Get Bruce

1999

Action / Documentary

4
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 72% · 18 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 45% · 500 ratings
IMDb Rating 6.2/10 10 743 743

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Plot summary

Affectionate tribute to Bruce Vilanch, who writes material for celebrities who make public appearances, from Oscar hosts and award recipients to Presidents. We meet his mom and see photos of his childhood; in Chicago, he writes for the Tribune and then heads West. Whoopi Goldberg, Billy Crystal, Robin Williams, and Bette Midler talk with him and to the camera about working with Bruce, and we also watch Bruce help others prepare for Liz Taylor's 60th, Bill Clinton's 50th, and an AIDS awards banquet where the hirsute, rotund Vilanch lets his emotions show.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
August 01, 2020 at 02:24 AM

Top cast

Tim Curry as Self
Salma Hayek as Self
Bette Midler as Self
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
669.25 MB
968*720
English 2.0
NR
us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 12 min
Seeds ...
1.21 GB
1440*1072
English 2.0
NR
us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 12 min
Seeds 3

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by take2docs 5 / 10

Get who?

If you think this is an actioner or a martial arts flick based on the title, you're mistaken. Heck, it's hardly even a comedy.

For starters, GET BRUCE is a documentary. Moreover, it's about some guy named Bruce Vilanch.

Here's a few things one learns about this Mr. Vilanch from watching this movie: He has bushy hair -- a massive mop of curls. (Incidentally, he looks to me a bit like Michael Moore were Moore to don a Harpo Marx wig.) This Bruce character, we're informed, as a youth performed in school plays, later majored in theater and journalism, for a while wrote for a college paper, and eventually landed a job after college working for the Chicago Tribune. As a movie critic and columnist, part of his job involved interviewing celebrities. This bit of back story which the doc provides was most appreciated.

As I watched the mediocre GET BRUCE I began to think how relatively easy it must be to be a Hollywood actor. There's the screenwriter who tells the actor what to say and a director who tells the actor where to stand and what emotions he wants conveyed. The actor's clothes are provided for by those in wardrobe and any hair-styling and applying of makeup that is needed is done for them also. If they're feeling a little under the weather or camera-shy, there are understudies and stand-ins available for hire. (Question: Is there any individuality to these people or are they strictly stage pawns?) If they should win an award, and can't think of anything witty or funny to say, they hire ghostwriters like Bruce Vilanch to write their monologues or jokes for them. It's no surprise why a lot of everyday idolaters look up to these screen thespians for wisdom and advice, what with the latter being so three-dimensional, identifiable, and all.

It may come as a surprise to some, but Mr. Vilanch has written award show monologues and quips for actors you'd think would never be in need of a ventriloquist -- names including Billy Crystal, Whoopi Goldberg and even the hyperactive and mercurial Robin Williams. (So much for ad-libbing and improvisation.) During these award shows when the scripted one-liners are delivered by overall vacuous mouthpieces and often in stilted fashion, the audience is heard laughing, but now one has to wonder whether even this laughter is for real or merely the result of a generous yak track.

At the center of the borderline entertaining GET BRUCE is a supposed jokester but I didn't find this documentary all that amusing or interesting, however much it loves itself. Comedians tend to be scatterbrained and lacking in depth and as such their shtick becomes tiring after a while. Mr. Vilanch is quite likable and was at one time the go-to guy in Hollywood for actors and even comedians in desperate need of a wisecrack or zinger. Perhaps why I didn't like this movie as much as I should have is because I gave up watching award shows long ago. I love the cinema but could care less about the private lives of self-absorbed celebs and their insular, narcissistic ceremonies and events.

I did, however, manage to catch some clips of Hollywood outsider Ricky Gervais as candid host of a fairly recent awards show. Forget Vilanch. Gervais got to deliver the ultimate punchlines in his having held a verbal mirror up to his self-congratulatory audience. Ba-da-bump, ba-da-bump!

Reviewed by mynerva 7 / 10

Charming documentary

Anyone should be so lucky to have such a delightful biography made about himself. I wish they had had more about the writing process he goes through, but since the film skims over every aspect of his life, fair enough. I also wish they had interviewed a few more people, like Sigourney Weaver.

Reviewed by / 10

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