ManiakJiggy
This is How Movies Should Be Made
NekoHomey
Purely Joyful Movie!
Sameer Callahan
It really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.
Lucia Ayala
It's simply great fun, a winsome film and an occasionally over-the-top luxury fantasy that never flags.
InaneSwine
It's a subject that certainly does deserve to be explored - but it certainly could have been done so much better. The final half hour of this documentary contains moments so emotional and insightful that it almost makes Moote's obnoxious behaviour and narration during the first hour worth sitting through.Unfortunately, its interesting points are so few and far between that the whole show becomes an insipid and occasionally stomach-turning pity party for Moote. Nonetheless, the documentary does exactly what any film studying this subject matter ought to do: expose its protagonist as a cripplingly insecure person in need of psychological - not physical - help.
olapola-564-587052
Patric said it best himself. "I'm going to come out as an insecure, narcissistic asshole with a small dick." Or something like that. It's all true, it's the overall impression I got of the protagonist.While production value is what I expected, it didn't seem like he wanted to do anything at all. All the way through the film he has a look on his face that screams "kill me now.", not a magnet for my attention by any standards.Sauna was a good idea that was executed in the most unprofessional manner you could dream of. The only thing that would have made that scene worse is if he went in there 30 minutes after popping Viagra. What he did is the reason camera phones are banned in several school showers. If I were in there, I'd sue. Just saying.The crew made a good job of planning the progression of the film, and the amount of locations, people and cultures in it is the best part of the film as a whole. It's also a unique documentary. Not in terms of film making, some of the work actually seems uninspired and lazy, but you don't watch a doc because of the brilliant cinematography.
rlcigars2
A young man excitedly prepared proposes to his girlfriend. To make it special and memorable, we waits arranges to pop the question on the Mistletoe Cam Jumbotron at the UCLA game. To his shock, the girlfriend declines on camera and runs away. The video of the failed proposal goes viral. That poor young man confesses his in a documentary that the size of his is at fault and he travels the world to find out if any why this is a important any issue was society claims it to be. What would make a better documentary is that if Patrick Moote had included more behind the scenes information like his frustrations as a struggling actor prompted the idea for this to create an emotional range demo reel and that the famous viral video was a complete setup, a fake event put on for a cheap pre-promotional tool for this film, or rather, this demo reel. Regardless of this film being a shame and the viral video a phony, this movie isn't good - it's self indulgent, full of unbelievable scenarios, and the acting - sorry - isn't all that impressive. Maybe a traditional short form demo reel is what should have been done so all the terrible performances could have been cut.
zif ofoz
The sum total of this documentary (in my opinion) is that - Men can be as needlessly obsessed with their 'penis size' as women can be needlessly obsessed with the size of their breast.This flick takes the viewer to some fairly exotic world wide locations in search of treatments to increase the size of a mans penis. The treatments are strange and some are absolutely grotesque. Our host & 'seeker' often comes across as a phony but what he shows to the viewer is a learning experience and it is best to just steer clear of the enhancement nonsense.If you ever wondered about this topic this is a good source to clear your mind!