IMDb RATING
7.3/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
DOUBLE DARE is a double-barreled, action-packed documentary about the struggles of two stuntwomen in male-dominated Tinseltown to stay working, stay thin, and stay sane.DOUBLE DARE is a double-barreled, action-packed documentary about the struggles of two stuntwomen in male-dominated Tinseltown to stay working, stay thin, and stay sane.DOUBLE DARE is a double-barreled, action-packed documentary about the struggles of two stuntwomen in male-dominated Tinseltown to stay working, stay thin, and stay sane.
- Awards
- 7 wins & 1 nomination total
Deborah Abbott
- Self
- (uncredited)
Kimberly Amato
- Self
- (uncredited)
Alec Baldwin
- Self
- (uncredited)
Gary Busey
- Self
- (uncredited)
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Featured reviews
10BECKY-67
fun and surprising movie
The storyline of the two stunt women in Double Dare was compelling and fun. It was well paced: up, down, sideways and all with outrageous stunts going on as a side dish. The main course here is seeing two people trying to break in, and stay in this brutal business.
Tough broads......
This is a pretty cool and interesting documentary if you understand the subject matter going into it.
The movie primarily takes a look at two Holllwood stunt woman: Jeannie Epper, who doubled for Lynda Carter during the Wonder Woman series run, has been working in the business for approx 30yrs and comes from a whole family of professional stunt men and women; and Zoe Bell, a New Zealand native & young up and comer who doubled for Xena during that shows six seasons who is now looking to make her mark here in L.A./Hollywood.
We get the background of each woman, a look at the difficulties that women face in the business, a lot of celebrity interviews, and some additional celebrity cameos that the filmmakers shot while making the film.
What I particularly enjoyed was the immediate bond between Epper and Bell. Epper seems to take Bell under her wing rather quickly by helping with valuable training and allowing her to stay at her home while she struggles to get work and make her own name in the stunt woman profession. It's a nice inside look that goes to show not everyone in "the business" is just out for themselves. Epper comes across with genuine eagerness, kindness, and integrity as she guides Bell through the Hollywood machine.
If the plot line so far interests you, or your a fan of shows like Wonder Woman and Xena, then this documentary should not disappoint.
Recommended.
The movie primarily takes a look at two Holllwood stunt woman: Jeannie Epper, who doubled for Lynda Carter during the Wonder Woman series run, has been working in the business for approx 30yrs and comes from a whole family of professional stunt men and women; and Zoe Bell, a New Zealand native & young up and comer who doubled for Xena during that shows six seasons who is now looking to make her mark here in L.A./Hollywood.
We get the background of each woman, a look at the difficulties that women face in the business, a lot of celebrity interviews, and some additional celebrity cameos that the filmmakers shot while making the film.
What I particularly enjoyed was the immediate bond between Epper and Bell. Epper seems to take Bell under her wing rather quickly by helping with valuable training and allowing her to stay at her home while she struggles to get work and make her own name in the stunt woman profession. It's a nice inside look that goes to show not everyone in "the business" is just out for themselves. Epper comes across with genuine eagerness, kindness, and integrity as she guides Bell through the Hollywood machine.
If the plot line so far interests you, or your a fan of shows like Wonder Woman and Xena, then this documentary should not disappoint.
Recommended.
A GREAT Documentary for film fanatics and fans of entertainment
Don't let the current score on this wonderful documentary scare you off. As the last commenter said I think someone who was a bit vindictive must have run amok. Read the positive comments posted here and see that everyone who has seen this movie loved it. Double Dare is a great film that focuses on two women, one on her way up, Zoe Bell, and one refusing to go down, Jeannie Epper. Die hard Xena fans will know Zoe from her stunt work AS Xena the Warrior Princess. One of my favorite lines in the film is when Zoe calls Lucy Lawless her Acting Double. And comic fans and children of the 70's might not remember her but Jeannie Epper definitely made an impression on them as she kicked but for Linda Carter as Wonder Woman.
You will fall in love with both these women as they share their struggles, their ups, and their downs. You will see Zoe come to grips with leaving her family behind as Xena ends and she looks to continue her career in Hollywood. While Jeannie struggles to keep working, anyway she can.
In a profession where respect for women is so hard to come by you will see how they earn it and fight to keep it. If you are a fan of film making, a fan of the human spirit, or just a fan of women who kick ass, then this is a film that you will not want to miss.
You will fall in love with both these women as they share their struggles, their ups, and their downs. You will see Zoe come to grips with leaving her family behind as Xena ends and she looks to continue her career in Hollywood. While Jeannie struggles to keep working, anyway she can.
In a profession where respect for women is so hard to come by you will see how they earn it and fight to keep it. If you are a fan of film making, a fan of the human spirit, or just a fan of women who kick ass, then this is a film that you will not want to miss.
10sigridg
Loved This Film
DOUBLE DARE chronicles the ultimately intersecting lives of two stunt women, a graceful, aging veteran and an ingénue-like up and comer. Somehow, in a reasonable chunk of time, the filmmaker tackles the unveiling of two distinct personalities and histories. She then recontextualizes them within the two distinct eras that produced them.
The older one faced challenges as a woman in a male dominated field that the younger one will probably never encounter. Yet neither the characters nor the filmmaker take the "Look at the injustice" route on this issue. The piece ends up being a solid character study with the gender politics circling cheerfully on the perimeter. The characters are aggressively likeable, and the filmmaker reveals a world that audiences rarely if ever get to see. Documentary is 90% editing, and lucky for us, because the editing is phenomenal. I can't wait to see what this filmmaker chooses to tackle next. Excellent work.
The older one faced challenges as a woman in a male dominated field that the younger one will probably never encounter. Yet neither the characters nor the filmmaker take the "Look at the injustice" route on this issue. The piece ends up being a solid character study with the gender politics circling cheerfully on the perimeter. The characters are aggressively likeable, and the filmmaker reveals a world that audiences rarely if ever get to see. Documentary is 90% editing, and lucky for us, because the editing is phenomenal. I can't wait to see what this filmmaker chooses to tackle next. Excellent work.
Cunning stunts!
I attended a press screening of 'Double Dare', so I got to meet this film's director and editor as well as the documentary's main subjects -- Jeannie Epper and Zoë Bell -- and to participate in Q&A. I sceptically asked if any of this material was staged: specifically, the sequence in which the documentary camera crew just happen to be present (with camera rolling) when Zoë Bell gets the 'phone call informing her that she's been hired to stunt-double for Uma Thurman in 'Kill Bill', and the stunt coordinator's voice down the 'phone line sounds perfectly clear. Director Amanda Micheli assured me that this scene was dinkum, saying: 'I staked her out for ten days, with a 'phone tap, until she got that call.' Then Micheli admitted that *one* thing in this movie was faked: Bell had got a haircut while this documentary was in production, so in some of the documentary footage (shown out of chronological sequence), she wears a wig so that the shots will match.
The title of 'Double Dare' is a pun: these women *double* for actresses in stunt sequences. My only complaint about this very moving documentary is that it tells us nearly nothing about the *history* of stunt women. We see a brief clip of Pearl White doing her own stunts in a silent serial. (Helen Gibson would have been a better choice for inclusion here: she did her own stunts in 'The Hazards of Helen', and also stunt-doubled for Helen Holmes.) There was a long period in which Hollywood actresses were always doubled by males, usually small-statured men such as Dave Sharpe. All we get about that here is a rostrum shot of TV actress Irene Ryan in costume and make-up with her (very unconvincing) male double. I wish that Micheli had included film clips such as the fight between Edna May Oliver and Blanche Yurka in 'Tale of Two Cities' (both of them blatantly doubled by brawny men in 18th-century frocks and poke bonnets), or Betty Hutton's leap off a bridge into a moving jeep in 'Star Spangled Rhythm' (doubled by a stuntman in a wig and skirt that don't conceal his linebacker physique).
The opening sequence of 'Double Dare' shows a stunt woman preparing for a fire stunt, in full body harness: ironically, the burning woman whizzes by so rapidly, she could just as well have been a dummy. Every scene in 'Double Dare' is fascinating, but the real eye-opener is a conference between male and female stunters (they have different trade guilds), in which the stunt men make it clear that they don't respect stunt women as equals. Some of this is down to the fact that men tend to get much more dangerous stunt work than women, yet some of the hostility towards these women is just macho arrogance. The female stunters expect equality and respect (fair enough), yet in this footage they refer to each other as 'girls'.
Jeannie Epper, ageing gracefully from stunt woman to stunt coordinator, points out that a stuntman can wear padding under his costume, but stunt women are usually dressed in skimpy outfits with no such option ... and stunt women must often run in heels! Having briefly done stunt work myself, I can testify that stunt men have one disadvantage that women don't: when doing a long rolling fall downstairs as a double for a male actor, I had to keep track of when my face was towards the camera, and I periodically had to raise my arm (while falling) to conceal my face, which didn't resemble the actor's face. Stunt women, using make-up and long wigs, can hide their faces more easily than stunt men.
Speaking of padding, in one sequence of 'Double Dare' we see stunt women squealing in girlish glee as they try on the falsies they'll need for body-doubling a busty actress. We see Jeannie Epper (a grandmother, but still a working stunt woman!) pricing the plastic surgery she'll need if she hopes to carry on doubling for young actresses. And there's one bizarre sequence, in which a stunt woman proudly shows off her new breast implants to her colleagues ... who admire her new breasts while ignoring her enormous facial mole.
I'm often sceptical when showbiz people trot out their 'spiritual' beliefs, but I was intrigued when Epper and Bell separately discussed their deep belief in Jesus. Epper asserts that God is protecting her. Stunt people, whether male or female, *must* trust the stunt riggers and support crew, placing their own safety entirely in these people's hands. It had never occurred to me that this situation parallels the sincere faith that some people place in a deity.
Amanda Micheli's direction and camera work are excellent, most notably in a sequence where Bell practises dives from a high ladder into an air bag: Micheli and her camera are *above* Bell on this lofty perch. If you've got vertigo, you might want to skip this scene.
We get sound bites from Lynda Carter (for whom Epper doubled) and from Lucy Lawless, for whom Bell doubled ... although Bell wittily notes: 'She's my acting double.' Even the end credits are fascinating. During the documentary, we meet Jeannie Epper's daughter Eurlyne, who followed her mother into stunt work but now has an injury that may end her career. As the film ends, Zoë Bell is riding high as Thurman's stunt double. Then the end credits tell us the aftermath: Eurlyne Epper has recovered and is stunting again ... but Bell injured herself during 'Kill Bill' and will require surgery. (Yet she'd recovered in time for the screening I attended. You go, Zoë!)
I found every frame of 'Double Dare' fascinating ... and there are even a few scenes that convey a girls'-locker-room camaraderie, without ever diminishing the dignity of these craftswomen. The stunt women are rigged, but my vote isn't: I rate this movie 10 out of 10.
The title of 'Double Dare' is a pun: these women *double* for actresses in stunt sequences. My only complaint about this very moving documentary is that it tells us nearly nothing about the *history* of stunt women. We see a brief clip of Pearl White doing her own stunts in a silent serial. (Helen Gibson would have been a better choice for inclusion here: she did her own stunts in 'The Hazards of Helen', and also stunt-doubled for Helen Holmes.) There was a long period in which Hollywood actresses were always doubled by males, usually small-statured men such as Dave Sharpe. All we get about that here is a rostrum shot of TV actress Irene Ryan in costume and make-up with her (very unconvincing) male double. I wish that Micheli had included film clips such as the fight between Edna May Oliver and Blanche Yurka in 'Tale of Two Cities' (both of them blatantly doubled by brawny men in 18th-century frocks and poke bonnets), or Betty Hutton's leap off a bridge into a moving jeep in 'Star Spangled Rhythm' (doubled by a stuntman in a wig and skirt that don't conceal his linebacker physique).
The opening sequence of 'Double Dare' shows a stunt woman preparing for a fire stunt, in full body harness: ironically, the burning woman whizzes by so rapidly, she could just as well have been a dummy. Every scene in 'Double Dare' is fascinating, but the real eye-opener is a conference between male and female stunters (they have different trade guilds), in which the stunt men make it clear that they don't respect stunt women as equals. Some of this is down to the fact that men tend to get much more dangerous stunt work than women, yet some of the hostility towards these women is just macho arrogance. The female stunters expect equality and respect (fair enough), yet in this footage they refer to each other as 'girls'.
Jeannie Epper, ageing gracefully from stunt woman to stunt coordinator, points out that a stuntman can wear padding under his costume, but stunt women are usually dressed in skimpy outfits with no such option ... and stunt women must often run in heels! Having briefly done stunt work myself, I can testify that stunt men have one disadvantage that women don't: when doing a long rolling fall downstairs as a double for a male actor, I had to keep track of when my face was towards the camera, and I periodically had to raise my arm (while falling) to conceal my face, which didn't resemble the actor's face. Stunt women, using make-up and long wigs, can hide their faces more easily than stunt men.
Speaking of padding, in one sequence of 'Double Dare' we see stunt women squealing in girlish glee as they try on the falsies they'll need for body-doubling a busty actress. We see Jeannie Epper (a grandmother, but still a working stunt woman!) pricing the plastic surgery she'll need if she hopes to carry on doubling for young actresses. And there's one bizarre sequence, in which a stunt woman proudly shows off her new breast implants to her colleagues ... who admire her new breasts while ignoring her enormous facial mole.
I'm often sceptical when showbiz people trot out their 'spiritual' beliefs, but I was intrigued when Epper and Bell separately discussed their deep belief in Jesus. Epper asserts that God is protecting her. Stunt people, whether male or female, *must* trust the stunt riggers and support crew, placing their own safety entirely in these people's hands. It had never occurred to me that this situation parallels the sincere faith that some people place in a deity.
Amanda Micheli's direction and camera work are excellent, most notably in a sequence where Bell practises dives from a high ladder into an air bag: Micheli and her camera are *above* Bell on this lofty perch. If you've got vertigo, you might want to skip this scene.
We get sound bites from Lynda Carter (for whom Epper doubled) and from Lucy Lawless, for whom Bell doubled ... although Bell wittily notes: 'She's my acting double.' Even the end credits are fascinating. During the documentary, we meet Jeannie Epper's daughter Eurlyne, who followed her mother into stunt work but now has an injury that may end her career. As the film ends, Zoë Bell is riding high as Thurman's stunt double. Then the end credits tell us the aftermath: Eurlyne Epper has recovered and is stunting again ... but Bell injured herself during 'Kill Bill' and will require surgery. (Yet she'd recovered in time for the screening I attended. You go, Zoë!)
I found every frame of 'Double Dare' fascinating ... and there are even a few scenes that convey a girls'-locker-room camaraderie, without ever diminishing the dignity of these craftswomen. The stunt women are rigged, but my vote isn't: I rate this movie 10 out of 10.
Did you know
- Crazy credits"Only one stuntwoman was harmed during the making of this film"
- Alternate versionsRenee o'connor interview Scene deleted
- ConnectionsFeatures Foxy Brown (1974)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Двойная дерзость
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $50,000
- Runtime
- 1h 21m(81 min)
- Color
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