Detroit Rock City (film)

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Detroit Rock City
Detroit rock city ver1.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Adam Rifkin
Produced by Barry Levine
Gene Simmons
Written by Carl V. Dupré
Starring Edward Furlong
Sam Huntington
Giuseppe Andrews
James DeBello
Lin Shaye
Melanie Lynskey
Natasha Lyonne
and featuring Kiss as themselves
Music by J. Peter Robinson
Kiss
Thin Lizzy
The Runaways
Van Halen
Black Sabbath
Blue Öyster Cult
Pantera
Cheap Trick
AC/DC
Cinematography John R. Leonetti
Editing by Mark Goldblatt
Peter Schink
Distributed by New Line Cinema
Release date(s) August 13, 1999
Running time 95 min.
Country United States
Language English
Budget $15,000,000
Box office $24,217,115[1]

Detroit Rock City is a 1999 American comedy film about four teenagers in a Kiss cover band who try to see their idols in Detroit in 1978. Comparable to Rock 'n' Roll High School, Dazed and Confused, The Stöned Age, and I Wanna Hold Your Hand, Detroit Rock City tells a coming of age story through a filter of 1970s music and culture in the United States. The movie ultimately took its title from the Kiss song of the same name. It flopped at the box office, grossing fewer than five million dollars domestically, while the final gross of $24,217,115 barely passed the budget. The film became a cult classic for Kiss fans, rock music fans, and metalheads in general.

The film was shot at Cedarbrae Collegiate Institute in Scarborough, Ontario, Canada, and other Ontario locations.[2] Other Ontario locations include Copps Coliseum, Hamilton, Ontario.

Contents

Storyline [edit]

The movie opens in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1978. Hawk (Edward Furlong), Lex (Giuseppe Andrews), Trip (James DeBello), and Jam (Sam Huntington) are four rebellious teenagers who emulate and tribute KISS to a degree in their own garage band called "Mystery." Having discovered his secret cache of KISS albums, Jam's ultra-conservative and religiously hysterical mother, Mrs. Bruce (Lin Shaye), races up to the home and drags Jam to the car, throwing Jam's Love Gun album into a trash can.

The three remaining boys discover the next morning that their KISS concert tickets are missing, figuring that Trip's jacket carrying the tickets got swapped with Jam's. Jam is not able to retrieve the tickets from his jacket before school due to his mother watching over him as he dresses. Jam's mother later discovers the tickets and destroys them in front of Jam and the others, by setting them on fire.

Mrs. Bruce then drags Jam from his school and has him transferred to a Catholic boarding school. While in tech class, the three remaining boys hear a radio contest for KISS concert tickets at Cobo Hall that night.[3] Trip leaves class, so he can call the contest line and he ends up winning the tickets. The boys then ditch school to bust Jam out of the Catholic school. They take Lex's mom's car, a Volvo 200 series. The trio arrives and Hawk disguises himself as an arriving pizza delivery guy and delivers a pizza ordered by the priest, Father McNulty (Joe Flaherty) who is currently lecturing Jam, that has been spiked with hallucinogenic psilocybin mushrooms. Father McNulty becomes high, allowing them to whisk Jam away.

On the freeway, a Solar Gold 1978 Pontiac Firebird Trans Am, driven by Kenny (Nick Scotti) and Bobby (David Quane), two Italian-American Disco fanatics, along with their girlfriends Christine (Natasha Lyonne) and Barbara (Emmanuelle Chriqui), begins tailgating them. Trip accidentally drops some pizza on his lap and throws the slice of pizza out of the window, where it hits the windshield of the Trans-Am, causing a dispute that results in the enraged Kenny pulling Hawk out of the car and rubbing his face in the pizza on the windshield. Their bullying upsets Christine, who argues with them and leaves, walking down the freeway. The boys then pick up Christine walking along the highway, who decides to accompany them to Detroit.

Upon arrival, they find out that Trip did not stay on the phone long enough to give the radio station his information, forcing the station to give the tickets to the next caller. When coming back outside, Lex notices that the car has been stolen, and they suspect Christine, who they left sleeping in the car. Hawk then states that the boys go their separate ways in order to find KISS tickets, and agree to meet in the same place later.

Hawk finds a scalper (Richard Hillman) who suggests that he enter a strip contest at a nearby stip club to raise money for tickets. Hawk does just that, although he gets extremely drunk beforehand. He doesn't win, but is offered payment for his company by Amanda Finch, an amorous older woman present (Shannon Tweed). They go to her car and she takes his virginity. Afterwards, Hawk declines the money she offered, but she insists, telling him to use it for whatever he wanted to begin with. As Hawk locates the scalper again, however, he runs off, indicating he's all sold out, much to Hawk's dismay.

Trip goes to a local convenience store in the hopes of mugging a younger child to get tickets. He grabs a kid (Cody Jones) in Ace Frehley makeup, but the kid has an older brother, Chongo (Matthew G. Taylor), a giant jock athlete who, with his gang of thugs, threaten to beat him up unless Trip pay them $200.00 for their trouble. Asking them to wait outside, Trip illogically plans to rob the convenience store with a fake gun (in reality a Stretch Armstrong toy) against his better judgement, but ends up thwarting a real robbery attempt at the store, earning him a $150.00 reward and a passionate kiss from the lady cashier (Kristin Booth). Trip meets the thugs in an alleyway behind the store, but the kid decides that Trip didn't meet their demands and has Chango punch Trip in the stomach while taking his wallet.

Lex sneaks into the backstage area with the KISS loading crew to help set up the concert, but is soon discovered and found, causing him to flee from arena security and manages to get to the area where the band's trailer is located. Lex is eventually caught and tossed over a fence by the guards. At first he is menaced by a group of vicious dogs, but earns their trust when he plays frisbee with them. In a nearby building he finds a chained-up Christine and his car in a chop shop with two workers (Kevin Corrigan and Steve Schirripa) who plan to rape her. Lex then uses his newly befriended dogs to chase the two thugs into a back office room, saving Christine and his mom's car. Lex and Christine share a passionate kiss.

Jam encounters his mother who is leading an anti-KISS rally. The furious Mrs. Bruce grabs him and drags him to a church across the street for confession, taking away his drumsticks. He is seen by Beth (Melanie Lynskey), a girl from his school who is in the presence of moving with her parents. She rushes into the church and into the confessional booth where Jam is, finally revealing to him that she's been in love with him since freshman year, but never had the courage to tell him. Jam and Beth then make love right then and there, losing their virginity to one another before the priest returns. Beth promises to contact him once she and her family are settled. Jam, now imbued with new confidence, goes back to the rally to take a stand. Jam finally stands up for himself, getting revenge at his mother for her controlling and domineering ways by yelling at her before the assembled crowd, telling her that forcing religion and morality down his throat are the reasons that he has been rebelling lately, that she has been so blindsided by her fanaticism she's forgotten what's really important, making her a lousy parent. Jam then demands that she return his drumsticks, only receiving one of them as the other is broken in the trash.

When the boys meet up again, none of them have had any luck getting tickets, so in a last-ditch effort, Jam suggests that they beat each other up and say that muggers took their tickets. They do so, unleashing all their angers and frustrations out on one another and, upon arrival at the concert, they tell the guards that they were mugged by four people. The guards do not believe them, despite the boys being bounded in blood, but suddenly Trip points out to the guards the kid, Chongo and the thugs from the store, who are just entering the concert hall. The guards finds Trip's wallet (with his KISS Army picture ID and the $150.00 he got as reward for thwarting the robbery) in their pockets, and hand him the tickets, ejecting the others outside.

Astonished and elated, the boys enter the concert hall and KISS plays the title song of the movie, "Detroit Rock City". Jam catches a drum stick thrown by drummer Peter Criss as the film ends.[4]

Cast [edit]

DVD [edit]

The DVD is on Region 1, Region 2 and Region 4, although the special features differ.

Region 1 special features [edit]

  • Commentary by all four original Kiss members
  • Commentary by Adam Rifkin
  • Commentary by Cast and crew
  • Multi-Angle Views of the Kiss Concert
  • An instructional segment featuring a step-by-step guitar lesson by SongXpress on how to play the Kiss song "Rock -N' Roll All Night"
  • Over 15 Minutes of Deleted Scenes
  • 2 Music Videos "The Boys Are Back in Town" performed by Everclear & "Strutter" performed by The Donnas
  • Original Screen Test Footage
  • DVD-ROM Features: Script-to-Scene Access, website access, email-able trading cards featuring characters from the film, M.A.T.M.O.K. (Mothers Against the Music of Kiss) spoof newsletters, updated cast and crew biographies and filmographies, productions notes

Region 2 special features [edit]

Region 4 special features [edit]

  • Commentary by director Adam Rifkin
  • Individual commentary by all four original Kiss members conducted in interview form by Director, Adam Rifkin
  • Multi-angle views of the Kiss Concert
  • Over 15 minutes of deleted scenes
  • 2 music videos "The Boys Are Back in Town" performed by Everclear & "Strutter" performed by The Donnas
  • Original screen test footage

KISSology Volume Three [edit]

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

Soundtrack [edit]

Detroit Rock City Soundtrack
Soundtrack album by Various Artists
Released August 3, 1999
Genre Hard rock, heavy metal
Length 55:48
Label Mercury

Track listing [edit]

  1. "The Boys Are Back in Town" performed by Everclear
  2. "Shout It Out Loud" performed by KISS
  3. "Runnin' with the Devil" performed by Van Halen
  4. "Cat Scratch Fever" performed by Pantera
  5. "Love Hurts" performed by Nazareth
  6. "Iron Man" performed by Black Sabbath
  7. "Highway To Hell" performed by Marilyn Manson
  8. "20th Century Boy" performed by Drain STH
  9. "Detroit Rock City" performed by KISS
  10. "Jailbreak" performed by Thin Lizzy
  11. "Surrender (Live)" performed by Cheap Trick
  12. "Rebel Rebel" performed by David Bowie
  13. "Strutter" performed by The Donnas
  14. "School Days" performed by The Runaways
  15. "Little Willy" performed by Sweet
  16. "Nothing Can Keep Me From You" performed by KISS

Note that the soundtrack does not feature all of the songs in the film. For instance, there are tracks from UFO (band) in the film that did not make the soundtrack.

See also [edit]

Footnotes and references [edit]

  1. ^ "Detroit Rock City (1999) - Box office / business". The Internet Movie Database (IMDb). Retrieved 14 November 2009. 
  2. ^ "Detroit Rock City (1999) - Filming locations". The Internet Movie Database (IMDb). 
  3. ^ During the 1978 "Alive II Tour", KISS did not perform at Cobo Hall. They did two shows at Olympia Stadium on January 20 and 21 that year.
  4. ^ Stephenson, Cliff (30 November 1999). "Detroit Rock City Review". DVDfile.com. Retrieved 14 November 2009. 

External links [edit]