Spurs fans who saw the team win the 2014 NBA finals might remember a certain photo captured of Tim Duncan: Confetti falling from the rafters, the Big Fundamental holds out his arms, almost as if to say “that’s the show” to the roaring crowd.
The image is perhaps even more iconic, considering this would be the last of the five championships Duncan won with the Spurs before retirement, leaving behind a legacy not just within the franchise, but also with the city itself.
Now, a new documentary premiering at the Austin Film Festival gives a peek behind the curtain of that show, and the life of the Spurs great.
Filmmaker Scott Duncan, the older brother of Tim Duncan and the director of new documentary “The Boy From St. Croix,” joined the Standard to talk about the film. Listen to the interview above or read the transcript below.
This transcript has been edited lightly for clarity:

Scott Duncan, left, is the filmmaker behind the documentary about his younger brother, Tim. Courtesy of Scott Duncan
Texas Standard: Well, your brother, it’s no secret, is someone who kind of avoids the spotlight – as well as any superstar effectively can, that is. I imagine being family helps with getting access, but was it difficult at all to get him to agree to this project?
Scott Duncan: I think it was the right time, and we both felt it together. He had retired, and time had gone by. It had been on-and-off just casually documenting, obviously, his career, knowing it had been filmed a lot, obviously, with NBA Entertainment as well.
But, you know, the time was just right. He retired. He could actually take a step back and look back and start to go through the memories, go through thoughts, watch his kids grow, you know, enjoy his career.
So it was really the right time together. And, you know, he agreed, gently. And I said,”it’s gonna be an amazing process.”
Oh, was it? Was it great?
It was absolutely magical just to even, for ourselves, to talk about things maybe we never spoke about and let him just talk about ideas – thoughts, memories, go down his own memory lane from finally taking a look at his whole life and career and growing up and family and Virgin Island life from just a moment of, like, take a pause.
And he could reflect and the structure of the film was to just be like, let Timmy talk.
I was curious because you guys are obviously really close, family’s really important to you guys. And I wondered if there were things that you learned about him while working on this that came as a surprise.
Do you mind mentioning one or two?
Yeah, I think there’s no big surprises or drama ever. But surprises, I think, were some of the persons.
I really wanted to reach back into St. Croix life and all the islands of the Virgin Islands and just find the persons that really knew him that maybe that never had a voice or really interacted with Timmy and some of those stories and conversations …
Very simple, but like, wow, this was a moment that Timmy was really shown to evolve. And to not just the family love we offered around him but just the people of Virgin Islands – the love they offered, the neighborhood kind of values of islander life: take care of one another, help one another, share and grow and expand.











