Bulking up, Christian Bale style

SoylentGreen

Don Juan
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Hey skinny dudes, my brothers, check this out. In the Machinist, Christian Bale got his weight down to 121 lbs from about 185 lbs, which is where he was around American Psycho. Then, ONE year later when he was filming Batman Begins, he was UP to 230 lbs. ONE YEAR LATER, 100 pounds heavier!

Heres the link to the image:
http://www.empireonline.com/images/features/buffed-up-actors/christian-bale-batman-begins.jpg

Now here's a link to a basic outline of how he did it:
http://www.motleyhealth.com/article...ness-workouts-for-batman-the-dark-knight.html

Or you can just read this:
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Batman’s Fitness Workouts:

The best workouts to follow to get a body like Batman would probably be a combination of Bruce Lee’s strength training and Sly Stallone’s training. Also plyometric workouts used by boxers would also be required to improve speed and agility. Bruce Lee had one of the most athletic bodies of any actor ever seen on screen, and Sly Stallone’s training was designed to bulk him up to look the part in Rocky 2. Christian Bale’s physique in Batman Returns and The Dark Knight is really a good combination of these two systems. The keys areas are:

Compound Weight Training
Intensive Interval Training
Explosive Plyometric Circuit Training
With this is mind, here is a workout routine that will get you strong, fast, agile and flexible like The Batman. The workout is split over three days, so can be repeated once a week with an extra day rest after Day 1 which involves the greatest load bearing exercise:

Christian Bales Batman Workout - 3 Day Split:

For each of these exercises aim to complete three sets of 8-12 repetitions. Ideally the final set should allow you to work to failure, or close to failure. Ensure plenty of rest between sets of exercises, unless they are supersetted.

Batman Workout Day 1:

Chin-ups supersetted with bent over rows
This superset is used as a warm-up before the main compound exercises are done. Chin-ups and bent over rows are both compound movements which work the upper body well and also provide large range of motion. Chin-ups / pull ups are a great power exercise. Unfortunately being even just a little overweight can make the exercise extremely difficult. Modified pull ups are of course allowed to ensure that the workout is completed. If you prefer cable rows can be performed instead of bent over rows.
Squats
Squats are considered by many to be the pièce de résistance for any successful strength training program. They are the key exercise in the MotleyHealth Core Four workout, which is designed for quick strength gains and fat loss.
High Pulls
With the “high pull” a barbell is lifted quickly from the floor by extending the hips and knees. As the bar reaches the knees, the shoulders are rapidly raised while keeping the barbell close to the thighs, and then the body is extended with a small jump movement. Elbows are flexed out to the sides, pulling bar up to neck height. This is an explosive movement, similar to a clean, but without the squatting movement. Start with a light bar to ensure that you are comfortable with the movement, before adding weight. A fuller description of the high pull is available on ExRx.
Clean and Press
The clean and press is a good exercise for overall mass building as well as power, most of the major muscle groups are utilized during the execution of this movement. To perform, a barbell is lifted from the floor to the chest in one continuous motion. Once it reaches the chest, the bar is the pressed overhead.
Batman Workout Day 2:

Sprints - Speed Training
Day 2 is dedicated to speed training and intensive cardio / interval training. Sprinting is an excellent form of field interval training. Utilise a football pitch to help pace out your sprints. Start out jogging around a field / pitch at a comfortable pace, and then when ready sprint flat out over a set distance. The length of a football pitch (or width) is ideal. After the spring, return to jogging, recover, and then repeat. Aim to build up the number of sprints completed in a session, and then aim to increase speed.
Squat jumps
The squat jump is exactly as it sounds - a squat followed by an explosive jump. In a normal squat a weight is lowered on the shoulders until the back of the thighs are almost horizontal, and then the bar/weight is slowly raised. With a squat jump, the lift is explosive, with the aim to lift the body onto the toes and leave the ground momentarily. An excellent plyometric exercise. Ideally a heavy punch bag should be used instead of a bar to avoid shoulder/neck injury.
Lunges
Lunges are another excellent leg strengthening exercise. Either perform with a barbell across the shoulders, or two dumbbells (this builds grip strength). Or perform bodyweight lunges to build up muscular endurance.

Batman Workout Day 3:

Dumbbell Flyes followed by Bench Press
Start the sessions with flyes as a pre-exhaust, followed quickly with bench press. The bench press is another of the Motley Health Core Four weight training exercises.
Clap Push Ups
Clap Push-Ups are an explosive way to perform push ups. Like the squat jumps, they turn a slow steady exercise into an fast, plyometric one. Simple start as with a normal push up in the plank position, lower your body until the chest just touches the floor, then raise quickly with the arms, and rapidly push up so that your hands leave the floor, clap once, and land, and repeat. If this is too much, then start with standard puch ups, but perform them as quickly as possible.

Lateral Jumps
Lateral jumps are a simple but intensive cardio workout. Like skipping, they build muscular endurance in the legs, allowing you to keep moving for longer - essential for martial artists and boxers. A great power exercise. To work up from this, box jumps can be added - simply a sideways (lateral) jump up onto a box (e.g. Reebok stepper)
Batman’s Diet:

Diet would have played an important role in such an intensive training regime. Meals need to have a good balance of quality protein sources, and carbs in the form of salads, vegetables and fruits, while maintaining low blood sugar levels to ensure that fat is burnt and not stored. A starvation diet is no good for building muscle and getting fit, in fact when working out intensively calorific consumption generally needs to be higher than average.

Christian Bale is a vegetarian, so whereas most people can take their protein from lean meats Bale would have been concentrating on high quality protein from eggs, cottage cheese, fat free cheese, milk and protein shakes. Supplementing the diet with nutritional snacks and drinks is often essential during intensive regimes, especially for vegetarians.

When working so intensively, meals need to be eaten more often, to ensure a constant supply of energy and proteins to the muscles. Bale would have had to eat every 3 hours to ensure that he was building and repairing muscle tissue, rather than wearing it down.

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Unbelievable!

I am wondering if any of you "fitness types" can tell me if this is really possible if one didn't have the luxury of personal trainers and a hollywood schedule that allowed for intense training everyday. One of my friends says that because he was naturally 185 lbs that that is the reason he was able to bulk up so quickly.

Thoughts???
 

Quagmire911

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Yea, cause he was 185 and lean as f*** before, it wouldn't take him all that long compared with others to get back to that. And considering he won't have had that much more muscle on him than in American Psycho (considering bodyfat in both films), it was doable for him.

If you have average genetics and your new to weightlifting, gaining 20-30 pounds of muscle is a reasonable goal in you first year, more if you are gifted.

I would use a different routine than this though, such as :

http://www.sosuave.net/forum/showthread.php?t=125444

Or other's on ironaddicts.com.
 

j0n024

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Plus the fact that he's rich doesnt really need to do anything in between movies and can put his whole focus on either gaining or losing weight really is in his favor as well.

Plus he wasnt in "Batman returns," That was Michael keaton....and I love that batman especially the part where he rips off his mask..so awesome.
 

Alle_Gory

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With this routine, all you need is a personal chef, a trainer and all the time in the world.
 

ProDJ26

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Alle_Gory said:
With this routine, all you need is a personal chef, a trainer and all the time in the world.
like most of hollywood
 

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Throttle

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ProDJ26 said:
like most of hollywood
yeah right... like a handful of people in hollywood. most of 'em are just trying to get by, like the rest of us.
 

SoylentGreen

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So...is it safe to assume that someone who didn't have ALL day to workout and a personal trainer could gain maybe HALF that much in a year. His personal trainer Neil Mctaggart?? made an ebook. So lets say I had the ebook, ate everything Christian ate and worked out HALF as much as he did. Or even worked out 3/4's as much. Could I gain fifty pounds at least? I know someone mentioned 20 pounds as a realistic goal...I'm not challenging your opinion, just curious.

BTW, I have gained 7.5 pounds in the last four weeks. I was 124 and am now 131.5 - just by working out, eating every two hours and drinking one "Ensure" drink per day (355 cal per drink). I imagine if I continue on this path, which averages out at a gain of 1.87 pounds a week, I could almost gain 100 pounds in a year...if my body type would even allow for that.
 

EFFORT

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SoylentGreen said:
So...is it safe to assume that someone who didn't have ALL day to workout

no, no one works out all day. All that "he has all day" to work out bs is just a big myth. Do you really think someone is working out all day... 8-15 waking hours?

and a personal trainer could gain maybe HALF that much in a year.

your looking at things wrong

His personal trainer Neil Mctaggart?? made an ebook. So lets say I had the ebook, ate everything Christian ate and worked out HALF as much as he did. Or even worked out 3/4's as much. Could I gain fifty pounds at least? I know someone mentioned 20 pounds as a realistic goal...I'm not challenging your opinion, just curious.

still looking at things wrong. You seem stuck in this "batman workout" box. There is no "batman workout". How to build a body isn't a secret, all the basic fundamentals for doing it are written on this site (and others as well), the "batman workout" came to be because people saw his body and were thinking wow i want that , just like 300 spartans or fight club. Since people want it, its a great way of creating a product that words the same fundamental concepts of building a body in a cool neat looking "new secret like method" and selling it to a bunch of people to make some money. I assure you that Christian did nothing special or new to achieve his results other than following the basics.

BTW, I have gained 7.5 pounds in the last four weeks. I was 124 and am now 131.5 - just by working out, eating every two hours and drinking one "Ensure" drink per day (355 cal per drink). I imagine if I continue on this path, which averages out at a gain of 1.87 pounds a week, I could almost gain 100 pounds in a year...if my body type would even allow for that.

Your focus needs to be the where to start thread for the rest of the year. Focus on that which has you doing all the correct fundamentals (eating, getting strong on big lifts, sleeping, gpp )
bold
 

Throttle

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the only relevant differences between christian bale and anyone else are as follows:

He is extremely disciplined and motivated.

He may have some endomorphic genetic advantages.

He's getting paid for this, and in spite of his acting chops & box office draw, if he doesn't look the part, he doesn't get the part.

He probably has more trouble sleeping regularly than most people, given the many, varied demands on his time.

-----

Look, I don't sit around here bragging about who I know or have met, and I certainly haven't even met any A or B list movie stars. But I've known a few people in Hollywood and met a few more, especially on the production side. Several have bailed, tired of the dog-eat-dog world and lack of sleep. Same goes for my ex-hedge fund buddies, actually. You guys with your fantasies...

What you need to be asking yourself is WHY you want to do all this. Do you honestly think you'll look like Bale when you're been doing this for 6 months? If you don't find your motivation, you'll flit around from one gimmick to another. If you don't nail down the basics, you can always be proud of the 5 lbs. of water weight and 2.5 lbs of fat you gained...and later lost. Again.
 

synergy1

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What I can vouch for is that these routines will add a lot, not just in terms of bulking up, but in terms of overall athletic ability. I have since given up doing regular splits, as lifting weights in a controlled way adds nothing ( actually I find adding mass for that sake alone subtracts - I digress). Pull ups, Olympic lifts, and plyometrics are the only way to go if you want to make real gains.

However, someone already touched on this; no one should go into this expecting the gains this guy gets. He might have genetics working on his side, and he certainly has time and money to help him get the optimal nutrition in order to maintain this level of performance. I would wager that most people would not even perform a squat with the correct form.
 

Da Realist

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Actually, what he had to do isn't too much compared to some of the stuff I did. Imagine doing day 1 and 3 together and then day 2 right after that; all of this is in one day but 4 times a week. But he did it for the look while I did it to compete, so there is a big difference.
 
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