Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 1978, he began work on a script titled Rocky Horror Shows His Heels, [10] which found Frank and Rocky resurrected, Brad and Dr. Scott now lovers, and Janet pregnant with Frank's baby. Director Jim Sharman was resistant to revisit the material and Tim Curry had no desire to reprise the role of Frank, [ 11 ] but O'Brien had put some work into ...
The first scene of both the 1973 stage production The Rocky Horror Show and 1975 film The Rocky Horror Picture Show open to a wedding scene with the two main characters, Brad Majors and Janet Weiss, in attendance. Brad and Janet were portrayed by Christopher Malcolm and Julie Covington in the original stage show. In the motion picture, a ...
The Rocky Horror Picture Show is a 1975 independent [6] [7] musical comedy horror film produced by Lou Adler and Michael White, directed by Jim Sharman, and distributed by 20th Century Fox. The screenplay was written by Sharman and Richard O'Brien , who also played the supporting role Riff Raff.
Let's do the time warp again! Several decades have passed since the release of 1975's The Rocky Horror Picture Show, and original movie cast member Barry Bostwick is looking back on his experience ...
When "Frank" meets prudish newlyweds Brad and Janet (Barry Bostwick and Susan Sarandon), he challenges them to break free of their comfort zones — including social constructs around sex and ...
Forty-eight years ago, the actor partnered with Susan Sarandon to play innocent idiots in love, Brad Majors and Janet Weiss, whose PG-rated romance is tested after an R-rated late-night visit to a ...
The Rocky Horror Show is a 1985 video game in which the player plays as either Brad or Janet collecting the pieces of the Medusa machine from around the castle. Rocky Interactive Horror Show is a PC game released in March 1999. Like The Rocky Horror Show video game, the player plays as Brad or Janet and attempts to save their partner from the ...
The plot of the tribute is fundamentally identical to the original film, with some additional scenes wrapped around the film. These scenes show several people attending a theatrical showing of The Rocky Horror Picture Show, and subsequently are used to introduce some of the audience participation elements from the original film (such as throwing toilet paper on the line "Great Scott!").