Eye For Film >> Movies >> The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975) Film Review
The Rocky Horror Picture Show
Reviewed by: Gabriella Trybalska
The Rocky Horror Picture Show is... hmm, very difficult to describe.
Think gothic horror colliding with rock musical, shot through with kinky transvestitism, a twist of sci-fi and a large dose of humour.
The story follows straight couple, Brad and Janet (Barry Bostwick and Susan Sarandon), who, when their car breaks down, find themselves lost in the middle of nowhere, as it is getting dark. They knock on the door of a very scary house for some assistance.
Here we are introduced to the charismatically camp, Frank N. Furter (Tim Curry), his hunchback butler Riff Raff (a wan-looking Richard O'Brien) and a bunch of outlandish house guests: Magenta (from the planet Transsexual), Columbia and Edie (who lives in the freezer), and not forgetting Dr "zeig heil" Scott.
This is positively the worst night that Brad and Janet could have come knocking: Dr Frank's little project, Rocky, is being brought to life.
The Rocky Horror Show almost faded into obscurity when it first came out in 1975, that was until it began to be aired in the midnight slots and quickly earned a cult following.
A social phenomenon, it has brought new meaning to the term "audience participation" with Rocky Horror fans putting on their own show that is almost as important as the film itself.
Fans typically don transvestite garb, sing along and dance in the aisles, in front of the screen, bring their own props for squirting or throwing around the room at appropriate moments, and add their own lines (to a script which many fans probably remember better than the scriptwriter himself).
The songs that O'Brien helped pen are fantastic: taking on a life outside of the film. Who hasn't found themselves jumping around to the Time Warp at some late night shindig?
Curry's larger-than-life performance as Frank N. Furter is utterly brilliant (especially his singing) from the beginning to the stunning ending.
This is possibly the best musical ever written.
Reviewed on: 08 Apr 2001