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Detroit Rock City
Format: DVD (1)
UPC: 0794043489921
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- SRP (Baht) : 870.00
- Our Price (Baht) : 619.00
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- Release Date : 21/12/1999
- Distributor : Import
- Genres : Comedy
- Aspect Ratio : 2.35:1
- Language : English Dolby Digital 5.1
- Subtitles : English
- Number of discs : 1
- Package : Snap Case
- Rated : R
- Special Features
- Three multiple angle features:
- "Detroit Rock City" performed by Kiss: Direct Your Own Video
- Check out Film's high school band; Mystery; playing Kiss and sit in on the live recording sessions
- The extended "Confessional" scene and a rare look at the actors' auditions
More than 15 minutes of deleted scenes
Song Express: Learn to play "Rock n Roll All Nite" on the guitar
Three feature length commentaries
Two music videos from the soundtrack
Original theatrical trailer
Filmographies & more
DVD-ROM Features:
- "Script to Screen" - Watch the film while you read the script!
- E-mail-able cast trading cards
- up to the minute cast; crew and trivia info.
- the entire website
- Credits
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- Actors : Giuseppe Andrews, Rodger Barton, Kristin Booth, Emmanuelle Chriqui, James DeBello, Edward Furlong, Natasha Lyonne, Lin Shaye, Gene Simmons, James De Bello, Peter Criss, Sam Huntington, Paul Stanley, Ace Frehley
- Directors : Adam Rifkin
- Studio : New Line Home Video
- Run Time : 95 mins
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Synopsis :
It's hard to call Detroit Rock City a "coming of age" movie--since it's hard to argue that any of the characters do any genuine growing up. But even though it's about four young metalheads trying to get to a KISS concert; the movie actually has more in common with sincere portraits of adolescence than it does with raucous teen comedies. The four heroes are members of a teen metal band called Mystery (the s is written in the same font as the letters of KISS; lest anyone mistake their source of inspiration). After the drummer's religiously zealous mother burns their tickets to a long-awaited concert in nearby Detroit; the boys go anyway and try to get tickets through theft; skullduggery; and entering a male stripper contest. The jokes are broad and the movie culminates in an orgy of male adolescent wish-fulfillment; but here and there some loving attention is paid to the details of 1970s teenage life--the haircuts; clothes; and toys the filmmakers probably had when they were kids. Edward Furlong; as the band's singer; is his usual scruffy self and exudes his particular lopsided charm; the rest of the cast play their parts with similar high spirits. Though Detroit Rock City was probably meant to be a no-holds-barred comedy in the vein of American Pie; the end result is curiously wistful; no one's going to mistake it for The Last Picture Show; but something sincere and elegiac lurks in those bang-covered eyes. --Bret Fetzer