole film rides on Marv's final actions so shouldn't we be more privy to his life up until this point? I'm looking to wholly and not coincidently explain how this all came to be.

Anyway, Hollywood loves revenge movies as we all know. Strange as it seems when it is real it is something to absolutely loathe, especially in the case of a man who unprovoked would have just been a "muffler store" owner.

Perspective-wise: no one was injured and only the protagonist died by his own hand. That is still tragic but we all know if this is wholly despicable or not depends on how band Marv was truly treated. That is the flaw here as I just do not find enough even-handed research to shed light on everything the led up to Marv's final, seemingly quite clear-headed, reality break (he wasn't a Blues Bro., but he felt he was on a mission if you follow).

See this. It is a sociology fiasco of unparalleled proportions. It might have been more deadly and it is quite fortunate it wasn't. As such it is a study in human behavior the viewer may well hunger for a more in-depth explanation.
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7/10
Great subject matter and payoff. Check it out.
rochfordsimon17 September 2020
This documentary, to me, is a mixed bag of content. Its basically a destructive revenge story. But what the makers don't focus or expand on , are the issues of Anger, Suicide, Loneliness, Mental Health, Corruptionion, Loss, Nepotism or Paranoia. Could have made a very good documentary an excellent documentary.

It's a bit of a slow burner, but the pay off is worth it. This would make a great fictional movie. Small town lives and small town mind lead big time problems.
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9/10
Small town folks know
fearthemcneil6 August 2020
I believe Marv 100%. I grew up in a small town of 1100 people and anyone who grew up in a similar town knows these good old boys clubs exist without a doubt. There are 3 or 4 familys in these small towns and if you cross them, they will have you excommunicated and isolated and do whatever they can to smear your name. Marv had an extreme reaction to such an experience for sure and it's terrible that he did so, but anyone trying to act like his story doesn't hold any water at all is fooling themselves. These people undoubtedly pushed him and now want to act like they were innocent little lambs in all of it. Not buying it.
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6/10
Full facts?
smoochemail22 July 2020
This documentary didn't really give the full facts and was kind of bias.

If you try to screw someone into the ground you better watch your back. This sort of corruption goes on in my country as well.

RIP Marv Heemeyer
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9/10
"Duel" for real
jarthur011116 June 2020
This news story always stuck in my mind when it was 1st reported well over a decade ago so I was intrigued to learn more about it. "Tread" tells the story of a man getting revenge on City Hall & building a marvel of a machine to exact it with. The film does a brilliant job at setting everything in motion, covering all sides of small town politics & a gifted welder driven to madness. Fortunately no one was seriously hurt during his rampage so there is nothing you have to turn your head away from while watching it. The incredible act of destruction is captured with actual news footage, photographs & some recreation. It'll give any action movie fan a rush. Do NOT let this documentary escape your attention.
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6/10
Well done, Marv!
madworld-6350319 May 2021
Hopefully this will be a lesson that ruining people's lives can have drastic consequences. But I doubt it, because the sadistic jerks that bully and push people to despair never seem to learn. Marv did what he needed to do and IMO succeeded in his intentions. The Thompson family and their enablers should burn in hell.
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6/10
A Town Of Num-Nut Rednecks Ruled By A Millionaire Family Of Bullying Redneck Scumbags!
silicontourist28 February 2022
Money talks and we see in this film how small town redneck trash grovel to the wealthy.

The old American west was full of corrupt families like the Thompson's of this tale, where they stole huge amounts of land taken from the Indians (and less fortunate settlers who got in their way). They became ruthless cattle barons who became mega wealthy and corrupt lowlife trash; owning and ruling the towns they created. This later moved on to the Oil Barons who lied and bullied their way through their daily/everyday actions before, times moved on to the mega rich corporate scumbags that run - and ruin - the everyday lives of not just America but the people of the world; and governments are their management teams.

This does a great job of revealing to many people that the old west small town, bullying, corrupt and wealthy families are still running things. The one outstanding point in this story, of a man bullied, hindered and let down by the justice system, is the completely imbalanced view of things about the hero of the sad story. Why did the director/maker not have an equal balance of friends, and character witnesses, for Marv Heemeyer to balance out with the one sided lying townsfolk? If I could have made money on every interviewed person that was lying through their teeth, I would have made a bundle! The part Bulgarian psycho idiot, Cody, whose friend was interviewed was the most blatantly lying lowlife in the whole documentary!

Marv stood up for himself (just like people in the old west did) and he didn't use violence; he never knocked that Cody idiot on his ass. He went the way of talking the matter over and went to the courts when that failed. He was a good man who was let down by money fueled corrupt people and officials. I think his actions were just and the people he perpetrated them against can think themselves lucky. He could have decided to shoot and kill them. But he didn't, because he wasn't crazy or mad or a nut job like the Cody psycho fella!

If more people stood up to defend, and protect, themselves - and their loved ones - from lowlife scum such as the Thompson's etc, their lives would be a lot better. As humanity has always known, when the heroes fight back the bullies always run away. Unfortunately humanity is too greedy to have the same things that their bullies have!

The media have memories like a Goldfish and thought the death of dreary person Ronald Regan, was more important than Marv Heemeyers fight against injustice!
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4/10
Well enough made, but completely glossed over the cause. (minor spoilers)
perisho2 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This documentary doesn't dig deep enough in to WHY Marvin Heemeyer would give up a comfortable and easy life of leisure to rampage through the town. Not sure if gaining access to the town's entrenched power families required them to gloss over everything that was done to him, but I find it hard to believe that a smart, industrious man who clearly was thoughtful and levelheaded would go off the deep end FOR NO REASON AT ALL, as the this documentary would have you believe. I just don't buy it and you shouldn't either.

He sacrificed his entire life and worked tirelessly for yeears for imagined slights? Nope. Doesn't happen.

So they may be able to cover it up, but Marvin did make them pay, and maybe they'll think twice before they screw over the next guy. But probably not.
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7/10
ENLIGHTENING, We hear you Marvin, It's written in the REVIEWS.
QuentinJ4443 August 2020
Tread, the documentary and VINDICTIVENESS of Marvin Heemayer, and the businesses and home he obliterated because of the wrong he felt that was done to him by members of the City Council and other business owners in the small town of Grandy, Colorado on June 4, 2004, with a self-modified bulletproof bulldozer. This documentary is fair and balanced, it allows both sides of the story told by both parties, but it's up to you to decide whom you believe. This is my type of documentary, this is a must watch.
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7/10
God , Guns and the American Public = TREAD
valleyjohn25 November 2020
Every country has its fair share of nut jobs but it seems The United States of America has a disproportionate amount of them. Add religion and guns as well as a bloody great bulldozer you get just another crazy day in small town America .

Pushed to his breaking point, a master welder in a small town at the foot of the Rocky Mountains quietly fortifies a bulldozer with 30 tons of concrete and steel and seeks to destroy those he believes have wronged him.

I don't remember this actually happening back in 2004 . It obviously got lost in the news as it happened when Reagan died . Bad Timing Merv!

Nobody comes out of this documentary that well . The town folk , counsellors and rule makers seem to have it in for Mervin and he obviously isn't stable but as the film goes on you begin to realise that maybe he wasn't as hard done by as he would like you to think . He definitely had a screw come loose and because of that he decided to take revenge, knowing it would be the last thing he did and it was glorious !!

Who doesn't want to destroy everything belonging to the arse holes they know . I certainly would love too!

It's a really good documentary. My only criticism is that they used some reconstructions and that is never good but apart from that it's a very good watch .
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7/10
Getting Inside A Psychopath's Head
DavoZed12 January 2022
Fascinating story. Well worth a watch.

What you or I would see as struggles with bureaucracy and dealing with other people, in the course of running a business, this guy saw as an ongoing vendetta that needed to be stopped and avenged.

He got some payback but at an extreme cost to himself and the people around him.
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10/10
Welp
leahmmarie23 January 2022
I grew up in a small, south Louisiana town. This is how small towns operate. The good ole boys do what they want and anyone who opposed is is met with whatever they feel will make you back down. Not saying how Marv handled it was the best, but I also know, having lived in such an area, there's nothing else TO do besides bend over. I must say, i love how those interviewing for the doc are acting innocent and as if this dude was just a lying psycho. The god and guns crowd aren't at all my cup of tea but.... Seems this small town created a monster by being monsters.
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7/10
You've got to try a little kindness, just show a little kindness...
shiannedog15 March 2021
The makers of this documentary should have used Glen Campbell's song "Try a little kindness" as the films theme song. The Granby town officials could have avoided this tragedy by employing that strategy. This world is loaded with people who are one or two objections away from disaster. Kindness and grace are powerfully useful toward avoiding these issues. It is very disturbing when government officials can follow the law by the book and not allow themselves to be moved by the human consequences of their decisions. There is no doubt that Marv Heemeyer had issues which resulted in disaster but how much did cold hearted stupidity on the part of the town officials contribute to that becoming reality? That is a very serious question that needs to be considered by anyone who holds elected office. Just my two cents worth.
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9/10
Powerful documentary
shredding-006447 September 2020
If you are a documentary fan put this high on your list. It's an incredible story, but not one that can easily translate on screen. Director Paul Solet figured out how to tell the story, with copious interviews from conflicting sides that tell two totally different tales. You can decide for yourself who to believe, and then watch as all hell breaks loose.
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6/10
Killdozer
zwdg974 December 2021
Marv is based. All the people who screwed him over are too stupid to understand the consequences of their actions, and still seem to think they did nothing wrong. Complete goofs.
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8/10
An excellent documentary
contactmaz22 June 2020
I don't usually like to watch documentaries but this one caught my attention because it was a kind of revenge thing. It was a well-written and a well-thought out 'film' and it is worth watching. What a pity that Reagan died the following day!
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Not divinely guided, but supernaturally lucky!
jas26695 August 2020
Maybe the best documentary I've seen in years. "Tread" is the story of a handy guy named Marvin Heemeyer who got screwed over by a small town good old boy network that made it impossible to keep his muffler shop business, so he locked himself in a garage for a few months while he rebuilt a bulldozer into something like that TV movie Killdozer, a rolling tank that he used to take down the town hall and the buildings of several adversaries, without ever actually injuring anyone. He just rolled out one day and destroyed the property of everyone who destroyed his dream.

The film uses footage of the rampage, recreation footage, and the actual tapes Marvin made as he worked on the Killdozer, talking about why and how he felt it was up to him to dish out justice. I remember the news stories when it happened, so it was just fascinating to meet all the people Marvin talked about and see the inside story of what really happened --- easily the best thing I've seen on Netflix since the new seasons of Mystery Science Theater 3000!

Marvin clearly suffered from serious mental illness. One thing I liked about the documentary is that it gave equal time to everyone in town, which made it even more clear that things weren't as Marvin imagined. The neighboring business Marvin fought so hard against turned out to be good for the town. That's what's so fascinating, the inside look at how one guy got the picture so twisted in his head, and was just brilliant enough - and crazy enough - to try and go out with some kind of apocalyptic even-scale reckoning.

Like one interviewee says, a good friend of Marvin's - he probably just spent too much time alone in his hot tub. One guy with a twisted reality can impose that false reality on a big chunk of the real world, at least when he has the power to do so -- certainly seems applicable to the times we live in now!
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7/10
I'm shocked.
Analog_Devotee23 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
One of the wildest documentaries I've ever seen. Marv was the definition of a real life anti-hero. Sure, what he did wasn't right... but man, what a way to go out.
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3/10
meh
amerikasend10 October 2020
This documentary about Marvin Heemayer bulldozing select individuals places of business and the town hall was meh. The documentary goes out of its way to try to make Marv sound like he went totally bonkers by using recordings of Marv talking about how god told him to do this. It repeats sections of the recordings too to reiterate that the documentary is trying to paint him as batpoop crazy. Out of over 270+ minutes of tape recordings Marv left explaining his motive, the documentary chose to use the parts of the recordings where Marv is talking about god.

So, of the over 270+ minute of recordings, it went with using 5 minutes of Marv talking about god and 5 minutes of Marv barely explaining his motive in all. The documentary doesn't really examine or present Marv's motive other than suggesting he was crazy. It doesn't get any deeper than that even though the recordings Marv left left a fairly nuanced rationale for why he did what he did. The documentary couldn't be bothered to include the full picture because then Marv wouldn't have seemed as crazy. There's is a part in the documentary where they try to make it seem like Marv dumped his girlfriend because she was smoking cigarettes. The only reason to randomly include that was to paint him as bonkers. Riveting stuff

The documentary seems to suggest the only thing people care about or should care about is money. Marv wouldn't sell his property that would've netted him a huge profit from it. Him refusing to sell his property and place of business is apparently extremely confusing to the person that made this documentary and for almost everyone interviewed. The rich people that ran the town and tried to run him out of their territory and town were baffled by Marv not selling. The documentary makes no effort to examine or take a critical look into the truthfulness of what Marv was claiming. It just takes the rich people that ran the town and their friends and relatives on the city council on their word alone. In the interviews, they just deny that they tried to screw Marv over and that they didn't understand why he wouldn't sell.

Funnily enough, the people in the city council and the town police ceased being on the city council or a cop in 2004. Why that is is not looked into. The people calling this documentary "fair and balanced" seem to be using an unusual meaning for the term. The bulldozer was the only interesting part. Other than that, the documentary wasn't good, nor compelling, or insightful. It seems like very little research was put into this documentary.
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7/10
Angry White Man: The Documentary
Agent1021 September 2021
There is a couple tropes the modern media absolutely loves....missing/murdered blonde white women and angry white men. Nothing creates a frenzy like those two tropes. Nothing creates more empathy and coverage than those two tropes. Marv Heemeyer was one of those angry white men, but unfortunately his rampage through the streets of a small town in Colorado was not a big enough stage for him to be canonized among the modern elite angry white men. However, one thing Heemeyer had over his contemporaries was a vast library of oratorical nonsense centered on revenge and a growing anger. This is how we can truly understand the bizarre and violent tendencies of a man that would have set the world on fire if he had not had the bad luck of a former president dying the day after his grand show.

Now, my cynicism aside, Heemeyer's background follows the usual excuse making. He had some beef with a couple of local tycoons. He was lonely. He might have been broken due to his days in the military. He is given a huge benefit of the doubt that his darker skinned contemporaries would never have gotten. He was once again a lone wolf, not an indictment on a larger subset of people or a culture. What we do know is this...he displayed the tendencies of a time bomb. He showed bouts of anger in public settings. He hated government and the perceived elite. Then he started living in a shed, rarely taking showers and working on a secret project. Oh, and did we mention he owned a 50-caliber gun? Yeah, there was something not right and if anything, he kept being given the benefit of the doubt. This was a just a few years after the Unabomber was caught mind you, and these bizarre behaviors should have been scrutinized more closely. A giant tarp was randomly displayed in his shed, and no one thought to look under it? Perhaps it is the naïveté of small town people, or perhaps it is misguided privilege.

In the aftermath of his rampage, it seemed pretty incredible that the conspiracies he hoisted had any inkling of truth. Were the small town elite trying to ruin him and run him out of town? Maybe, but the dead tell no stories, and in Heemeyer's case his posthumous story sounded like a delusional canto to being God's messenger against corruption. Yikes.

Anyway, the documentary gives too much of an empathetic eye to the perpetrator who spent a year stockpiling metal, concrete and bullets. While you can understand someone reaching a boiling point, very few would spend a year preparing to turn their small town into a landfill of broken matchstick buildings. This goes well beyond a man going on a rampage due to one stroke of bad luck too many.

Aside from the framing, the final third of the film was really what saved the feature. With a mixture of live footage and recreated footage, we got a good glimpse into how this rampage went down. Flash bombs and 50-caliber bullets couldn't even dent this thing, and the irony of a huge tractor getting stuck above a basement was fitting. Like being stuck in a sinkhole, the great machine died.

Like I said before though, this documentary didn't seem to take a hard stance about Heemeyer, which was disappointing. While one might say his enemies were playing it cool for the camera, Heemeyer's tapes tend to support their arguments much better. If God truly exists, he would not send one man on a such a ridiculous and petty mission.
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