Unfortunately Blaustein isn't an experienced enough film-maker to make much of such material.
Beyond the Mat (1999)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:65
Fresh:53
Rotten:12
Average Rating:6.7/10
Consensus: Even if you aren’t a fan, Beyond the Mat provides a riveting, perceptive look into the world of professional wrestling by taking a closer look at the people beneath the personas.
Runtime: 2 hrs 24 mins
Genre: Musical & Performing Arts
Synopsis: Filmmaker Barry W. Blaustein takes a look at the professional wrestling game at every level, from the hopeful, perhaps deluded beginners who spend their money on wrestling schools, to the lower... Filmmaker Barry W. Blaustein takes a look at the professional wrestling game at every level, from the hopeful, perhaps deluded beginners who spend their money on wrestling schools, to the lower levels of the profession, to the pinnacle of wrestling success: national fame in the WWF. Particularly fascinating are Blaustein's examinations of Jake "The Snake" Roberts and Mick "Mankind" Foley. Roberts was once a superstar in the WWF, but evidently drugs and alcohol destroyed his career, and left him a broken and bitter man, wrestling on the outer reaches of the pro circuit. In a poignant scene, Blaustein captures a painful reunion between Roberts and his adult daughter. Foley, on the other hand, is a tremendous success in the WWF and a devoted husband and father. But the violence of his profession still threatens to tear his family apart. Blaustein makes no bones about his perspective in making his film. He's a wrestling fan. That said, the film offers an honest view of the outrageous and controversial world of professional wrestling. Though the outcomes of matches are usually predetermined making it a different kind of sport, pro wrestling is certainly a demanding and brutal way of life. [More]
Starring: Terry Funk, Mick "Mankind" Foley, Jake "The Snake" Roberts, Vince McMahon
Starring: Terry Funk, Mick "Mankind" Foley, Jake "The Snake" Roberts, Vince McMahon, Jesse Ventura
Director: Barry W. Blaustein
Director: Barry W. Blaustein
Producer: Barry W. Blaustein, Brian Grazer, Ron Howard, Michael Rosenberg, Barry Bloom
Composer: Nathan Barr
Reviews for Beyond the Mat
We tour the All-Pro Wrestling School in California and Philadelphia's fearsome Extreme Championships, but it's the studies Blaustein makes of several wrestlers that root the film.
It centres on the distinctive, disturbing, weird, unnerving universe that is American wrestling which primarily presents legitimised violence as entertainment.
I guarantee you will never watch Smackdown without thinking about what is going on beyond the mat.
Beyond the Mat wants to blend thrills and pathos, getting at the many sides of what is, as Mr. Blau stein describes it, a carny act. The problem is that he doesn't articulate any of his own thoughts beyond a few slight asides.
Fans of Roberts or Funk may be interested to see what these men are like when not performing, but others may find it simply boring. Their stories are not especially compelling in the human-interest department; they're for fans only.
Soft, repetitive to a fault, and narrated by its maker in tones of wistful awe that seem totally inappropriate to its subject.
A biased story of a billion-dollar industry that must have tons of skeletons in its closet. But it didn’t even open the closet door.
Beyond the Mat takes all the fun out of the insanity that is wrestling.
Blaustein suggests wrestling's appeal -- as a kind of primal spectacle closer to parades and pageants than any accepted form of sport -- without wondering at all why he finds it compelling.
The wrestlers are cannier than Blaustein probably gives them credit for; they seem to be offering up their backstage lives to him in ways that mimic the soppiest of melodramas, and he falls for it.
For the first time in the history of our sport, a filmmaker has finally had the foresight to focus on the very contradictions that make professional wrestlers so damn interesting.
It's hard to explain why a movie about wrestlers is so compelling, but it's probably the same thing that makes the WWF itself so popular.
Latest News for Beyond the Mat
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