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  • js-6613031 August 2018
    So apparently there was a steady line of randy Hollywoodsters taking advantage of a hedonistic drive-thru emporium at the local gas station. Wow. An effervescent and constantly smiling nonagenarian hustler Scotty Bowers says so. And the facts do too.

    The sheer number of A-list stars and starlets named, and their varied sexual preferences sounds shocking even by today's unshockable standards. But when presented so matter-of-factly, and with such fondness by the charismatic Scotty Bowers, it all seems perfectly alright.

    Seems there was more to the post war than just a baby boom. Waiting to protect their secrets, Scotty finally published his racy memoirs after his customers had passed, and now much of it is documented in this film. When asked if outing someone posthumously is kosher, Scotty asks, "what's wrong with being gay, baby?" Indeed.

    Besides an endless stream of tabloid fodder tales, this documentary focuses on a very complex character. Someone whose free formed attitude towards sex is at both times bewildering and very refreshing, has a crackerjack memory and lust for life as he approaches the century mark, but also shows hints of hidden sadness. Scotty is a complicated man, who has lived a wild life, made many people very happy, but seems to be missing something. Baby.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Oh, how this man got around! Director/Producer and Documentarian Matt Tyrnauer ("Valentino: The Last Emperor" 2008) brings George Albert "Scotty" Bowers' memoir "Full Service" to the bring screen. Scotty (today) is an elderly gentleman whose home, car, deeded properties and garages are filled with piles and piles of Hollywood memorabilia, junk mail and immaterial finds. However, according to Scotty, while working at Hollywood gas station (between 1940 -1980) Walter Pidgeon ("Mrs. Miniver"), drove up, invited to swim in his pool, where he later landed in his bed and as they say, "the rest is history". As the go-to-guy/pimp of sorts to the then Hollywood closeted elite, he enlisted his fellow soldiers looking for a quick $20, and soon his escort service to the stars (ranging from Clark Gable, Kate Hepburn, Spenser Tracey, Cole Porter, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, J. Edgar Hoover, to a three ways with Ava Gardner and Lana Turner and more) was born. With so many of his "tell all" tales about celebrities now passed, no one's around to counter his claims. Regardless, director Tyrnauer presents Scotty has an intriguing and interesting character, while looking back at old Hollywood's stigma associated with being "out," and he at least briefly allows the ladies of "The View" to question is claims. For a man (Scotty) who never told his current wife about his past, and who today appears to be a certified pack rat, one has to take his memoir and this film for what it is: a good read and an entertaining documentary.

    This film was screened at the Palm Springs International Film Festival #PSIFF2018.
  • What a nostalgic and historical view of the post world war 2 era of Hollywood in the mid 1940's through the next few decades provided by ninety (90) year old "the arranger" Scotty Bower. He remains quite the personable and charming character even as a nonagenarian house hoarder with charisma running through his old veins.

    Am I a believer in Scotty Bowers claims? Absolutely. He hob nobbed with many Hollywood gay stars of the 1940's - 1970's, and kept their trysts on the QT until some decades later after all had passed in to the heaven's gates. Most of us had heard the many rumors about some of the biggest stars such as Rock Hudson, Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn, Randolph Scott, and Cary Grant preferring same sex partners but Scotty explaining his intimate interactions with these A lister Hollywood stars came across as if he was talking to his closest friends and not as if he was BS'ing us all.

    What I really found quite interesting about Scotty's secret history of the Hollywood stars, royalty and Hollywood executives was how forthcoming some of these stars became as they grew older and how good it must have felt to finally be able to come out of the proverbial closet, even if it was Scotty who had to convince us his stories were all true.

    Scotty is definitely a house hoarder and his was a pimp and prostitute lifestyle that he emphatically declares he chose to live and quite enjoyed every minute of living. This is a documentary that I will most likely watch again as Scotty's unabashed proclamations are now considered historical God rest his weary soul. RIP Scotty.

    As a heterosexual male I give this documentary an 8 out of 10 IMDB rating.
  • adamhsandel29 January 2019
    Since I enjoyed the juicy, can't-put-it down book, I was disappointed in the film. Instead of focusing more on Bowers' rollicking sexual adventures in the '40s and '50s, the filmmaker spends much of the time focusing on the now 95 year old Bowers, and his wife, puttering around his multiple hoarder-cluttered homes.

    The real story is about Bowers' star-studded sexual past, not his relatively downbeat present. The film should have been racy, fun and juicy, but it ends up being primarily glum.
  • Scotty Bauers' book about his business as a Hollywood procurer in his book, Full Service, is a prelude to this not-quite-salacious documentary about his life servicing the sexual needs of mid-century Hollywood elite, especially the gay ones. Although Scotty's personal life is disorganized and cluttered, his procuring activity as Hollywood's "pimp to the stars" was universally acclaimed by those who used his services.

    Getting dates, or providing " an introduction service" as Scotty calls it, for the likes of Walter Pidgeon and George Cukor was all in a day's work for the Hollywood Blvd. Richfield Gas Station attendant he was while he arranged liaisons there and around town. This brief explanation of the documentary might make it seem juicy, but I assure you it is not quite that. Despite the cast of characters in need of same sex dates like Kate Hepburn and Spencer Tracy, most of Scotty's revelations are not new and hardly in depth.

    Randolph Scott, Tyrone Power, Cole Porter, and Charles Laughton are among the others who used Scotty's services, including his own. His three-way adventure with sex goddesses Lana Turner and Ava Gardner is one of the more alluring bits of gossip, but again only a fleeting mention. Those limited details are what make this a superficial if not charming doc.

    Most of the doc centers on Scotty, now 94, an impish gossip whose obvious aging seems the opposite of the well-kept elderly like Cary Grant, who appears several times as a young gay star guarding his orientation better than Rock Hudson. As Scotty shows us the dumpy houses where he stores his personal junk, this inveterate collector is just not that interesting; you'd think he must have some stars' memorabilia-not.

    Although director Matt Trynauer jazzes it up with male frontal nudity and vintage Hollywood footage, Scotty's shuffling senescence lends the dusty mood of an old album full of his photos and too few of Hollywood stars. Scotty and the Secret History of Hollywood guards those secrets too well for my adolescent-like curiosity.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The salacious promises of Hollywood scandal in the previews for this film piqued my interest. Even though most of the secrets of these stars are now well known, a first hand account of what went on and with whom was too good to ignore. Scotty Bower was handsome and is still charming, extremely uninhibited, but crude at times and uses archaic slang 'baby'. He is completely believable, and even though all the stars that used his services as a lover or pimp have since passed, there are enough photos, film clips, and fellow gigolos to confirm enough of the stories to accept what can not be proven.

    Even in these days of selfie nudes and sexual preferences being broadcast daily through social media, these stories from Hollywood's past are shocking - especially some of the group sex stories, as well as the odd pairings (Rock Hudson and Cary Grant, or Lana Turner and Ava Gardner). However, when Scotty Bower recounts them without a hint of shame, and even fondness, you can't help but to be pulled in by his charisma.

    From the previews I thought that Scotty's wartime service, seeing his friends die during horrific battles in the Pacific, may have been the cause for Scotty to abandon conventional morality and pursue the rest of his life to having a good time. However, I was disappointed to find that he had no epiphany for the pursuit of pleasure, Scotty was molested at an early age by a neighbour, and went into pleasuring for cash as a business when he was just eleven years old. His first clients were the Roman Catholic clergy of Chicago -- a trending topic in today's headlines.

    He didn't share his business plan or personal carefree sexual attitudes with his family. He still lies to his sister and doesn't tell his current wife everything he did before he met her. He also laments how he wasn't a good husband to his first wife or late daughter, because he was too busy pleasuring Hollywood. There is a deep sadness in his realization that his fun got in the way of intimacy.

    Perhaps this is why he remained silent for so long.

    The documentary may make promises of sexy stories, but it is, in fact, a rather sad tale of a man distracted by pleasure from having a real life. Scotty is a hoarder, saving toilets from the curbside and packing them away in garages around the city. He accumulates things, like he once accumulated clients and lovers. Ultimately, he is a selfish man who convinces himself every day that he makes others happy, and perhaps he did provide a sexual outlet for many stars, but he forgot to make himself happy in the process.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I could tell early on in the documentary that this Scotty Bowers must've been abused at some point in his childhood to morally think that his "service" in the form of being a prostitute/pimp was acceptable and to just so willingly jump into it full-force.

    Sure enough, about halfway through the film he recalls his childhood and it was full of child abuse and the worst of it.. he never considered himself abused and seemed to enable the abuse of other children. Sorry but this is really disturbing to hear and of course these experiences shaped his life and the lives of so many others. And while the documentary portrays this all in a acceptable almost congratulatory way I find it all very sad. Essentially Scotty's entire life amounted to being about sex and getting sex for others. It's not surprising Hollywood thinks this is great, especially gay Hollywood but ultimately it's all just very sad to me.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This is one hella Hollywood Who Done It! OR, who really did it.

    Scotty, the subject of the documentary, has me thinking (not a bad thing... Usually). As the screen faded to black, after an inordinate number of photos of Scotty in all stages and I do mean ALL stages, I wondered just who wasn't gay in Hollywood in the 40s, 50s and 60s.

    I don't understand his marriage. I think it was incredibly selfish of him. And his hording is as distressful to her as is his past. Yet she sticks around, so the old guy has "something".

    He seems to be one of those entirely sexual beings - given what he says about his childhood. But that's where my disbelief came tumbling in.

    When he disposed of his friend's ashes down the hole in his deck without letting other people know, I lost a lot of respect for him and that colored his past for me - not in a good way. While he proclaimed again and again (and again) how he wants to make people happy - that act was going to make several people very sad, but it was most convenient for him.

    What else did he shade a bit to make more convenient for him to make himself look more colorful and interesting to sell books and get a documentary done? And to get a woman to marry him? And and and?

    At the end, I am glad not to be in his orbit. Nor he in mine. Sadly, I don't trust him any longer. And, as one reviewer put, it's time to take a shower.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Scotty and the Secret History of Hollywood is Matt Tyrnauer's documentary about Scotty Bowers, a World War II vet who is now considered an icon of sorts in the gay world, for his proclivities (primarily) in the 40s and 50s as a glorified procurer of Hollywood gay celebrities as well as ordinary gays who were chiefly closeted due to the stultifying mores against gay people at the time.

    In 1947, Scotty began working at a gas station in Hollywood where he purportedly fixed up various gay stars including such luminaries as Cary Grant, Randolph Scott and Charles Laughton. The gas station featured a trailer in the back where trysts were consummated as well as a motel across the street, in which Scotty had a deal with the owners, where he could send clients who requested a more luxurious setting for their encounters.

    After working for a few years at the gas station, Scotty then became a bartender and worked at private parties, where he claims to have numerous dalliances himself with stars such as Spencer Tracy and actresses including Bette Davis, Vivien Leigh, Lana Turner and Ava Gardner (all at the same time) as well an affair with the Duke and Duchess of Windsor. Scotty maintains that Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn were only platonic friends and he procured over one hundred lesbian lovers for Hepburn.

    The film combines archival footage during Scotty's heyday and a few years ago, at the time of Scotty's 90th birthday and during various book signings, when his book "Full Service," an even more detailed account of his career, was released. There are also glimpses of Scotty's private life including interviews with old friends, his current wife (his apparent bisexual life now behind him) and a visit to a secondary residence, cluttered with hundreds of mementos he's collected over the years.

    The documentary only managed a 67 rating on Metacritic, as it was criticized for two basic reasons: 1) it was felt that there was no way to verify all of Scotty's stories and some reviewers felt he was either embellishing his narrative or not telling the truth at all; and 2) it was considered presumptuous of Scotty to "out" various celebrities, all unable to defend themselves, as they are all now deceased.

    I had no reason to doubt most of Scotty's claims as they were corroborated through various interviews with people who knew him and lived during that era. As for "outing" those now who are unable to speak for themselves, the passage of time suggests perhaps there is a statute of limitations on revealing time worn escapades.

    In view of the times Scotty was living in, he's considered by some to be a sexual revolutionary. I don't know if I would go that far, but he certainly assisted many gay people who were forced into the closet and needed assistance in socializing and forming relationships.

    There's something refreshing about a man who expresses no guilt feelings over his past conduct. In contrast to many who have claimed to have been victims of sexual abuse, Scotty reveals how a family friend as well as various priests whom he knew as a teenager forced themselves on him. But Scotty takes it all in stride and refuses to blame others for the sexual contact-which he considers part of growing up (others of course disagree, terming it "molestation").

    Scotty is also quite candid about a number of tragedies that befell him including the loss of fellow soldiers in World War II, the death of his daughter and first wife as well as various prior lovers. There is no way such events couldn't have taken a toll on Scotty and perhaps it's his hoarding (the desire to hold on to clutter) that's an indication that he's not able to completely "let go" emotionally, regarding the tragedies he's had to cope with over the years.

    "Scotty" is essentially a collection of gossipy sexual vignettes, and one feels there could have been more information about the lives of the various celebrities Scotty talks about. Nonetheless, Scotty is a fascinating character and director Tyrnauer masterfully puts together the archival footage which proves to be an impressive aesthetic achievement.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    A most interesting documentary about Hollywood and its randy desires and Scotty Bowers, who became a legend facilitating sexual favors and encounters for handsome gay movie stars and charming starlets through his filling station. The 1940's Hollywood secret scene was not so secretive as one would think. Bowers was a sexual procurer for decades was honestly proud as seen in this documentary based on his best selling memoir. Pimp to the stars and those that wanted a piece of a star.

    Also featured are Lois Bowers, Stephen Fry, William Mann, Peter Bart, Phyllis Bowers, Liz Smith and some often mind blowing archive footage of: Lauren Bacall, Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Charles Laughton, Randolph Scott, Cary Grant, Rock Hudson, Liberace, Walter Pigeon, George Cukor, Barbara Stanwick, J. Edgar Hoover and Elsa Lancaster.
  • "Scotty and the Secret History of Hollywood" (2017 release; 98 min,) is a documentary about Scotty Bowers. As the movie opens, there is a celebration of Scotty's 90th birthday at the Chateau Marmont. We learn that Scotty just recently has written a memoir called "Full Service" (which is the basis for this film), in which he retells of the days right after WWII when he by happenstance became the "pimp" of gay and lesbian Hollywood, the "center of an alternative world", in which famous movie stars like Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn lived lives that were very different from their public personae, and calling on the services provided by Scotty. "Everything cost $20", Scotty laughs. Along the way we alo learn how today's Scotty has become a compulsive obsessive hoarder... At this point we're not even 15 min. into the movie, but to tell you more of the plot would spoil your viewing experience, you'll just have to see for yourself how it all plays out.

    Couple of comments: this is the latest from up-and-coming documentarian Matt Tymauer, whose previous film was the excellent "Citizen Jane: Battle For the City". Here he picks up on a long unknown fact, namely how one guy became the Hollywood king-pimp starting in the late 40s. Tymauer tries to take that fait divers to build a documentary about "gays and lesbians in Hollywood" over the years. Yes, there are glimpses here and there (in particular as we get to the AIDS era), but overall it feels like this film is a missed opportunity to do an in-depth look at that topic. Instead, we get a close look on someone who seems like a nice enough guy, but it is as if he stands in the way of a far more important documentary. The fact that we get sidetracked by the compulsive hoarding behavior only reinforces that feeling...

    "Scotty and the Secret History of Hollywood" premiered at last year;s Toronto International Film Festival (yes, almost a year ago) to positive acclaim. The movie finally made it to my local art-house theater here in Cincinnati this weekend. The Sunday early evening screening where I saw this at was attended so-so (about 10 people). If you are in the mood for a documentary that is brought mostly with a light touch about how gays and lesbians got by in the Hollywood era of the 40 and 50s, I'd suggest you check this out, be it in the theater, on VOD, or eventually on DVD/Blu-ray and draw your own conclusion.
  • Gossips about the film people in Los Angeles and their erotic delusions have always occupied the headlines. The sexual activities of people from all social levels at the end reveal: one, that bizarre appetites are everywhere; two, that we are victims of our own puritanism and debauchery; and three, that such news only arouses curiosity and little contributes to our lives. If not, consider what have you learned from the ignoble aspects of the lives of Marilyn, O.J. or Polanski.

    The story of Scotty Bowers is film and literature material, without a doubt, and «Scotty and the Secret History of Hollywood» proves it. It has become a documentary inspired by his biography «Full Service: My Adventures in Hollywood and the Secret Sex Life of the Stars.» All the surviving interviewees who personally knew Cary Grant, Katharine Hepburn, the Dukes of Windsor or Rock Hudson, confirm the revelations and affirm that Scotty does not lie. No salacious gossip in the style of Kenneth Anger in «Hollywood Babylon», which for a long time was the best-selling gossip book about film people.

    At age 90, with most of his clientele already dead, Scotty published his account of sexual services offered to personalities of the L.A. movie industry (and other industries) and left the half-population of the city speechless. For being silly, if you ask me, for still believing in the Oscar, in Walt Disney and E.T. Before the camera, Scotty does not hide anything from his contemporary life, which he shared with singer Lois Bowers, who died in October 2018.

    At the beginning of the movie, Scotty seemed an unpleasant person, simply because he calls a spade a spade. Then, I put aside my hypocritical self and let myself be guided by his humor, his strength to move on in 21st century L.A., for his love for Lois and his sincerity. Scotty does not hide anything about himself! From the abuse of his father in the country and the group of priests who used him as a child prostitute when he was growing up in Chicago, going through the interviews he gave to Dr. Alfred Kinsey about the sexual behavior of the average American male (and the orgies that he took him to see "the action" in the front row), until he got his job at a gas station in L.A. where he started connecting his friends with the stars, and he kept his first wife and daughter with his own body. The Hollywood anecdotes do not stop: all the girls he took to Hepburn, the nights spent with an undecided Spencer Tracy, George Cukor's gay parties, the threesomes with Lana Turner, Ava Gardner and Frank Sinatra, his anecdotes of J. Edgar Hoover, Laurence Olivier, Walter Pidgeon, the secrets of the Duchess of Windsor, who held the reins of sexual mischief in their marriage...

    The documentary follows the traditional structure of interviews, archival material, music, without forcing the viewer into a judgment about Scotty Bowers. There is no moralism here or pharisee positions. It is a dramatic portrait, perhaps sordid for some, of a man who forgives abuse, but who does not grasp it in all its dimensions. In spite of the humor, the vintage music and the images of the famous, it is a very moving portrait: the memories of family, the evidence of all the pain that he still does not recognize; the exaggerated and unhealthy accumulation of his memorabilia in different houses, the deterioration of his home, Lois's reluctance to know her husband's past, her nights singing in nightclubs while he lovingly watches her...

    This is a revealing film, a humane, compassionate and open portrait that, as expected, was ignored by the Oscars, Globes, associations of critics, film-clubs and independent filmmakers.
  • Scotty Bowers provided sexual partners for Hollywood's rich and famous he claims included Cary Grant, Randolph Scott, Ava Gardner, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Katharine Hepburn, and Spencer Tracy for years. The Matt Tyrnauer-directed documentary, 'Scotty and the Secret History of Hollywood,' is a fascinating and undeniably irresistible look into that world. Entertaining as it is, the movie leaves its its documentary subject's surface mostly unscratched - not fully written.
  • Pandering to a tabloid worthy attention seeker, this, so called doc, wastes both the film maker's talent and whatever meager audience's time. Cary Grant once said something to the effect, after you die they can and will say anything they want about you. Pathetic but accurate.
  • I'm a huge fan of classic Hollywood. Watch movies, consume documentaries, listen to podcasts, and read books on the subject. I was looking forward to this documentary, having heard so much about it. Not particularly well made nor revealing. Really, more a portrait of this one man than it is about Hollywood - and since I didn't find Scotty particularly interesting or likable, I turned it off.

    Watch The Celluloid Closet instead.
  • staciarose2020 March 2022
    6/10
    Sad
    Warning: Spoilers
    This is a tragic story. I know it's scandalous, and interesting old Hollywood. At the heart you see Scotty was lying to himself and in denial. He was molested, had a rough and poor childhood, then he ran his shady business. You see the house is hoarded badly, and then he says his only child was dead at 23. A back alley abortion. This along with the molestation is his damage.
  • I love celebrity autobiographies but I don't like gossip. So I thought I wouldn't care much for this documentary but watched it anyway, and came away surprised at how interesting I thought it was. It's not that juicy, and it's not that revelatory, but it surely proves that Scotty is no liar. (Almost) every word that comes out of his mouth rings true and sincere, and he has old friends and lots of photos to back up his claims. The film is part comedy, part tragedy, and partly a grim look at what hoarding can do to a person. Much like the interesting documentary "The Projectionist", it's a big raunchy, but it doesn't make the subject out to be any sort of hero or any sort of demon. He just was, he existed. Scotty had a very interesting life, whether you approve of it or not, and I'm glad that he told his story.
  • Pumping gas by day and clients by night tinsel town pimp extroadanaire Scotty Bowers made quite a living in the 50s catering to the Hollywood set in search of utter discretion. Walter Pidgeon, Charles Laughton, George Cukor, Tracy and Hepburn even the Duke and Duchess of Wales were clients. At 90 he revisits his days of glory when he was both player and manager doing a threesome with Ava Gardner and Lana Turner among others. He even brought Al Kinsey to gang bangs for "research" purposes. It is pretty saucy stuff, a jolt to the film historian.

    Ancient Scotty is in excellent shape reaching final count down to the century mark as he climbs ladders and displays an enthusiasm decades younger than he is. Unapologetic and proud he says he provided fun to an uptight society where morals clauses held famous careers in the balance. No doubt his unique service proved invaluable to his customers.

    With the real story 50 years in the past, director Matt Tyraneur has to deal with Bowers a pack rat of immense proportions stumbling through mountains of trash in a couple of deeded properties, climbing ladders, stealing cat food, coveting a sidewalk toilet and tooling around LA while he dishes on Hudson, Grant and the good times. There is also testimony to his friendship and loyalty and dependability seeing through a scheduled trick the day he found out his daughter was dead. Yes, I know.

    Scotty and the Secret History of Hollywood is a by product of the major success of his tell all tome Full Service. Purportedly it has even more salacious detail as Bowers re-buries legends. But why? He was extremely well off and took so much pride in keeping things on the down low for these folks while alive. There was also a degree of underground fame to go along with it. But even his wife thinks he's a sleaze for doing it, especially since he's in the final stretch of an exciting life (Chicago streets as a kid, action in the Pacific as a marine) to stumble and fall as he rats out the people that gave him an excellent living. It's a lousy last act, the gossip of an ingrate dishing titillating trash while living in the middle of it. You might want to shower after watching it for a number of reasons.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    If I come away with mixed feelings, generally I feel like a documentarian has done a good job if his initial intention was to create a "fly-on-the-wall" style documentary. Following the titular character, Scott Bowens, the documentary recalls his experiences as Hollywood's premiere male madame for over three decades.

    On one hand, it really captured the queer and sexual underground of Hollywood's golden age: under the razor thin veneer of everyman relatability and conventional conservative morality that the Hollywood Studio system tried to project, there was lasciviousness, opulence and hedonism. On one hand, the materialist in you thinks "damn, did he get to live the life." On the other, just with simple questions and strategically-framed shots, you get the feeling that this is an incredibly damaged man that has never dealt with his trauma. Particularly, his downplaying of child molestation almost to the point of non-existence, candidness about bestiality, apparent PTSD from the war/losing his brother and becoming a male prostitute almost immediately thereafter, Scotty might be the poster boy for escapism and denialism through excess. While some might say that focus on his compulsive hoarding seems like filler, I disagree. If one understands the psychology behind habitual hoarding, especially in the way he does it--actively collecting used toilets on the side of the road, for example--it does visually make you feel like he's clinging onto something he's lost and never reconciled because he can no longer live the gregarious escapist life he used to.

    Without doubt the man is still charming in his 90s, and seems genuinely honest, totally disinterested in embellishment. At the very least that makes for an interesting story. I feel like the documentary could have been more fleshed out though. Specifically, I don't think it set the exuberant, hopeful tone of booming post-war America as much as it could have, nor the moral puritanism. McCarthyism, the vice squads and Red/Pink Scare made it truly dangerous to even be gay or smoke weed in the 50s, and that environment of fear and mistrust that set the stage for Bowens success was not adequately expounded upon. It also would have been nice to see how his role changed through the 60s and 70s, considering both the sexual revolution and the fact that Scotty apparently sold the gas station and become a party bartender.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This might have been good if they had focused exclusively on what transpired in Hollywood from the early days through the modern era. We get some of that but we have to endure watching Scotty feeding his cat, looking for toilets, and admiring the clutter in his house. A one word message to the folks who produced this flabby excuse for a documentary film...."editing".
  • mseamon24 March 2019
    Wish I could have been there during the golden time
  • True story of Scotty Bowers. He was a young. Handsome guy who (in the 1950s and 60s) provided men and women to closeted actors and actresses. Most of the movie consists of Bowers (still alive and in his 90s) talking to the camera and recounting his life. It also has him visiting people he worked with who back up his story 100%. There's also talk about who was gay back then. Naturally all the stars they talk about are conveniently dead. There's also some hardcore gay sex footage. (It's not rated but would easily get an NC-17 if it were).

    This isn't a bad movie but I was bored silly. I actually dozed off a few times! The film says the same things multiple times over and none of the revelations of who was gay are shocking. It just shows us again and again that Bowers is a compulsive hoarder--the state of his house is downright disgusting. So it was somewhat interesting but I was bored.
  • Rumors. It emanates especially with its delusion of grandeur of those in Hollywood. From the wicked book of Anger to the Tabloid coverage, there is something fun and oddly addicting with this story. In this film, another rumor-monger is on the fray BUT does he?

    A known hustler during the late Hollywood Golden age, it follows Scotty as he tries to recount his life as a Hollywood's 'favorite gigolo', while preparing for the release of his book. From Scat queens, Closet lesbians and homosexual, Scotty bares it all in an explicit way. No one really would know. The film present proof on his part, very solid ones. But with those big names, only stories. Long stories. A very interesting swan song for a man of the trade, its really difficult to think if he is truly telling the truth, because I hate to speculate for the dead. The film is very blank canvas. You see what it wants to tell. Anyhow a very interesting film from the vantage point of a very great storyteller. Would rewatch. [4/5]
  • A suppose tell-all-tell of sex and more sex in Hollywood back in the good old days. Is it true? Maybe? Is it all true? I doubt it? While most likely some of these sexual encounters occured; clearly others are a vast figment of imagination used to sell a book and now this documentary. Scotty seems a nice enough man and hats off to him for his World War II service as a marine. However, being a prostitute and pimp for a number of actors is nothing to be proud of. See this film only out of curiosity and take it with a grain of salt.
  • DavidsGuy27 July 2022
    Those who've built up Scotty Bowers as some sort of Hollywood "legend" are ridiculous. Legend of what? Pimping and exploiting? No one likes an opportunistic kiss-and-tell. Yes, the doc holds one's interest to a certain extent, but it's also sad that Bowers ended up a hoarder who wore the same clothes every day, shoplifted cat food, and drove around town looking for used toilets to add to the junk he hoarded. Even his wife didn't feel comfortable with his past and the circle of "friends" he had. I did enjoy the various photos and films of gay and bi men displaying their bouncy, flapping danglers -- anybody who says they didn't is either a liar, a pinchy prude, or sexually dead -- but so much of this makes one want to take a shower afterward.
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