IMDb RATING
6.4/10
3.2K
YOUR RATING
The inspirational tale of the grandfathers of fitness as we now know it, Joe and Ben Weider. Facing anti-Semitism and extreme poverty, the brothers beat all odds to build an empire and inspi... Read allThe inspirational tale of the grandfathers of fitness as we now know it, Joe and Ben Weider. Facing anti-Semitism and extreme poverty, the brothers beat all odds to build an empire and inspire future generations.The inspirational tale of the grandfathers of fitness as we now know it, Joe and Ben Weider. Facing anti-Semitism and extreme poverty, the brothers beat all odds to build an empire and inspire future generations.
Featured reviews
So, I think the totality of the user reviews here suffer from two things, one, sampling bias, and two, biased judgment about the subject matter. Sampling bias I'm referring to the fact that the few people (in the world) who watch this and able to write a review are from the bodybuilding community, who knows a thing or two about the actual history, so they are not necessarily the best "movie reviewers" and probably think too much about how it matches real history, biased judgment goes to the reviewers who has some negative opinion about bodybuilding in general. In any case, if you forget all that, this movie is actually a well paced, fun and moving film to watch in its own right.
For sure, one may ask "What's the higher cultural and social significance here?" Answer is maybe not much, but, the writers know that, and they have done a good job dramatizing the series of mini/focal conflicts and struggles, so each one of them is fun to watch as they occur. Overall it's a linear and straight to the point "documentary" of probably made-up series of failures and successes, and the character background (mother wanted a girl, mother against weight lifting, being a jew, weak) are not beefy enough, it managed to capture attention and when Joe struggled to show emotion in front of Betty, it worked.
Overall, the acting and constructing of a character who's almost possessed and highly focused on one strange thing stands on its own and makes the character fun to watch, the acting is pretty good too.
One last point I want to make is "so what it is about boasting the success of the Weider empire?" aren't all biopic success stories about boasting the protagonist? Watch it as a motivation story.
I just saw this movie on opening day at the only theatre in the Bay Area that was showing it (in San Francisco).
This movie is excellent. Well paced, excellent editing; it tells the story of the Weider brothers as they lay the groundwork for what would become the fitness industry.
Anyone who grew up idolizing Arnold or any of the other body builders will love this too. The actor who plays Arnold is phenomenal - he looks, sounds, and acts like him.
My only complaint is the movie wasn't long enough. It ended a bit abruptly. But this movie is a solid 7.5 - 8 in my book. Engaging throughout, great acting, choreography, etc. I hope it gets the praise it deserves.
This movie is excellent. Well paced, excellent editing; it tells the story of the Weider brothers as they lay the groundwork for what would become the fitness industry.
Anyone who grew up idolizing Arnold or any of the other body builders will love this too. The actor who plays Arnold is phenomenal - he looks, sounds, and acts like him.
My only complaint is the movie wasn't long enough. It ended a bit abruptly. But this movie is a solid 7.5 - 8 in my book. Engaging throughout, great acting, choreography, etc. I hope it gets the praise it deserves.
Now I know about the sport of bodybuilding as I have trained in gyms in and off since the eighties and used to buy the Weider magazines.
So I was looking forward to this film to see old time bodybuilders. The film had a few in there but nothing as I thought there would be.
So the film itself was good but nothing special, I felt it played it safe, nothing controversial in it. I was waiting for a strong punchline, something that would say it was in the Raging Bull side of movies not Driving Miss Daisy side of films, it sided with the latter.
So I enjoyed but left disappointed with it.
Overall a good film but nothing special with it.
So I was looking forward to this film to see old time bodybuilders. The film had a few in there but nothing as I thought there would be.
So the film itself was good but nothing special, I felt it played it safe, nothing controversial in it. I was waiting for a strong punchline, something that would say it was in the Raging Bull side of movies not Driving Miss Daisy side of films, it sided with the latter.
So I enjoyed but left disappointed with it.
Overall a good film but nothing special with it.
Film biography about a pioneer of strength training is definitely worth seeing.
Montreal-born Joe Weider (1919-2013) became a pioneer of the bodybuilding movement through specialist magazines such as "Muscle & Fitness", which also included early bodybuilders such as Steve Reeves (portrayed in the film by Jared Motyl) and Reg Park ( Billy Reilich) could become film stars in Italian sword and sandal films. With the invention of the Mr. Olympia competition, which a certain Arnold Schwarzenegger (Calum Von Moger) from Austria won several times, Weider increased his popularity and the marketing of bodybuilding even further.
Tyler Hoechlin (The Domestics) and Julianne Hough are convincing in the leading roles as the Weider couple.
Montreal-born Joe Weider (1919-2013) became a pioneer of the bodybuilding movement through specialist magazines such as "Muscle & Fitness", which also included early bodybuilders such as Steve Reeves (portrayed in the film by Jared Motyl) and Reg Park ( Billy Reilich) could become film stars in Italian sword and sandal films. With the invention of the Mr. Olympia competition, which a certain Arnold Schwarzenegger (Calum Von Moger) from Austria won several times, Weider increased his popularity and the marketing of bodybuilding even further.
Tyler Hoechlin (The Domestics) and Julianne Hough are convincing in the leading roles as the Weider couple.
BIGGER is essentially the video biography of the grandfather of bodybuilding/nutrition, Joe Weider.
Perhaps best known for his weights (WEIDER across a set of plates or barbells at your local gym), Joe and his brother Ben arguably brought bodybuilding and the need for balanced nutrition to the forefront of western culture, some 60 years ago. The billion dollar market that exists today, is based on the template that Weider created with his magazines, equipment, pro competitions and the creation of the IFBB.
The film portrayal is loyal to his life, vision and clearly conveys the passion Joe obviously felt from a very young age without any outside influence in being drawn to the sport of bodybuilding (before he had it recognized as a sport).
To me, the firl was very entertaining beginning to end; some of the acting was a little wooden at times and downright awful at others (Calum Von Moger, looking at you) but it can be forgiven for these moments, since the goal of showing Arnold in his prime at a competition were achieved/believable, which obviously outweighed the requirement to have him be a good actor to boot. With that said, I really hope Calum pursues acting (after some good lessons) because it would be a lot of fun to see him throw people around in roles like Arnie used to do, coupled with memorable one-liners ( "Crush ya' enemies, see dem driven befo' you...")
All in all, a great movie which I recommend checking out. Solid 3.5 out of 5 stars.
Perhaps best known for his weights (WEIDER across a set of plates or barbells at your local gym), Joe and his brother Ben arguably brought bodybuilding and the need for balanced nutrition to the forefront of western culture, some 60 years ago. The billion dollar market that exists today, is based on the template that Weider created with his magazines, equipment, pro competitions and the creation of the IFBB.
The film portrayal is loyal to his life, vision and clearly conveys the passion Joe obviously felt from a very young age without any outside influence in being drawn to the sport of bodybuilding (before he had it recognized as a sport).
To me, the firl was very entertaining beginning to end; some of the acting was a little wooden at times and downright awful at others (Calum Von Moger, looking at you) but it can be forgiven for these moments, since the goal of showing Arnold in his prime at a competition were achieved/believable, which obviously outweighed the requirement to have him be a good actor to boot. With that said, I really hope Calum pursues acting (after some good lessons) because it would be a lot of fun to see him throw people around in roles like Arnie used to do, coupled with memorable one-liners ( "Crush ya' enemies, see dem driven befo' you...")
All in all, a great movie which I recommend checking out. Solid 3.5 out of 5 stars.
Did you know
- TriviaBill Hauk is not a real person but a composite character representing the variety of adversaries Weider faced in building his fitness empire.
- GoofsStock footage of Times Square cites the year as 1970. But a theatre marquee shows "The Possession of Joel Delaney" playing -- it was released in 1972.
- Quotes
Joe Weider: What you do not realize is all these men want is to compete against the very best.
- SoundtracksBaby Count Ten (The Waiting Song)
Written by Cynthia Strother and Raymond Keith Saar
Performed by The Bell Sisters
- How long is Bigger?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $46,382
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $31,477
- Oct 14, 2018
- Gross worldwide
- $49,997
- Runtime
- 1h 47m(107 min)
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content