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| released = [[September 15]], [[1995]] ([[Toronto Film Festival]])
| released = [[September 15]], [[1995]] ([[Toronto Film Festival]])
| runtime = 86 minutes
| runtime = 86 minutes
| country = USA
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| awards =
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| language = [[English language|English]]
| language = [[English language|English]]
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'''''Man of the Year''''' ([[1995 in film|1995]]) is a [[mockumentary]] written, directed by, and starring [[Dirk Shafer]]. The film is a fictionalized account of Shafer's reign as ''[[Playgirl]]'' magazine's 1992 "Man of the Year" and his struggle with reconciling his public persona as a [[sex symbol]] to women with his identity as a [[gay]] man. Shafer combines mock interviews (both with some of the actual people involved and with actors standing in for the actual people) with archive footage from Shafer's appearances on [[talk show]]s like ''[[Phil Donahue|Donahue]]'', ''[[Maury (TV series)|The Maury Povich Show]]'' and ''[[The Jerry Springer Show]]'' (along with an early appearance on ''[[Dance Fever]]'') and recreations of events like his Playgirl photoshoots, his "fantasy date" with a ''Playgirl'' reader and the death of his friend Pledge Cartwright (Bill Brochtrup) of an [[AIDS]]-related illness to relate the story.
'''''Man of the Year''''' ([[1995 in film|1995]]) is a [[mockumentary]] written, directed by, and starring [[Dirk Shafer]]. The film is a fictionalized account of Shafer's reign as ''[[Playgirl]]'' magazine's 1992 "Man of the Year" and his struggle with reconciling his public persona as a [[sex symbol]] to women with his identity as a [[gay]] man. Shafer combines mock interviews (both with some of the actual people involved and with actors standing in for the actual people) with archive footage from Shafer's appearances on [[talk show]]s like ''[[Phil Donahue|Donahue]]'', ''[[Maury (TV series)|The Maury Povich Show]]'' and ''[[The Jerry Springer Show]]'' (along with an early appearance on ''[[Dance Fever]]'') and recreations of events like his Playgirl photoshoots, his "fantasy date" with a ''Playgirl'' reader and the death of his friend Pledge Cartwright (Bill Brochtrup) of an [[AIDS]]-related illness to relate the story.


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[[Category:1995 films]]
[[Category:1995 films]]
[[Category:LGBT-related films]]
[[Category:American LGBT-related films]]
[[Category:Mockumentaries]]
[[Category:Mockumentaries]]
[[Category:AIDS in film and television]]
[[Category:AIDS in film and television]]

Revision as of 12:04, 14 May 2009

Man of the Year
original poster
Directed byDirk Shafer
Written byDirk Shafer
Produced byMatt Keener
StarringDirk Shafer
Vivian Paxton
Bill Brochtrup
Beth Broderick
CinematographyStephen Timberlake
Edited byBarry S. Silver
Ken Solomon
Music byPeitor Angell
Barry Stich
Eric Vetro
Distributed bySeventh Art Releasing
Release dates
September 15, 1995 (Toronto Film Festival)
Running time
86 minutes
Country United States
LanguageEnglish

Man of the Year (1995) is a mockumentary written, directed by, and starring Dirk Shafer. The film is a fictionalized account of Shafer's reign as Playgirl magazine's 1992 "Man of the Year" and his struggle with reconciling his public persona as a sex symbol to women with his identity as a gay man. Shafer combines mock interviews (both with some of the actual people involved and with actors standing in for the actual people) with archive footage from Shafer's appearances on talk shows like Donahue, The Maury Povich Show and The Jerry Springer Show (along with an early appearance on Dance Fever) and recreations of events like his Playgirl photoshoots, his "fantasy date" with a Playgirl reader and the death of his friend Pledge Cartwright (Bill Brochtrup) of an AIDS-related illness to relate the story.

Critical response

Variety gave Man of the Year a generally favorable review, calling the film "pleasant to watch and intermittently clever."[1] However, it notes that Shafer's writing is "uneven" and that the film's "structure is a bit repetitive."[1] The New Yorker largely concurred, noting that Shafer "keep[s] condescension at bay with some nice comic spins"[2] but finding the use of the death of Shafer's friend as Shafer's catalyst for coming out to be self-serving. The San Francisco Chronicle was far harsher, deriding the film as a "vanity" production and complaining "There's no shape to Man of the Year, no forward movement. Man of the Year doesn't even have the benefit of being hip."[3] The New York Times, however, found the film "gently satirical"[4] with the use of real clips from Shafer's various talk show appearances creating a "tone of vertiginous loopiness."[4] The Times also saw the metaphor in Shafer's experience to the pressure that society put on gay people to pretend to be straight.

DVD release

Man of the Year was released on Region 1 DVD on February 23, 1999.

References

  1. ^ a b Levy, Emmanuel (1995-07-17). "Man of the Year". Variety. Retrieved 2008-03-23.
  2. ^ Diones, Bruce (1996-04-01). "Man of the Year". New Yorker. Retrieved 2008-03-23.
  3. ^ LaSalle, Mick (1996-03-01). "'Year' of Living Vainly". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2008-03-23.
  4. ^ a b Holden, Stephen (1996-03-15). "Literally and Figuratively, Unclothing a Dreamboat". New York Times. Retrieved 2008-03-23.