On January 28th, 1993 wrestling legend, Andre The Giant, died in a hotel room in the Paris, France. He was 46 years old. Trading on his extraordinary physique Andre Roussimoff was the biggest draw in the wrestling world throughout the 1970s and 80s; standing at seven feet plus and four hundred pounds he was billed as the Eighth Wonder of the World. It was only a matter of time before the movie industry came calling and in 1986 Andre starred in the fantasy hit The Princess Bride. But privately Andre had been haunted by his size throughout his life. Andre made no secret of his belief that the world wasn’t made for people of his stature – cars, hotel rooms and airplanes all presented challenges and frustrations. Born in France Andre had grown prodigiously in his late teens. When his size and agility caught the eye of a wrestling promoter his path out of poverty was set. Japan and North America beckoned and the legend Andre the Giant started to grow; the stories of his phenomenal appetite for alcohol reaching mythic proportions. By the mid 80s Andre was wrestling’s star attraction but what his fans didn’t know was that a rare condition was eroding his once superhuman strength and the clock was ticking on his life. In 1993 after receiving news that his father had just days to live Andre returned to France. Two weeks later Andre had also passed away. World renowned forensic pathologist, Dr Michael Hunter analyses Andre’s long medical history and the testimonies of close friends to determine the precise reason for his death.