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Time magazine proclaimed Animal House one of the year's best. [53] When the film was released, Landis, Widdoes, and Allen went on a national promotional tour. [37] Universal Pictures spent about $4.5 million ($21,021,429 in today's money) promoting the film at selected college campuses and helped students organize their own toga parties.
Douglas Kenney. Douglas Clark Francis Kenney (December 10, 1946 – August 27, 1980) was an American comedy writer of magazine, novels, radio, TV and film, who co-founded the magazine National Lampoon in 1970. Kenney edited the magazine and wrote much of its early material. [2] He went on to write, produce, and perform in the influential ...
Following the success of Animal House, MAD magazine lent its name to a 1980 comedy titled Up the Academy. Although two of Animal House 's co-writers were the Lampoon 's Doug Kenney and Chris Miller, Up The Academy was strictly a licensing maneuver, with no creative input from Mad 's staff or contributors. It was a critical and commercial failure.
Chris Miller (writer) John Christian Miller (born 1942 in Brooklyn) is an American author and screenwriter. He is best known for his work on National Lampoon magazine and the film Animal House, which he also acted in with co-writer/actor Douglas Kenney. [1] The latter was inspired by Miller's own experiences in the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity at ...
Demographic. Seinen. Published. 1990. Volumes. 1. King of Wolves (Japanese: 王狼, Hepburn: Ōrō) is a Japanese manga series written by Buronson and illustrated by Kentaro Miura. It was serialized in Hakusensha 's Monthly Animal House in 1989, with its chapters collected in a single tankōbon volume. A sequel, titled Ōrō Den, was serialized ...
Martin Gerald "Matty" Simmons[1] (October 3, 1926 – April 29, 2020) was an American film and television producer, newspaper reporter for the New York World-Telegram and Sun, and Executive Vice President of Diners Club, the first credit card company. [2] Simmons gained his greatest fame while serving as the chief executive officer of Twenty ...
During the 1970s and early 1980s, a few films were made as spin-offs from the original National Lampoon magazine, using some of the magazine's creative staff to put together the outline and script, and were cast using some of the same actors that performed in The National Lampoon Radio Hour and the stage show National Lampoon's Lemmings.
Young Animal was launched in May 1992. [3] [4] [5] The magazine is a successor to Monthly Animal House (月刊アニマルハウス, Gekkan Animaru Hausu), Hakusensha's previous seinen manga magazine that ran from 1989 to 1992. [3] [6] [7] Young Animal is issued on the second and fourth Friday of each month in saddle-stapled B5 format.