Private Dicks: Men Exposed

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Private Dicks: Men Exposed
Directed by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Thom Powers
  • Meema Spadola
Starring <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Theme music composer
  • Stephan Crump
  • John M. Davis
  • John Mettam
  • Andrew Ramsey
Country of origin  United States
No. of episodes 1
Production
Producer(s) <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Jacqueline Glover
  • Sheila Nevins
  • Thom Powers
  • Ann Rose
  • Meema Spadola
Running time 56 min
Release
Original network HBO
Original release 15 March 1999 (15 March 1999)

Private Dicks: Men Exposed is a 1999 HBO TV documentary on the human penis. The film was directed by Thom Powers and Meema Spadola who previously made HBO's 1996 Breasts: A Documentary, a similar documentary on the breast.

Plot

The documentary features 25 men ranging in age from 17 years old to more than 70 years old, and who work in a variety of professions, some of whom are professional performers, such as porn actor Lex Steele. A mix of heterosexual, homosexual and bisexual men, along with two transsexuals, were interviewed. They were interviewed nude on a variety of topics related to their genitals and sexuality, including first sexual experience, frequency of masturbation, penis size, oral sex, libido, sexual performance, and sexually transmitted diseases.

Hoax

One of the people featured in the documentary, a 57-year-old musician by the name of "Bruce", was featured heavily as having an extremely small member that he claimed was "the smallest in the world. One inch, erect."[1] "Bruce" was later revealed to be professional prankster Alan Abel.[1] HBO decided against removing Abel from the documentary and later versions of the documentary labeled him as a professional hoaxer.[2]

Reception

Ken Tucker of Entertainment Weekly described the film as "alternately funny and quite literally touching".[3] Eric Mink of New York Daily News calls the film "insightful" and "funny".[4]

Kam Williams reviewing the DVD in AALBC.com described the film as "excellent". He notes, "The directors were clever enough to contrast all this graphic present-day content intermittently with some tame file footage from stock Sexual Education films which probably passed as state-of-the-art instruction back in the Fifties." According to him, these interludes, which he labels as "antiseptic", "humorous", and "amusing", are "a welcome reminder of how far we've come from the days of learning about the birds and the bees in clinical presentations by a nervous nerd in a white lab coat standing in front of a blackboard with a pointer."[5] MaryAnn Johanson, writing in Flick Filosopher, asserts that it is the openness of the interviewees, not the nudity, which is significant.[6]

References

External links