Staff Pick Premiere: “Monster Factory” wrestles for glory

Ina curates videos at Vimeo. She also host screenings with some of her favorite films and has programmed at a number of film festival. @pira.ina on Instagram.
Ina Pira

“Show, don’t tell” is a golden rule of storytelling. As a guiding principle, it prioritizes communication through visual language to move the story forward, allowing audiences to interpret their own meaning. To put it plainly, seeing is believing. Yet, in the world of professional wrestling, where audiences are trained to be skeptical of what they see, filmmakers are faced with a unique challenge, i.e., how to capture truth in something largely dismissed as fake. In this week’s Staff Pick Premiere, “Monster Factory,” filmmaker Tucker Bliss takes us out of the ring and into the training room, documenting a diverse group of aspiring wrestlers as they fight to become professionals. From gripping monologues to casual moments shared between bouts, “Monster Factory” leaves no doubt in our minds about the very real blood, sweat, and tears poured into each performance.

Set in a repurposed high school gym in Paulsboro, New Jersey (where pro wrestling has become a religion), owner and head coach Danny Cage preaches a no-bullshit, get-it-done training style. With the belief that “wrestling is 10% in the ring and 90% out,” Cage encourages wrestlers to build their public personas alongside their physical skills. This intense style of training translates into an experience that feels like a strange mix of ballet, UFC, and improv theater. “If you can’t captivate audiences with your words or charisma, nobody will watch you in the ring,” says Bliss, “even if you’re the most talented wrestler in the world. It’s all about the personalities — these are performances at the end of the day. It’s an art form, not just a sport.”

At the heart of Cage’s training program are the promos. Shot with handheld anamorphic lenses (for an intimate and wonderfully cinematic result), these deeply personal monologues express the unique obstacles, motivation, and triumphs that ultimately unite the wrestlers into one big family. “Nobody knows who will make it,” says Bliss “but they are all there with the same goal in mind and a deep respect for the art of professional wrestling, even if the world views it as fake. It’s real to them, and the work that goes into the performances, training, and exercise is anything but fake.” Through an artful “watch and learn” approach, Tucker Bliss doesn’t try to reason with skeptics, or engage in parsing out what’s real or not. Instead, his scrappy team embeds itself in the middle of the action and looks beyond the theatrics for a deeper story about the passion that bonds this wrestling family together. The result is a surprisingly endearing film that is anything but smoke and mirrors.

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