It was a cool, crisp November evening, while five teenagers were hustling and bustling around my house excitedly getting ready for their very first showing of the live version of their all time favorite movie. They knew it would be the best night of their lives. The night of my 15th birthday party, my friends and I all piled into my parents car around 11:00 PM and headed off down the road to the Heights Theater. The movie we are about to see is an all time classic. The Rocky Horror Picture Show is the best cult film of all time. The movie has all the three basic elements it should have. It has funny audience participation, wonderful acting, and a great story line.
Before the beginning of the movie, cast members will wander around the theater, and yell out various lines from the movie. When the movie curtain starts to roll its way up, you see a bright pair of red lips singing. When the lips appear, people will start to yell out their favorite audience participation lines. One of my favorite spots in the movie to shout out lines would have to be in the very beginning when the lips on screen are singing the song "Science Fiction, Double Feature." The song is full of participation lines and props that people can bring to the theater with them. There is one line that I particularly like that comes from this song and it goes a little something like this; "and from a deadly place it came from (where?) outer space! (Thank you!)." Another example of audience participation/prop use would be when one of the characters, Dr. Scott, goes flying through the walls of the laboratory in his wheelchair. As he is rolling down the ramp from where he flew through, another character, Brad, yells out "Great SCOTT" and that’s when everyone takes the toilet paper they have brought with them and throws it all over the place. Once all the toilet paper has been collected by the cast leader, they pick out one person from the audience and DOUSE them with toilet paper and it’s the funniest sight one will ever see!
Even though there is a great amount of audience participation, one really has to turn your attention to the actors in the movie. It takes a special kind of person to really understand the movie they are in.
When the lights come up the audience is immediately thrown into an old and dingy movie theatre complete with popcorn strewn across the floor. It is within this set that deep social commentary is made throughout the
The story begins abruptly, as we find our mock heroes out in the desert en route to the savvy resort of Las Vegas. The author uses a tense hitchhiker as a mode, or an excuse, for a flashback that exposes the plot. An uncertain character picked up in the middle of the desert who Raoul Duke, the main character, feels the need to explain things to, to help him rest easy. They had two bags of grass, seventy-five pellets of mescaline, five sheets of high-powered blotter acid, a salt shaker half-full of cocaine, and a whole galaxy of multicolored uppers, downers, screamers, laughers....Also a quart of tequila, a quart of rum, a case of Budweiser, a pint of raw either, and two dozen amyls. They were on assignment from a fashionable sporting magazine in New York, to cover the 4th Annual "Mint 400" dirt bike and dune buggy race.
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas by Hunter S Thompson is a novel that takes a journalistic approach to Raoul Duke’s drug trip to Las Vegas. His point of view is unreliable because one does not know for sure whether he is experiencing these events, or if it is the drugs speaking for him. He is with his Lawyer, Dr. Gonzo, and they are attempting to find the American Dream. Both are convinced that they can somehow find this in Las Vegas, and set out together to do so. In reality, the different aspects of Las Vegas are representative of the actual American Dream, which, realistically, is disappointing and unachievable today.
Each interaction between them is very back and forth, and watching the show can feel like watching a tennis match. The show even had to bring in a dialogue coach to get the actors to talk faster. These details make it so you are always entertained by what is going on in the scene, and can always pick up on new things every time you
Right off the bat, the acting in this movie is amazing. Many of the actors in
In the book, “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas”, Hunter Thompson begins the book with an epigraph from Dr. Johnson stating, “He who makes a beast of himself gets rid of the pain of being a man.” With this quote it starts the book off with setting the book’s mood and explains through the book what a person’s willing to go to escape reality and the consequences from the burdens and their expectations. This essay will discuss how Raoul Duke and Doctor Gonzo express the epigraph through the consumption of numerous forms of drug use and absurd behavior, as well as several forms of Duke and Gonzo’s actions being an uprising against life and a solution to discarding the pain and other events happening due to the 1960’s countercultural movement. The
THE GODFATHER, made in 1974, details the Corleone crime family in Manhattan during the mid 1930s. The Don, Vito Corleone, played by Marlon Brando, leads his organization against a relentless narcotics push by a rival family, the Sollozzos. Vito Caleone does not want anything to do with drugs because he believes they will be the downfall of the Mafia. The story, covering a ten year time period, offers a rich tapestry of Mafia life from the inside, drawing the audience into witnessing the transfer of power within a close-knit family
As an audience, we become involved in the plot not through learning about characters’ backgrounds and traits. Instead, we learn information at the same time through the mechanics of the plot and editing. We are made to work to understand the workings of the plot. As we watch the film unfold, the editing takes the along for the ride rather than watching from a distance. the audience and characters sweat together as surprises arise in the well-thought out plan and the way the movie ...
With popcorn and slushie in hand, I sank into the theater seat prepared to relive my childhood. The theater was pretty packed, which was unsurprising considering I was at a venue located near several college campuses that were full of other 20-something-year-olds like me who have waited 13 years for this moment. I went to a 6:30
Cult Films, a.k.a Cult Classics, became popular around the 1970s. Cult films are known for their dedicated and passionate followers that engage in repeated viewings, quoting dialogue, and/or audience participation. In the 1970s many of this movies were considered underground films and midnight showing movies. A main feature of a cult film is that it breaks social norms or is considered taboo. Cult films are many times considered controversial and have been kept alive by their dedicated fans. Many cult films include an excess of violence, gore, profanity, sexuality, or a combination of all. This leads many films to be controversial, censored, or even banned. One of the most popular cult films is “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” (1975), many
The movie Fight Club made a great achievement in the film industry, and significantly depicted the social system of the late 20th century. According to most of the reviewers, the success of the film lies behind the fact that almost every American man over 25-years of age is going to inevitably see some of himself in the movie: the frustration, the confusion, the anger at living in a culture where the old rules have broken down and one makes his way with so many fewer cultural cues and guideposts.
I thought it was interesting that we can hear the actors performing out front, but what we see is the back side of the scenery flats, the stage manager trying to keep the action flowing, and the various antics of the actors offstage between their exits and entrances. The actor that played Selsdon was by far my favorite in the way he delivered his lines as if he were actually extremely intoxicated.
It is my hope that this paper will enable the reader to gain a better insight into how a spectator can engage with a character because character engagement is vital in understanding and enjoying a character and the film or series in which the character
Movies take us inside the skin of people quite different from ourselves and to places different from our routine surroundings. As humans, we always seek enlargement of our being and wanted to be more than ourselves. Each one of us, by nature, sees the world with a perspective and selectivity different from others. But, we want to see the world through other’s eyes; imagine with other’s imaginations; feel with other’s hearts, at a same time as with our own. Movies offer us a window onto the wider world, broadening our perspective and opening our eyes to new wonders.
The film perpetuates and challenges the dominant ideas that it is always good to be involved in extracurricular activities. Being involved with the school more than just being a student and performing in the classroom is a good way to become deep into the student body. Representing the school in various ways of having East High pride. Although the movie wasn’t completely about wanting to improve their ways of becoming academically successful such as the movies that were watched before in the class. High School Musical still reminded the viewers that extracurricular activities are important on resumes too.