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Pumping Iron

1977

Action / Documentary / Sport

Plot summary


Uploaded by: OTTO

Top cast

Lou Ferrigno Photo
Lou Ferrigno as Himself
Bud Cort Photo
Bud Cort as Himself
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
701.26 MB
1280*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 26 min
P/S 1 / 4
1.24 GB
1920*1080
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 26 min
P/S 3 / 24

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by les69699 / 10

Milestone Film

Every now and then a film comes along that changes cinema or an aspect of it. In the way Enter the Dragon changed films, in that almost all film fight scenes now have martial arts in them. Pumping Iron changed the attitude of many towards muscles and muscle men. It is true to say that before Schwarzenegger came along, men with muscles in film were often portrayed as stupid or slow. Arnold showed in this film that he had tons of personality, his charisma was as big as his chest and he made Bodybuilding seem cool. Look at films made since Pumping Iron, the lead actor often has to have muscle. Stallone, Van damn etc all owe a lot to Schwarzenegger for their success. Pumping Iron itself is an interesting exploration into the strange world of competitive bodybuilding and it successfully shows the variety of characters that exist within the 'sport'. Since it was made bodybuilders are even bigger and certainly more muscular today than they were in Arnolds day. Truth is his build would not win today but at the time he was the best their was. There were more muscular men ( Franco is much more muscular )but he had the ability to show his body to the best advantage, hiding weaknesses and pushing his strong parts to the fore. Certain sides of bodybuilding are omitted ( drug taking, homosexuality ) but the film itself is very entertaining and crams a lot into a relatively short film.

I recommend the DVD edition that others have mentioned as you get a lot more from it.

Reviewed by classicsoncall7 / 10

"I don't have any weak points." - Arnold Schwarzenegger

I watched this film a number of times when it first came out, and not again for forty years until catching it last night. What a blast down memory lane. I was a follower of bodybuilding back in the Seventies so the names were all familiar to me when the documentary was released. It was fun seeing muscle men like Mike Katz, Ken Waller, Franco Columbu, Serge Nubret and Lou Ferrigno in the story, but the center stage guy was Austrian strong man Arnold Schwarzenegger. I still remembered his put downs to Ferrigno and his father, meant to both demoralize and psych out his main opponent for the upcoming (1975) Mr. Olympia contest. It's comical to watch, but as part of Ah-nold's strategy, it worked to have it's effect on the second place finisher.

One thing I noticed today that didn't get my attention back in the day, was how the crowds at the bodybuilding shows mixed out pretty closely to fifty-fifty, men and women. You wouldn't think so, figuring most followers of the sport would be similar minded muscle heads (like myself),mostly men. I haven't followed the sport for almost as many years now as this film exists, but to my mind, there was one bodybuilder who might have been slightly better than Arnie in one of the early Olympia contests. That being Sergio Oliva, but he wasn't in this film.

I happened to catch Lou Ferrigno at a Chicago Comic-Con quite a few years ago, well after his heyday as a bodybuilder and star of the late Seventies/early Eighties TV series, "The Incredible Hulk". 'Louie' was signing autographs and trading stories with fans, still in great shape, and to my mind, with a build that looked a lot like the character he portrayed. It's good to see both Arnold and Lou still going strong today.

Reviewed by SnoopyStyle7 / 10

Arnooold

It's 1975 before bodybuilding competitions in Pretoria, South Africa. Arnold Schwarzenegger is the multiple Mr. Olympia champion and favorite. He's from Austria and embraces the free wheeling American lifestyle. While he works out of Gold's Gym in Venice Beach, another competitor Lou Ferrigno is a rookie from Brooklyn who suffered from hard of hearing. Other bodybuilders are also highlighted in this unique competition.

It's a nice insightful doc into a small slice of the world. Of course, everybody watches this for Arnold today. Our view of him is colored by his future. It is fascinating to see him unscripted. He is a competitive magnetic man with an inquisitive mind. His competitive nature is the most compelling part and explains so much about his life. The bodybuilding world is almost secondary looking back at it. It's an interesting slice of the world unknown at the time but today, it's an insight in one of the world's most fascinating personality.

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