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 Location:  Home » Shark DVDs » Bigger, Stronger, Faster*December 3, 2008  
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Bigger, Stronger, Faster*
Bigger, Stronger, Faster*
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Director: Christopher Bell
Actors: Christopher Bell, Mark Bell, Mike Bell, Christian Boeving, Floyd Landis
Studio: Magnolia Home Entertainment
Category: DVD

List Price: $26.98
Buy New: $16.99
You Save: $9.99 (37%)
Buy New/Used/Collectible from $14.70

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars(19 reviews)
Sales Rank: 3637

Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Ntsc, Widescreen
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Media: DVD
Running Time: 107 minutes
Number Of Items: 1
Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

MPN: 10140
UPC: 876964001403
EAN: 0876964001403
ASIN: B001B7CNW4

Release Date: September 30, 2008
Theatrical Release Date: 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Pop culture junkies tend to think of Hulk Hogan, Sylvester Stallone, and Arnold Schwarzenegger as entertainment figures. In Poughkeepsie, NY, back in the 1980s, filmmaker Christopher Bell and his brothers viewed them as heroes and became bodybuilders. Like the Hulkster, Mike and Mark Bell even turned to professional wrestling. Chris, a former staffer at Venice's famous Gold's Gym, doesn't use anabolic steroids--he did try them once--but his heroes have and his brothers do, leading him to look deeper at this increasingly common practice. While Bell explores the health costs of juicing, he's mostly concerned with the moral consequences involved in the use of performance-enhancing substances. Though he refrains from judgment, he stopped taking steroids because it felt dishonest. Naturally, his burly brothers feel otherwise. Aside from his family, Bell speaks with doctors, lawyers, congressmen, gym rats, and professional athletes, like Olympic sprinters Ben Johnson and Carl Lewis and Tour de France cyclist Floyd Landis. He also includes footage of Jose Canseco, Barry Bonds, and Mark McGwire testifying during the federal grand jury and congressional hearings on steroid use in the major leagues (prompted by the publication of Canseco's Juiced: Wild Times, Rampant 'Roids, Smash Hits, and How Baseball Got Big). For the most part, Bell doesn't leave any stone unturned and the personal nature of his entertaining and enlightening inquiry elevates Bigger, Stronger, Faster, i.e. The Side Effects of Being American, above your average expose. Recommended to athletes, sports fans, health nuts, and of course, pop culture junkies. --Kathleen C. Fennessy

Product Description
In America we define ourselves in the superlative: we are the biggest strongest fastest country in the world. We reward speed size and above all else: winning at sport at business and at war. Metaphorically we are a nation on steroids. Is it any wonder that so many of our heroes are on performance enhancing drugs?From the producers of Bowling For Columbine and Fahrenheit 9/11 comes a new film that unflinchingly explores our win-at-all-cost culture through the lens of a personal journey. Blending comedy and pathos BIGGER STRONGER FASTER* is a collision of pop culture and first-person narrative with a diverse cast including US Congressmen professional athletes medical experts and everyday gym rats.At its heart this is the story of director Christopher Bell and his two brothers who grew up idolizing muscular giants like Hulk Hogan Sylvester Stallone and Arnold Schwarzenegger and who went on to become members of the steroid-subculture in an effort to realize their American dream. When you discover that your heroes have all broken the rules do you follow the rules or do you follow your heroes?Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: DOCUMENTARIES/BIOGRAPHY UPC: 876964001403 Manufacturer No: 10140


Customer Reviews:   Read 14 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars Little man complex tacken to the extreme with naivitity   November 23, 2008
  0 out of 3 found this review helpful

No one other than 12 year old bots are shocked when they find out Arnold Schwarzenegger and Hulk Hogan used anabolic steroids. The documentary is angled from the smallest of three brother who doesn't use steroids and his brothers do. They are also much physically larger than him as well which describes most of the physical advantages, and in part steroids.It takes you through the life of gym rat junkies thinking muscles with open the door to fame and fortune. The three brothers are moderately obese but strong as horses. This fact eludes them throughout the film, while at the same time having the minds of 21 year old boys in grown men's bodies. I mean no disrespect to the brother with a learning disability but the other two were pathetic.

Was really only impressed with the view interviews of congressmen and people giving testimony as to the shallow depth of coverage banning decisions were based on.

I'm sure it will continue to get five stars based on the level of interest in learning about the subculture. In fact it almost tells you how to enlist. (Freeze frame when the football coach open his stash).




5 out of 5 stars Biceps in Balance!   November 11, 2008
  1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Bigger, Stronger, Faster is a well done, honestly written documentary that avoids the usual hyperbole involved in the steroid debate. It's balanced and personal and deals with real lives of people who you know and with whom you work and live. It stays away exclusive focus on steriod usage in the upper eschalon of athletes and bodybuilders. And the personal struggles and the willingness to do whatever at whatever risk to achieve a goal is both insightful as well as a bit chilling. I left watching this a little less clear about my opinion than I was before -- and that's a sign of a well done presentation.


5 out of 5 stars Excellent!!!   October 30, 2008
  1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Finally the truth about the Ben Johnson' case. The whole world know that the american athletes only compete "in juice". Always there were stories about a tam arriving in a country to a competition and, when knew that they have a dopping test, the whole team returned to america. Also, is was commom, some years ago, that always when a no american athlet won a international competion, some "dopping test" take back the medal and it fall in american hands. We, that live in another countries always was intrigued how it can happen ,if american atlets are always " in juice"?!!
This docummentary show how, explainin that Ben Johson/Carl Lewis controversy and we have only a honest conclusion to this: in a competition wiht all athletes juiced, the real champion was Ben Johnson, not Carl Lewis. However, this film show much more than this and help to clear some myths against steroids.

A much more message dominates the whole film: Why these poor people think that they only worth if they "the first one, the better one, the bigger one"? This point apperas to in Bowling for Columbine. What is wrong with a view of a whole society that can not be happy being good husband, good worker, good friend, good father or mother? THIS IS RESULT OF A IDEOLOGICAL BRAINWASH! You have no right to happiness if you are not a "perfect gear to the system".

Only a point I think that is a little exagerating: Arnold Schwarzenegger is the "dark ship" in this film. Please, when he began, so much muscles was a obstacle, not a advantage, to actor career! He launched a new standard because he is a PERSONALITY. The secret never were his muscles or he never would act in another movies beyond adventures. We always like his face, his voice, his charisma, and if in USA there are thousands of musclemen, the most in juice, how explain that they are not so famous as Schwarzenegger? The muscles never was the answer to success, there is no shortcuts to explain this, some people have qualities that, as unique human beings, help them to be a success in some goals and are obstacles to another, and the most of them are innate qualities, not created qualities, as a brainwasher ideology would like the people believe.

The problem with steroids is the truth: if the champions always tell the truht and the people can choose if they want to risk their health to be "hugge" or "the first one", or if they will choose ohter goal or other heroes that do't use them. For example, if you know that a man 5'9" only can reach 220 lbs with natural training you can be satisfied and a sucess weighting 200-220. But if you, because steroids, believe that a man 5'9" can wieght 280lbs, you will kill yourself trying to reach this, and when you reach ONLY 220lbs you can think that you are a failure. If you know the truth you can choose the truth or the cheating, and analize your sucess in a more realistic base (220 to natural, 280 to juiced). The truth free us, always!



5 out of 5 stars Thought provoking documentary that may shatter your preconceptions ..   October 25, 2008
  1 out of 1 found this review helpful

"Our heroes have always used steroids ..." Or is that how the song goes???

I expected this to be an anti-steroid film. It was neither that nor a pro-steroid commercial. Instead, it is a thoughtful and thought-provoking documentary of the role of performance enhancers in our society. It seems to imply that steroids are wrapped up in the American culture (though elsewhere the film implies that the American sports establishment started using them to ape the Soviets, echo were kicking our butts in the Olympics.)

Focal to the story is the tale of three brothers from Poughkeepsie, NY. Adolescent chubbies, all three grew up to worship weightlifting, which took them on common paths of anabolic steroid use.

(Any film that makes Rep. Henry Waxman look like an idiot can't be all bad, not that that is such a difficult task.)

This film will grab you by the biceps and pecs, command your attention and make cause you to re-think much of what we have been conditioned to decide about anabolic steroids.

A good film!



5 out of 5 stars Even better than I expected!   October 8, 2008
  1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I wanted to see this film ever since it got outstanding reviews during its theatrical run. Unfortunately, that theatrical run did not include my town. However, when I watched the dvd, I found that the reviews did not do this film justice.
Chris Bell's film blows away anything that Michael Moore puts out for the reason that even though Bell is against steroids, he realizes that there is a huge gray area with this subject (as there is with almost any topic). Bell points out (rightly so), that performance enchancing drugs are a way of life in just about any walk of life, and that the majority of steroid users are the average Joes wanting to look better, not athletes. He also points out that for all the ranting and raving about the dangers of steroids, alcohol and tobacco abuse count for way more illness and death than do the abuse of steroids. These are fine points that are never brought up by Congress or the mainstream press.
The best part of the film has to go to Bell's delving into why people feel the need to use performance enhancing drugs. The answer? The strong love of a winner found in society. Like I said earlier, this film is even better than the positive reviews it is receiving, and I would put it right up there with "Super-Size Me" as one of the better documentaries released recently. Do yourself a favor and pick this film up - you won't regret it.


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