Question about Rocky Horror Picture Show
April 1st, 2008 by DanielleI’ve been meaning to ask a question about The Rocky Horror Picture Show and wasn’t quite sure where it fit on the blog, so I figured I would just make a brief post.
After watching the film and experiencing a less extreme version of the whole callback phenomenon last week, I was wondering how this interaction with the text began. Are the callbacks something that have always existed with the film? I was just curious because I don’t think I have ever heard of this type of participation and interaction with other films, so I was wondering if this phenomenon was particular to Rocky Horror or a part of a broader fan practice that I was just not aware of. If it is particular to Rocky Horror, then, I am also curious as to what it is about the film that inspires this sort of fan participation when other cult films have not attracted the same type of response. Can anyone help me out?
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Definitely not an isolated form of audience engagement but it is a very unique example regardless. I went to a screening of the director’s cut of Blade Runner and people were doing similar callbacks but in a less regimented and pervasive manner.
Less popular but very campy (if not just altogether bad) examples include the classic Troll 2, Silent Night, Deadly Night, Sleepaway Camp, etc which all screen at midnight theaters around the country but do not share TRHPS’s legendary ongoing theatrical release.
“The Graduate” has developed its own set of callbacks here at Swat.