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Detroit Rock City (film)

1999 film by Adam Rifkin From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Detroit Rock City (film)
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Detroit Rock City is a 1999 American teen comedy film directed by Adam Rifkin and written by Carl V. Dupré. It tells of four teenage boys in a Kiss tribute band who try to see their idols in a concert in Detroit in 1978. It took its title from the Kiss song of the same name. The film stars Edward Furlong, Giuseppe Andrews, James DeBello, Sam Huntington, the members of Kiss (Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, Ace Frehley and Peter Criss), Natasha Lyonne and Lin Shaye.

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The film was primarily shot in Canada, such as at Cedarbrae Collegiate Institute in Toronto and Copps Coliseum in Hamilton, but also at Fox Theatre in Detroit, Michigan, United States. The film received mixed reviews from critics and grossed approximately $6 million against a $17 million budget.[2] It is a 1970s nostalgia film.[3]

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Plot

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In 1978 Cleveland, Ohio, four rebellious teenage boys – Hawk, Lex, Trip Verudie, and Jeremiah "Jam" Bruce – play in "Mystery", a Kiss cover band, and prepare to see their idols in concert in Detroit, Michigan the following night. Their hopes are dashed when Jam's religiously conservative mother finds their tickets and burns them before having Jam transferred to a Catholic boarding school.

After Trip wins tickets and backstage passes from a radio contest in Detroit, the boys, with leader Hawk disguised as pizza deliveryman, rescue Jam from the boarding school by drugging Father Phillip McNulty using a pizza topped with hallucinogen mushrooms before setting off for Detroit in the Volvo of Lex's mother to collect the tickets. En route, they get into a road rage incident with disco fanatics Kenny and Bobby after Trip throws a slice of pizza on their windshield. They beat up the duo and continue their journey before picking up Kenny's girlfriend, Christine, who dumped Kenny due to his behavior.

Upon arriving in Detroit, the boys discover that Trip did not stay on the phone long enough to give the radio station his information, resulting in the tickets being given to the next caller. While exiting the building, they find the Volvo missing and deduce that Christine stole it. The four split up to find Kiss tickets and the Volvo, planning to regroup in 105 minutes. Hawk sees a scalper who suggests that he enter a male stripping contest to raise money for tickets. He gets drunk and loses the contest after vomiting, but is offered payment for the company and has sex with Amanda Finch, an older woman. After being paid, he locates the scalper, only to discover that his tickets are sold out. Trip goes to a convenience store, hoping to mug a younger child for his ticket, but the boy's older brother, Chongo, and his friends confront and threaten him for $200. He then plans to rob the store with a Stretch Armstrong doll disguised as a gun, but ends up receiving $150 after thwarting a genuine robbery attempt. Trip gives the money to Chongo's gang, who assault him regardless and steal his wallet.

Lex sneaks backstage with the concert loading crew but is caught and tossed over a fence where he tames a group of vicious dogs with a Frisbee, then saves Christine and the Volvo from two car thieves (who are responsible for stealing the car) at a nearby chop shop. Jam encounters his mother at an anti-Kiss rally, who takes his drumsticks before dragging him to a nearby church for confession with a perverted priest who is more interested in salacious conversation than an actual confession. He is then greeted by classmate Beth Bumstein, who is moving to Ann Arbor. After admitting their feelings for each other, they have sex before parting ways, agreeing to maintain contact with each other. Jam, imbued with new confidence, returns to the rally and criticizes his mother's domineering ways and hypocrisy, saying that her extreme religious views and controlling attitude have only caused him to despise religion and rebel. He ultimately breaks her spirit by labelling her as a lousy mother and proclaiming to her and the rally attendees that he lost his virginity in a confessional booth. He then demands his drumsticks back, one of which she broke in half. She complies and apologizes to him, reminding the crowd, "They grow up fast, don't they?".

When the boys meet empty-handed, Jam suggests beating each other up to imply having been mugged for their tickets. Upon their arrival at Cobo Hall, the guards initially doubt the boys' claims, until Trip points out Chongo's gang, who are just entering, as their assailants. When the guards search them, they find Trip's wallet with his Kiss Army picture ID and money, then confiscate Chongo's tickets and give them to the boys before escorting him, his little brother, and his friends out of the concert. The quartet enters the concert hall as Kiss plays their song Detroit Rock City. Peter Criss then throws a drumstick, which Jam joyfully and excitedly catches.[4]

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Cast

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Release

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Box office

Detroit Rock City opened in 1,802 theaters on August 13, 1999, and earned $2,005,512 in its opening weekend, ranking number 13 in the domestic box office.[5] By the end of its run, it had grossed only $4,217,115 with an additional $1,608,199 from international sales, bringing its worldwide total gross to $5,825,314. Against an estimated $17 million budget, it was a box office bomb.[2]

Critical reception

Detroit Rock City received mixed reviews from critics. Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes shows that out of 43 reviews, it has a 51% rating. The website's critics consensus reads, "Silly plot, over-the-top directing style."[6] On Metacritic, it has a 33/100 rating based on 18 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable" reviews.[7]

Home media

Detroit Rock City was released via VHS and DVD on December 21, 1999.[4] DVD special features include four audio commentaries (director Rifkin, selected cast and crew members, and all four original Kiss members), deleted scenes, multi-angle views of the Kiss concert, an instructional segment featuring a step-by-step guitar lesson for "Rock and Roll All Nite", original screen test footage, and DVD-ROM features.

In December 2007, the film was re-released on DVD as an exclusive bonus fifth disc contained within Kissology Volume Three: 1992–2000.[8] It was only available with initial pre-orders sold during VH1 Classic's 24 Hours of Kissmas weekend marathon.

The film was released on Blu-ray in April 2015, containing additional special features, not in the original DVD release.[9]

Soundtrack

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Quick Facts Soundtrack album by various artists, Released ...
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The soundtrack was released on August 3, 1999, by Mercury Records. The album features a mix of classic rock songs and covers of classic rock songs by contemporary artists. It also features a new song by KISS titled "Nothing Can Keep Me From You".

Track listing

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See also

References

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