纪录片自媒体解说素材-新闻动态参考-希腊健美运动员在塞萨洛尼基Doc Fest的“徒劳”中占据了中心地位/Greek Bodybuilders Take Center Stage in Thessaloniki Doc Fest’s ‘Made in Vain’
https://cdn.6867.top:6867/A1A/hddoc/news/2022/07/0507/3918v3hs0yt02wf.jpg希腊健美运动员在塞萨洛尼基Doc Fest的“徒劳”中占据了中心地位
Greek Bodybuilders Take Center Stage in Thessaloniki Doc Fest’s ‘Made in Vain’
个人恶魔,严格的饮食,令人难以置信的牺牲和几乎无法实现的理想塑造了健美运动员的日常生活。几个月的紧张准备导致舞台上片刻,少数法官会决定他们的命运。有人称它为运动,一种生活方式,虚荣心;对其他人来说,健美是一种宗教。不过,所有人都同意,曾经是健美运动员总是健美运动员。“徒劳的”是导演迈克尔·克里米斯(Michael Klioumis)对希腊健美运动员生活的亲密肖像。这部电影由Louizos Aslanidis为Ekso Productions制作,在希腊电影中心和Ekome的支持下,这部电影在塞萨洛尼基纪录片节的新移民国际比赛中举行了全球首映。他的第二部电影的希腊健美运动的竞争世界。他告诉《综艺》:“我想做些完全公正的事情。”允许访问竞争者的私人生活,他们详细介绍了一切克里米斯(Klioumis)从精确的蛋白质摄入到激素替代疗法,“决定让参与者描述自己的旅程和自己的真理。”他的其余对话如下。您能告诉我是什么激发了您制作这部电影的?您以前有没有接触过健美的世界?我从一个朋友那里得知,大约五年前,希腊有一个健美运动。我四处寻找它的意思,然后我参加了一场比赛,这真的很兴奋。我从未见过这样的人,这真的让我惊讶 - 首先,他们拥有的纪律,他们所做的劳动以及他们不一定要赚钱的事实。这是他们对此的压倒性爱。所有这些都赢得了我的胜利,我想与世界分享,尤其是那些对健美运动一无所知的人。但主要是我的惊奇让我想拍这部电影。关于为了成功的目的,他们必须做出的巨大牺牲。您是否感觉到他们在健美运动之外有任何个人生活?他们在体育馆外面是什么样的人?事实是,牺牲是巨大的。只是他们饮食中的牺牲是可怕的,例如不吃脂肪,或者身体上有脂肪。这是必要的,这占了他们的大部分时间,因为他们必须非常强烈地锻炼,他们不断进食,因为他们的代谢很高。但是现实是他们确实有生命。他们有家庭,很高兴。这是我想打破的刻板印象 - 这是他们的一切,他们没有生命等等。但是他们确实有住在健身房的生活。他们没有那么不同 - 他们是像我们这样的人。我们听到很多有关受试者的饮食要求,他们的补充剂和激素替代疗法的信息,这是维持所有这些的高成本。有什么吗Y告诉您他们的生活方式真正炸毁了您的想法?我真的不能说除了令人难以置信的牺牲外,还有什么让我震惊的。但是真正给人留下深刻印象的是,所有恒定的准备工作都在舞台上仅15分钟内结束。我试图将自己放在他们的位置,以想象我花了一年的时间进行激烈的锻炼,严格的饮食,牺牲,以向法官展示我对身体的所作所为,而不是焦虑与其他人竞争,不要在舞台上崩溃。全部15分钟,以最好的方式展示自己。有些人告诉我,有些运动员可能比其他运动员更好,但是由于某种原因或其他原因,他们没有做好自己的表现,或者其他设法隐藏了自己的缺陷并仍然赢得胜利。这是给人留下深刻印象的东西,当他们在舞台上时遇到的困难。乏味的岁月,乔治显然花了很多时间思考他作为健美运动员的那种人,以及他的思想和身体造成的损失。您是否遇到了社区中许多其他人表现出同样程度的内省程度的人,或者大多数人都在追求成功以思考后果而受到关注?有很多人一旦停止竞争,就会改变。他们不会停止参加运动或保持体形,而是停止竞争并改变日常工作。他们中的许多人想停止竞争性地做到这一点,但要继续以业余爱好的身份进行自我形象和健康。他们的优先事项改变了。也许他们有健美运动是第一件事。突然,他们想有一个家庭。一开始,他们都开始想成为运动员。有一次,随着年龄的增长继续竞争,这是不可能的。保持低体脂,低碳水化合物的饮食等非常困难。所以他们离开了竞争性的PA在后面的RT。一定是什么,您从他们对这些几乎无法实现的身体理想的追求中带走了什么?我看到了它,并认为我不能做他们所做的一百分之一。我认为,对于我们不关心健美运动的我们来说,这是完全无法实现的,是身体的理想。就我个人而言,我永远无法想象如何实现这种身体,因为我无法做出牺牲。我不能停止进食 - 我爱食物。我每天都不能锻炼。这种类型的人拥有令人难以置信的纪律和动力,对健美运动的热爱,他们全力以赴。实现这一目标的决定性令人印象深刻。我希望我对自己一生中的某些事情有同样的奉献精神。有时候我想写一些东西,我开始,我失去了重点。这不会发生在他们身上。他们非常敬业。
Personal demons, strict diets, incredible sacrifices, and almost unachievable ideals shape the daily life of bodybuilders. Months of intense preparation lead to a few moments on stage where a handful of judges will decide their fate. Some call it a sport, a lifestyle, a vanity; to others, bodybuilding is a religion. All agree, though, that once a bodybuilder, always a bodybuilder.
"Made in Vain" is director Michael Klioumis' intimate portrait of the lives of Greek bodybuilders. Produced by Louizos Aslanidis for Ekso Productions, with the support of the Greek Film Center and EKOME, the film has its world premiere in the Newcomers International Competition at the Thessaloniki Documentary Festival.
Klioumis said he tried to keep an open mind when entering the hyper-competitive world of Greek bodybuilding for his second film. “I wanted to make something that was completely impartial,” he told Variety. Given access to the private lives of competitors who detail everything from their precise protein intake to their hormone replacement therapy, Klioumis “decided to let the participants describe their own journey and their own truth.” The rest of his conversation follows below.
Can you tell me what inspired you to make this movie? Did you have any exposure to the world of bodybuilding before?
I learned from a friend that there was a bodybuilding scene in Greece about five years ago. I was looking around to see what it was about, and then I went to a competition, and it really excited me. I had never seen such people, and it really amazed me—first, the incredible amount of discipline they have, the labor they do, and the fact that they don’t necessarily do it to make money. It’s an overwhelming love they have for it. All of this won me over, and I wanted to share it with the world, especially people who didn’t know anything about bodybuilding. But mostly it was my amazement that made me want to make this film.
Several of the subjects of the film talk about the intense sacrifices they had to make for the sake of success. Did you get a sense that they had any personal lives outside of bodybuilding? What sort of people were they outside the gym?
The truth is that the sacrifices are huge. Just the sacrifices in their diets are terrible—to not eat any fat, for example, or have any fat on their bodies. It’s necessary, and it takes up a big part of their days, because they have to work out very intensely, they eat constantly, because they have a very high metabolism. But the reality is they do have lives outside of that. They have families, they’re happy. And that’s a stereotype I wanted to break—the idea that this is everything for them, they don’t have lives, and so on. But they do have lives outside the gym. They’re not so different—they’re people like us.
We hear a lot about the subjects’ dietary requirements, their regimen of supplements and hormone replacement therapy, the high cost of sustaining all of that. Was there anything they told you about what their lifestyle required that really blew your mind?
I can’t really say there was anything that blew my mind, apart from the incredible sacrifice, really. But what really made a huge impression is that all of the constant preparation ends in just 15 minutes on stage. I tried to put myself in their place, to imagine that I’ve spent one year with intense workouts, with a strict diet, with sacrifices, in order to show the judges what I’ve done with my body, not to have anxiety to compete with the others, to not collapse on stage. All for 15 minutes, to present myself in the best way possible. Some told me that there are athletes who might be better than others, but who haven’t managed—for one reason or other—to present themselves well, or others who manage to hide their imperfections and still win. That’s something that made a huge impression, the difficulties they have when they’re on stage.
Now that he’s had some distance between himself and his competitive years, George has obviously spent a lot of time thinking about the sort of person he was as a bodybuilder, and the toll it took on both his mind and body. Did you come across many others in the community who showed that same degree of introspection, or were most of them too caught up in their pursuit of success to think about the consequences?
There are many who, once they stop competing, change. They don’t stop playing sports, or staying in shape, but they stop competing and they change their daily routines. Many of them want to stop doing it competitively, but to continue as amateurs, for their self-image and health. Their priorities change. Maybe they had bodybuilding as the number one thing. Suddenly, they want to have a family. In the beginning, they all start out wanting to be athletes. At one point, it’s not possible as you get older to continue to compete. It’s very difficult to maintain low body fat, to have a low-carb diet, and so on. So they leave the competitive part behind.
Ultimately, what did you take away from their pursuit of these almost unattainable physical ideals?
I saw it up close and thought that I couldn't do one hundredth of what they do. I think for us, who aren’t concerned with bodybuilding, it’s completely unattainable, the physical ideal. Personally, I couldn’t ever imagine how to achieve that kind of body, because I can’t make the sacrifices. I can’t stop eating—I love food. I can’t work out every day. That type of person has incredible discipline and drive, a great love for bodybuilding, and they do it with all their strength. That type of decisiveness to achieve it is incredibly impressive. I wish I had the same dedication for certain things in my own life. There are times I want to write something, and I start, and I lose my focus. That doesn’t happen to them. They’re very dedicated.
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感谢大佬分享。我又来学习了~ 谢谢更新,天天学习,天天向上!
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