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45 of 48 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Chris Bell's Engaging, Heartfelt Look At Steroids and his Family
"Bigger, Stronger, Faster", the new documentary from Chris Bell, and produced by many of the people who have worked on Michael Moore's documentaries, is a very entertaining, level-handed look at the use of steroids in America.

"Bigger" is better than your average documentary for two key reasons. Chris Bell is a likable, very real guy and he guides us through...
Published on July 7, 2008 by thornhillatthemovies.com

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Informative and Ebtertaining
I actually Bought this video as a welcome home gift for my boyfriend. He had said he wanted the film so i knew he would like it, but what suprised me was that i also enjoyed the film. I have no interest in bodybuilding but i try to make an effort for my boyfriend and really enjoyed the film. it was very entertaining and informational.
Published on September 4, 2009 by M. Vickers


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45 of 48 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Chris Bell's Engaging, Heartfelt Look At Steroids and his Family, July 7, 2008
By 
thornhillatthemovies.com (Venice, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Bigger, Stronger, Faster* (DVD)
"Bigger, Stronger, Faster", the new documentary from Chris Bell, and produced by many of the people who have worked on Michael Moore's documentaries, is a very entertaining, level-handed look at the use of steroids in America.

"Bigger" is better than your average documentary for two key reasons. Chris Bell is a likable, very real guy and he guides us through this maze of information much like he probably learned about it in the first place, giving us an in depth look into the use of steroids and how they have affected both the practice and perception of sports in America, and to a lesser extent, the world.

The second, and perhaps more important reason this film sticks out is because it comes from a personal place in Chris' life. As he quickly explains during the beginning of the film, he was the middle of three children, all boys, who grew up with a loving, overweight mother and a loving, but busy with work father. In an attempt to stand out from the rest of the kids, each of the brothers decides to take up weight lifting and try to become famous as wrestlers, hoping to follow the likes of their heroes, Hulk Hogan, Sylvester Stallone and Arnold Schwarzenegger into the limelight. They each transform their chubby bodies into bulky muscle powerhouses, but the fame is still fleeting.

Chris' older brother, Mark, actually makes it into the WWE, but his role is that of the guy who always gets beaten up by the more powerful and more famous wrestlers. He doesn't last long. So he starts to take steroids.

Chris decides the way to make it into the limelight is to move to Southern California, to be closer to the action, and the auditions. He naturally ends up at Venice Beach and gets a job working in Gold's Gym, the place made famous by many weightlifters and body builders, by Schwarzenegger and Stallone. In a particularly telling moment, Chris speaks with one of the gym members, a man well past his prime who continues to work out at the gym, and lives in his small van in the gym parking lot. You can tell from the expression on Chris' face he sees the similarities between them as he looks at the guys living quarters. You can almost see him pray that he won't end up in the same situation; homeless, working out, continuing to hope for stardom.

Chris' younger brother, Mike, had development problems growing up, so he decided to follow his other brothers into weightlifting and bodybuilding. This focus clearly helped him to improve his life and his attention to detail, but he also decides to try to improve the workouts through the use of steroids.

Chris knows his brothers use steroids, but he has stayed away from them. He wonders why one of three children would feel the need to do things the 'right' way, the harder way, and stay away from the drugs? This is what leads him on the journey through this documentary.

The best scenes involve Chris and his family. On a visit home, he talks to his mom, a perfectly likable, overweight, middle-aged woman who spends her life as a stay-at-home mom. As they talk, she makes a batch of her famous bar cookies for a local high school sports team. It is unclear why she still makes these for the local high school, but it is clear the bars are both very good and not low fat. Chris claims his mother doesn't know that his brother use steroids. She may not admit it, but you can tell she knows. Late in the film, Chris has dinner with his brothers and mom and dad and steers the conversation towards steroids, hoping that his brothers will finally admit it to their parents. Mom asks a few questions, giving the brothers an opportunity to come clean. But they keep their secret. And so does mom.

As he meets with and talks to his brothers, we learn each of their stories and they couldn't be more different.

But Chris also seeks to understand the influence of steroids throughout sports. He speaks with many people, both pro and con, amateur and professional, and it appears that everyone is using some sort of enhancement. As the tagline for the film states "if everyone is doing something, can it be illegal?"

He talks about how heartbroken he was when he learned Hulk Hogan was using steroids, despite all of the famous wrestler's encouragement to get bigger through hard work. He talks about former NFL player Lyle Alzado's sickness, which the NFL Player attributed to the use of steroids. Interestingly, the footage from an interview used in the film features Maria Shriver in her pre-Mrs. Ahnuld career. He talks about Stallone and interviews both Carl Lewis and Floyd Landis. These moments, interspersed with graphics, and other amusing methods of presenting the message, combined with the personal side of the story, make for compelling viewing.

There are also a few scenes from an old after school special featuring Ben Affleck dealing with the side effects of using steroids. These scenes provide a welcome moment of laughter because they are so over the top and heavy handed.

I think Chris may have actually found his entry into the limelight. I could easily see him parlaying this film into a television series or series of specials, ala Morgan Spurlock. They have similar personalities and Spurlock has made a number of films and season 3 of "30 Days", the series of documentaries he makes for FX is currently airing. Chris is an extremely pleasant, likable person who clearly listens to his subjects, whatever their position, taking everything in. As he presents both sides of the argument, he appears to be genuinely interested in what they have to say, waiting for them to finish and for his mind to process before forming an opinion of his own.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good in many ways but also rather saddening, January 22, 2010
By 
K. Swanson (Austin, TX United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Bigger, Stronger, Faster* (DVD)
3.8 stars

Chris Bell succeeds here when he keeps things personal. Describing his youthful worship of Ahnold and Sly, talking with his brothers about their steroid use, detailing the collapse of his dream of moving to Cali and becoming a champion lifter. But as the movie goes on, the increasingly obvious pro-steroid slant skews what seemed like objectivity to the point that by the end, one wonders which steroid manufacturers helped finance this film.

The nadir is the "Steroids 101" section, wherein Bell attempts to seem unbiased and present just the facts, ma'am. Yes, your testes shrink while using...but they grow back when you stop! Yes, women's reproductive systems change...but it...uh...it...umm, well they may not return to normal. But on to the next, positive point! It's moments like this, glossing over the many physiological negatives of artificially bombarding your body with many times its natural production of hormones, that ultimately derail this film.

Bell seems balanced for a while, then his weird, subtly expressed regret over not taking juice earlier in his career kicks in and he becomes a cheerleader for 'roids, interviewing only doctors who are on the fence, and ignoring the many who could show the other side. Any serious juicehead will tell you that to counteract the many side-effects of 'roids, a ton of other chemicals must be taken to protect the liver and various other body parts that go into crisis in the unnatural roided-up state. How can that be healthy?

But Bell seems content with the argument, expressed by many pro athletes here, that "everyone's doing them, so to compete, I must too". The deeper moral issues of that stance are avoided, and the movie even ends with Bell blaming the "American way of life" for causing steroid abuse, or use, or whatever it is. That's weak. No one made these guys want to look like the Hulk (they all admit that early on they wanted to look like comic book characters...seriously), but it's society's fault? At least man up and admit that cheating is cheating and lying is lying, even if the entire world is doing it. Little mention is made of the many champions who have not stuck needles in their body every day to win, by the way. That's a telling fact.

In spite of these issues, Bell and his family are very sympathetic, nice folks, and that's what makes this doc work. They seem like truly good people, and Bell is unflinching in his honesty about them. If only he'd been so even-handed with the negatives about 'roid use. Shrinking testes and uterine damage are not minor issues to be dismissed lightly. Instead, this is all seen as the price one must pay to play with the big boys.

The main problem for me with BSF is that it really does make 'roid use seem like it's ok for kids, despite weak warnings. Bell's brother teaches high school football and admits that he juices but always lies to his students and their parents about it, for their own good of course, not his; the movie then shows his players praising his great build and how it's "all-natural". I'd love to see a follow up doc about how they reacted to the truth, and his lies. It's that sort of backhanded semi-honesty that makes this film suspect. If it was truly ok to use 'roids, this sort of lying wouldn't be necessary. People are scared of 'roids for many reasons; the lying they engender seems like a good one.

I really liked Bell, and his intentions, and perhaps there are many positives about steroids. But he is just as guilty in his one-sided arguments as those who condemn 'roids are in theirs. And, unfortunately for Chris' side, the anti-roid folks do have the moral high ground. Yes, America is a win at all costs nation...but so what? We are meant to to hold ourselves accountable to a higher standard than the idiots who surround us, not as Americans, but as human beings.

There are some very fine scenes where Bell challenges specific people's views on steroids, such as the father whose son killed himself while on 'roids and antidepressants; the dad is unwilling to accept that the antidepressants may have been the problem (as they very often are; it is a sick crime and a pox on Big Pharma's heads that so many kids have killed themselves while on these meds, and that it's been so hushed up. Someone PLEASE make a doc about it!). That scene and a few others show Bell's truly good heart and gentle nature, and made me appreciate his efforts here even when I didn't agree with all of his ideas. The early scene with the guy living in his van waiting to be a star took balls to include, damning as it is to Bell's own dreams. Very nice, Chris. More documentarians should have your self-effacing attitude.

The extras have some moments of good humor, and bad weirdness, like the guy sucking horrible goop out of his biceps with busted needles. Why wasn't that in the movie? Probably because it's a little too close to the truths about steroid use, and the insanity that infects their users, that this movie does not want to address.

All told, this is worth watching, even if just to see how some really nice folks let themselves be swept up in a win at all costs mentality, and rationalize it all away. Which also sums up our recent financial debacles and so much else in this country, in fact. Maybe I'm just kidding myself...maybe it is all about winning. But if you have to lie to everyone around you to do it, while making your body grow in ways nature never intended, is it really worth it?
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12 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating look at steroids' effect on the lives of the Bell family, August 22, 2008
This review is from: Bigger, Stronger, Faster* (DVD)
Chris Bell's "Bigger, Stronger Faster*" is a brilliant documentary. His triumph is to crystallize the steroids debate into its effects on a single family: His own. The stars of the film are the Bell brothers - big brother Mark (aka, Mad Dog) is a would-be WWE wrestler; younger brother Mike (aka, Smelly) is one of the world's top power lifters; and writer/director Chris - no less addicted to perfecting his physique - balances his bodybuilding obsession with a degree from USC Film School. His unique blend of interest and career path has given us a fascinating film.

Here's the thing: his work is neither ardently pro- nor anti-steroids. But, as its subtitle ("the side-effects of being American") implies, Bell notes what happens when three young brothers obsessed with wrestling (we see family tapes of them re-enacting WWE plotlines) have the various heroes of their youth (Arnold Schwarzenegger, Hulk Hogan, and Sylvester Stallone as notable examples) subsequently revealed as pharmaceutically-fueled.

It's a testament to Bell's skill as a filmmaker that the unexpected standout is Smelly's wife, Andie. Attractive and articulate, she emerges as the soul of the film. She comes across as a decent, trusting person. Without belaboring the point, Bell makes you see her as testament to his brother's depth and inherent goodness. Her presence also evokes feelings of betrayal in the film-goer when Smelly begins to waffle on his "no more steroids" vow at the end of the film.

Despite the glut of documentaries that have flooded the film world over the past two years, this one ranks at the top of my list.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Where Have All the Heroes Gone?, October 4, 2008
This review is from: Bigger, Stronger, Faster* (DVD)
"That, that, that don't kill me, can only make me stronger." Kanye West-"Stronger"

`Bigger, Stronger, Faster' is fair, fun, and informative. Thoroughly taking every angle on the issue of steroid use, filmmaker Christopher Bell has ample material to back up his case for and against one of the most used and abused drugs going nowadays.

First he focuses on his own family. He is the middle child of three boys. Mike "Mad Dog" Bell is the eldest, and Mark "Smelly" Bell is the youngest. All three have aspirations of bigness. Literally. Mark wants to be a professional wrestler, and Mike wants to be a champion power-lifter. All three have used steroids. Chris, the narrator, only used it once, but stopped because he thought it was "immoral". This openness may have us questioning his credentials, but he is as thorough as he is fair.

Among his interviewees are John Romaro, senior editor of `Muscular Development,' Dr. Guy Wilder, New Jersey Congressman, Henry Waxman, Floyd Landis, Carl Lewis and Ben Johnson. His highlights include video clips from several steroid scandals, including the ones on Capital Hill featuring Jose Canseco, Mark McGuire, and Barry Bonds. We also get some footage of Senator Joe Biden's indignation as well as Senator Orin Hatch's impassioned pleas for deregulation of supplements.

To indicate the fairness and breadth of this documentary, Bell interviews an HIV survivor who testifies and shows convincing evidence that steroids have saved and improved his life. Another selling point is when he interviews Donald Hooton, father of his deceased son, Keller, who allegedly took his own life after withdrawing from steroids. Here they reveal that the boy was on prescription anti-depressants as well. On the con side, he interviews Gregory Valentino, who admits that steroid abuse have given him the largest, but most hideous biceps. He even interviews porn star, Christian Boeving, for Pete's sake.

One of the best features Bell presents is the straightforward "Steroids 101," which sorts out myth from fact well on the side effects of steroids.

Although he tries, as a filmmaker he isn't as smooth or funny as Morgan Spurlock or Andy Rooney, but his thrust is so exhaustive, yet honest, you can't help but admire his ability to present a case and let the people watching make up their own minds. Christopher Bell doesn't hide his misgivings about those whom he felt cheated to win, but it's rare that you get someone so upfront about his agenda, yet so willing to give everyone a chance to speak their minds.

A J.P.'s Pick 4*'s =Very Good
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10 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Documentary Perfection, July 2, 2008
By 
Clyda Bell (Westchester, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Bigger, Stronger, Faster* (DVD)
Clever, Funny, Touching!!! An absolute MUST see. A family touched by the use of steriods, a parent's perspective through tragedy and triumph. The good, the bad, the ugly and anything you can imagine in between. This movie is so objective it begs you to have your own opinion about the topic. Don't miss it, buy a copy for your local high school or library... Tons of acurate information that will benefit the masses!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars We Lack Contentment, July 20, 2010
By 
Mr. Mambo (Burnsville, MN USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Bigger, Stronger, Faster* (DVD)
Terrific movie, absolutely worth seeing.

I have been an Olympic-style lifter and bodybuilder for over forty years. Years ago, not happy with my progress, I tried Dianabol, but only for six weeks. Primarily because of genetics, I was never very good at the "iron sports". Too tall, too skinny. I can admit now that the primary reason I lifted was, like most guys, to get bigger and stronger, to impress girls, to make myself feel better about myself. But with me, it went beyond that: I felt inferior to other guys, on many levels. I wanted to be better than them, to be able to intimidate them, and if I couldn't do it with money or education, at least I could do it with my physique and my poundages. I may be wrong, but I believe that a psychologist might suggest that there is a significant amount of immaturity and desperation in such thinking.

I'm not saying that this is the case with every guy, but I'd say it's not far from the truth. A lot of us want to be able to say "I'm the biggest, baddest guy in this room". If we only lifted to improve ourselves physically, and were able to keep it in perspective, we wouldn't be using steroids, HGH, testosterone, etc.. Guys wouldn't sacrifice their families and their health just to get to a bodybuilding title or world record bench. Women would not end up looking like freakish gender anomalies. Years ago, they asked a group of world-class athletes the following question: If you knew (1) you could win an Olympic gold medal by taking steroids, would you do it? Vast majority said "yes". And then the key followup question: (2) If you knew that, as a result of taking the "juice", you'd be dead within five years of winning your medal, would you still do it? Again, vast majority said "yes". To me this epitomizes the egocentric and distorted thinking of many--not all--of the folks who do steroids. What about the rest of your life? What about your grandkids?

This is a must-see film for anyone who's ever felt the deep and heavy bite of the "iron bug". Chris Bell does a wonderful job, particularly in how he involves his family in the whole project. He and his brothers have, and are, hoisting some truly incredible poundages. If you can do a 500-lb. bench, you are way, way above what most gym rats could ever hope to do. But to be able to do 600....700....this is amazing. But in the whole scheme of things, is it worth it? What meaning does any athletic achievement, regardless of whether it's done with or without "help", really have? Does it do anyone any good, other than feed an individual ego?

I've personally known guys who have for years been on and off modest amounts of steroids, and their health seems fine. On the other hand, I've known lifters and wrestlers who went over the line with the drugs and are now dead, due to massive heart attacks.

As for myself, I will continue to lift for health, and I will not become obsessed with it, like I used to be. If I had continued with steroids, I believe that, with my personality, I would have taken too much. I thank God for that night, when I was in bed trying to sleep, so many years ago, when, in my second month of Dianabol, I noticed that my heart was pounding a mile a minute and it felt like it was going to explode. The next day, the headaches.....Bottom line: It scared the hell out of me, and I stopped forever.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Real Story of Steroids, January 21, 2009
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This review is from: Bigger, Stronger, Faster* (DVD)
This movie cuts through the common misconceptions of steroid use and shows the true effects and side-effects of the drug, the supplement industry, and the culture that surrounds it. The filmmaker does a great job of presenting the facts and leaving the conclusions up to the viewer. As such, you will see people that think that this is a pro-steroid movie because it debunks the various prevarications of the anti-steroid crowd; and you will see people that think this is an anti-steroid movie because its use is neither glorified nor advocated.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Even better than I expected!, October 8, 2008
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This review is from: Bigger, Stronger, Faster* (DVD)
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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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely brilliant, October 25, 2009
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This review is from: Bigger, Stronger, Faster* (DVD)
Like the title says. This is a great movie. It touches on what people think about what it means to be a man, what it means to be American, what it means to succeed, what is 'moral', what is cheating, and peripherally on the 'war on drugs'.
Three moments stand out for me:
Chris Bell's meeting with the father of a high school kid who was supposedly driven to commit suicide because of steroid use. Bell questions what else might have been going on in that kid's life. The father mentions that the family lives in a town where achievement is very important. We get to see the kid's room -- it is stuffed with sports trophies. (Maybe dad was pushing his kid too hard?) It turns out the kid was taking Lexapro -- which has been implicated in suicidal thinking. Dad wants to blame steroids, so he bats away all of Bell's questions. Meeting with that kid's father and diverging from the standard "steroids are evil" script took a lot of nerve, but it was done well and respectfully;
The second moment came with (then senator) Joe Biden's grandstanding against steroids in a Senate committee meeting. Biden says that the thought of athletes using anything but what God gave them to win at their sport offends him -- this from a guy who got hairplugs and dental veneers for a leg up in his game (coincidentally, Biden's the same idiot who pushed the RAVE Act, which made possessing a baby pacifier at a party illegal), and;
The third moment was Arnold Schwarzenegger's being named GHW Bush's chairman of the Presidential Council of Sports and Physical Fitness -- after the president signed the bill outlawing steroid use. Arnold never would have been 'Mr. Universe', or a movie star, or governor, had it not been for steroids.
And someone once said Americans don't do irony.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More than I expected, March 27, 2011
This review is from: Bigger, Stronger, Faster* (DVD)
This is more than a documentary on performance enhancing drugs. This is a look at America's desire to me number at everything and how it effected three brothers in their choices of whether to use drugs or not in order to bulk up.

This movie is very deep and emotional. The interviews with family are honest and real. You'll find yourself pulled emotionally listening to their mother say how God made us the way we are and that we should love ourselves the way we are.

Worth the time and the money to get this DVD.

Enjoy.

PS
The section on how easy it is to start a supplement business was downright scary. You never know what the heck is going into all of those supplements. The exposure of the Photoshopping of pictures was eye opening.
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Bigger, Stronger, Faster*
Bigger, Stronger, Faster* by Christopher Bell (DVD - 2008)
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