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Beefcake (1999)
Released By: Strand Releasing   Rating: N/A   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: Strand Releasing
Genre: Drama
MPAA Rating: N/A
Director: Thom Fitzgerald
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Daniel MacIvor, Joshua Peace
Published ID: 773646
UPC: 712267990825,
Plot: This portrait of the man who brought nude male flesh into the American mainstream combines present-day interviews, archival footage, and semi-fictionalized dramatization into a cinematic hybrid. Photographer and filmmaker Bob Mizer (Daniel MacIvor) founded the Athletic Model Guild, or AMG, in Los Angeles in 1945, hoping to turn his fascination with the male physique into a successful business that used nude and semi-nude photographs to sell the services of models to painters and the like. When the photos themselves proved more lucrative than the non-existent modeling contracts, Mizer launched {~Physique Pictorial}. The magazine ostensibly offered bodybuilding tips and moral guidance to young men the world over, but in reality its clientèle included legions of gay men eager for eye candy. With the help of his mother and business partner, Delilah (Carroll Godsman), Mizer parlayed his magazine, short films, and other work into a palatial residence/studio where young men fresh off the bus from Nowheresville could frolic, crash, and earn a little cash in front of the camera (or on the casting couch). Occasional run-ins with the law and stints in prison couldn't deter Mizer from continuing his photography until his death in the early '90s. His models, contemporaries, and associates included bodybuilding proponent Jack LaLane and future Warhol superstar Joe Dallesandro, who are among the many men interviewed by filmmaker Thom Fitzgerald. The writer/director/producer intersperses his dramatic and documentary sequences with plenty of actual AMG and {~Physique Pictorial} images. The film's narrative arc, however, focuses on the fictionalized character of novice model Neil E. O'Hara (Joshua Peace), who serves as a stand-in for the audience as he acclimates himself to Mizer's campy, flesh-filled compound and witnesses the photographer's betrayal by another model, Red (Jack Griffin Mazeika). Beefcake was inspired by F. Valentine Hooven III's book {-Beefcake: The Muscle Magazines of America, 1950-1970}. The scenes of Mizer's trial for pandering were based on transcripts of the real-life Red's courtroom testimony. The character name Neil E. O'Hara, of course, is a joking reference to Neely O'Hara, the ingénue character from Valley of the Dolls. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Beefcake, the movie
Added 11/16/2008

How did I miss this movie when it came out? I happened upon it in Amazon, and since the price was right, I thought I'd take a chance on it. It is part documentary/part recreation of the career of Bob Mizer who created and published Physique Pictorial in the 1950's and 1960's. The movie is very funny and not at all insulting to its subject. Since I was not there I cannot say how accurate it is, and the ex-models they interview are clearly trying to gloss over their shady pasts, but as far as I can tell it gives a lot of insight into a world once scandalous, and now old fashioned and unnecessary. It kind of makes you nostalgic for the old days. If you are interested in the subject or the way things were before the sexual revolution, it will not disappoint you.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Excitement from the magazine section at the supermarket
Added 1/7/2008

This is a great documentary slash story. All of us who've browsed the muscle mags at the supermarket with embarrassed discretion when the grocery moms wheelled down the aisle now know we were not alone. Fabulously presented.
1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Editorial Masterpiece
Added 10/7/2007

Outstanding. Superior dramatization of the life and works of Bob Mizer. There are not enough accolades to describe this extraordinary look back at the fifties/early sixties. Particularly noteworthy is the actual glimpse of film footage of Dick Dubouis - one of his most incredible models. Surprisingly enough, there are no actual film flashbacks of Ed Fury and Bud Counts who also were some of his more featured models. It is extremely hard to believe that Mr. Mizer did not take advantage of all those opportunities with the many models available on his property 24/7 and only had an encounter with the single model. As illuded to in the film, many models where in need of additional cash. It would probably be factual to believe that higher prices were offered for more revealing shots. In addition, it is curious that other photographers such as Douglas of Detroit, Pat Milo and others of the same era featured many more full frontal shots of their model where as Mizer seemed to favor posing straps. Again, extremely hard to believe that there are not similar photographs available by him. From a collector of vintage beefcake prespective you become aware of this fact as you view other books by various other photographers. Any collector who possesses Mizer frontal photographs is sitting on a gold mine - this treasure trove is out there somewhere and should be shared. Should a collection be gathered and produced for publication it would be impossible to keep in stock due to the enormous demand. This is a must have DVD for any collector of vintage athletic models. Spectacular. A true find!
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Say Cheesy
Added 12/16/2006

"BEEFCAKE"

Say Cheese

Amos Lassen and Cinema Pride

Thom Fitzgerald, the director of "The Hanging Garden" and "3 Needles" gives us "Beefcake" which could have been a wonderful movie but falls short of the mark. The movie is supposed to tell us about "beefcake" magazines, male physique publications of the 1950s, long before the widespread advent of porn. The movie focuses on Bob Mixer who was one of the most known photographers of the male form. Mixer was largely responsible for much of the oiled body, posing strap photography that gay men ate up (because they had nothing else). Now we look at the genre and laugh. Mixer ran the Athletic Model Guild which was a Hollywood agency for body builders until people with high and mighty consciousness and censorious minds shut it down because they believed it was a front for male prostitution. What Fitzgerald set out to do was t give us a comedy about Mixer and the men that posed but what he gave us is a stew in which he integrated documentary footage with live interviews and it is a mess (but an enjoyable mess). The best parts of the movie are the interviews and the theatricals of the story line falls short in comparison.
Fitzgerald's portrayal of Mixer is as a nerdy example of manhood. He constantly rants and raves about the necessity of his models being clean-cut and asexual, boys next door type yet buff and oiled (?????????). On the documentary side those interviewed are introduced as if they are contestants on a TV quiz show and I think that what was meant to be serious is taken as a joke. The models in the movie come nowhere near the original real thing with the exception of the strikingly beautiful ex-Warhol star, Joe Dallesandro who rises above the muck to be the star of the film.
"Beefcake" is a slick attempt at being slick. What results is 90 minutes of campy humor and lines that were not meant to be funny manage to get guffaws. I think the main fault with the picture is that it just doesn't know what it is supposed to be--a biopic? a mockumentary? a comedy? or a drama? The subject of the film, man's physique magazines, could have been a great framework with which to present a really good movie falls flat on every thing it tries to do. The fact that Mixer was in the closet could have made a great subplot. I have read that after filming began, the director changed its direction and this is what probably caused the disaster that resulted. Yet there is a message here and it concerns bigotry and shows how society suppresses what it doesn't understand. Thus is the reality of life and it went on in the fifties and is still going on today. Fitzgerald could have played that aspect up but he chose not to moralize. Instead he relied on his imagination to make this movie and some of it just did not work. With its faults there is a lot of energy in "Beefcake" and as bad as it was, I had fun watching it.

1 out of 5 people found this helpful.
Fun look at a forgotten time in gay America
Added 10/14/2006

Beefcake is a bright fun movie, that looks at the beginings of the modern
gay porn era.
The movie focuses on Bob Mizer and his Athletic Model Guild Studio.
Started at first as a modeling agency for male physique models.
The enterprizing Mizer soon discover that his photos of the handsome semi-nude men were more in demand than the models themselves!
Thus began an industry based the (gay) erotisim of physical male beauty.
You might say that Mizer is the father of the modern gay male magazine. and that Physique Pictorial (his magazine) is the precusor of such modern 'zines as Unzipped, XY, DNA, Blue, Advocate Men (and its various off-shoots)and many others.
The movie begins in a courtroom with Mizer on trial on charges of disseminating obscene material through the US mail. As well as charges that his bussiness was engaged in male prostition as well. (While convicted of the former. He is aquited of the latter.)
The rest of the film is played out through the eyes of a young man named Neil O'Hara (ie.Neely O'Hara from Valley of The Dolls) who becomes one of Mizer's models.
He is there at the begining of AMG. And is there as Mizer and his
studio begins its slide downward from tasteful male nude photogaphy, to distateful lewd pictures,(ie full-frontal nudity).
Beefcake is not to be taken as a serious documentry or bio on Bob Mizer.
For that, read the book on which the movie is taken from "Beefcake" by Valintine F. Hooven.
It is a humorous look at how the modern gay male magazine began.





2 out of 3 people found this helpful.
Beefcake, the movie
Added 11/16/2008

How did I miss this movie when it came out? I happened upon it in Amazon, and since the price was right, I thought I'd take a chance on it. It is part documentary/part recreation of the career of Bob Mizer who created and published Physique Pictorial in the 1950's and 1960's. The movie is very funny and not at all insulting to its subject. Since I was not there I cannot say how accurate it is, and the ex-models they interview are clearly trying to gloss over their shady pasts, but as far as I can tell it gives a lot of insight into a world once scandalous, and now old fashioned and unnecessary. It kind of makes you nostalgic for the old days. If you are interested in the subject or the way things were before the sexual revolution, it will not disappoint you.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Excitement from the magazine section at the supermarket
Added 1/7/2008

This is a great documentary slash story. All of us who've browsed the muscle mags at the supermarket with embarrassed discretion when the grocery moms wheelled down the aisle now know we were not alone. Fabulously presented.
1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Editorial Masterpiece
Added 10/7/2007

Outstanding. Superior dramatization of the life and works of Bob Mizer. There are not enough accolades to describe this extraordinary look back at the fifties/early sixties. Particularly noteworthy is the actual glimpse of film footage of Dick Dubouis - one of his most incredible models. Surprisingly enough, there are no actual film flashbacks of Ed Fury and Bud Counts who also were some of his more featured models. It is extremely hard to believe that Mr. Mizer did not take advantage of all those opportunities with the many models available on his property 24/7 and only had an encounter with the single model. As illuded to in the film, many models where in need of additional cash. It would probably be factual to believe that higher prices were offered for more revealing shots. In addition, it is curious that other photographers such as Douglas of Detroit, Pat Milo and others of the same era featured many more full frontal shots of their model where as Mizer seemed to favor posing straps. Again, extremely hard to believe that there are not similar photographs available by him. From a collector of vintage beefcake prespective you become aware of this fact as you view other books by various other photographers. Any collector who possesses Mizer frontal photographs is sitting on a gold mine - this treasure trove is out there somewhere and should be shared. Should a collection be gathered and produced for publication it would be impossible to keep in stock due to the enormous demand. This is a must have DVD for any collector of vintage athletic models. Spectacular. A true find!
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
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