Fails to deliver much in the way of engagement or thrills.
Lipstick & Dynamite: The First Ladies of Wrestling (2004)
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Reviews Counted:37
Fresh:23
Rotten:14
Average Rating:6.4/10
Consensus: This documentary on the early days of women's wrestling features an array of colorful, compelling personalities.
Theatrical Release:Mar 25, 2005 Limited
Synopsis: Before Hulk Hogan, The Rock, and the stars of Vince McMahon’s WWE took pro wrestling to new heights in American culture, pro wrestling was a small, relatively disorganized network of small time... Before Hulk Hogan, The Rock, and the stars of Vince McMahon’s WWE took pro wrestling to new heights in American culture, pro wrestling was a small, relatively disorganized network of small time promoters, con-men, and over-the-top characters who brought their unique brand of showmanship to audiences around the nation. A cornerstone of the success of these promotions was the rise of women’s professional wrestling in the 1940’s and 50’s. Lipstick and Dynamite is a look into the lives of the women who made their living on the professional wrestling circuit. Full of outstanding archival footage of wrestlers like The Fabulous Moolah and Johnnie Mae Young, Lipstick and Dynamite is primarily concerned with the lives of hardship and hard work these superstars of the ring created for themselves. It could have been the sex, money, injuries, and intrigue that dominated their lives on the road, but the competitive passion of these women have for their sport shines through in director Ruth Leitman’s touching portrait of women who lived hard, and fought even harder. -- © Ruthless Films [More]
Director: Ruth Leitman
Director: Ruth Leitman
Studio: Koch Lorber Films
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Reviews for Lipstick & Dynamite: The First Ladies of Wrestling
Talk about being ahead of your time. Most of these women were living independently by the age of about 15, and took their place in a man's world through herculean effort.
Too shapeless...but the topic is worthy, and the onslaught of trivia and quirky anecdotes hold interest for the film’s 75 minutes.
What we get is essentially the press-book version of their careers, which is harrowing enough.
What a gutsy, sad, seize-the-day, glorious life it was for the women warriors of Lipstick & Dynamite.
Despite a couple key oversights, this film can sometimes be as immensely entertaining as the guilty pleasure it portrays.
Don't expect the inside scoop so much as an unsatisfying slice of life.
There is a great film to be made about the grappling glamazons who helped blaze a trail that lead to legitimizing women's athletics. This is not that movie, however.
The non-stop swirl of anecdotes from which the film is assembled lacks sociological resonance.
Doesn't succeed in its attempt to make a feminist statement, with too many of the wrestlers sounding like male athletes who talk in excruciating detail about high school football seasons that everyone else forgot.
Ruth Leitman's documentary is more of a scrapbook than a coherent history of professional women's wrestling during its rough-and-tumble infancy.
Collectively, the Lady is a Champ -- but the general story is of too slight a treatment to merit an entire feature.
A dynamic portrait of the quintessential tough broads who staked their claim to the spectator sport in the 1940s and '50s, becoming stars of the circuit.
Leitman gives us a comprehensive array of pinup photos, news clips and wrestling footage from these women's younger years, and gives the women plenty of camera time to emerge as individuals and personalities.
Ruth Leitman's generous, slyly tough-minded documentary about the pioneers of female wrestling features an all-star lineup of rough-talking, no-nonsense broads.
The film dwells more upon the sensational aspects than the sport itself but it's impossible to deny the sheer tawdry entertainment value in this compelling film tabloid.
Never more than a collection of small stories that do not amount to much or rise above the level of a small soap opera
Docu moves at a snappy pace, threading together recent interview material with a treasure trove of vintage footage.
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