The Room
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About
The Room is a cult classic film written and directed by Tommy Wiseau about a love triangle resulting in tragedy. It has been called "the Citizen Kane of bad movies" in an article in Entertainment Weekly[3] and has risen to cult status with its Rocky Horror style midnight screenings. One of the more popular lines from the film is "You're tearing me apart, Lisa!" from one of it's many cheesy scenes. (See also: So Bad It's Good)
History
In 2001, Wiseau completed The Room as a play, and decided to turn it into a movie as well. After writing the script himself, he amassed $6 million according to an interview with Entertainment Weekly.[3]
The filmmaker has always refused to discuss where he got the movie's $6 million budget, but he now hints that at least some of the money came from a clothing import business. ''I tell you a little bit, but that's it,'' he says. ''We import from Korea the leather jackets that we design here in America. If you work, you have to save money, right? I didn't get money from the sky. I was preparing, let's put it this way.''
The film premiered at the Laemmle Theatre in Los Angeles on June 27th, 2003.
Reception
Midnight screenings of the film started shortly after the premiere in Los Angeles release. Midnight shows spread out initially to NYC at the Village East Cinema, and have since gone around the world to Canada, Europe and Australia. Audience members participate by yelling out the lines of their favorite scenes, dressing up as their favorite characters and by throwing plastic spoons at the screen.
The Disaster Artist
On October 10th, 2013, Simon & Schuster released the book The Disaster Artist by Tom Bissell and Greg Sestero, who played Mark in The Room. The book (cover below) tells the story of the film's production, particularly Sestero's relationship and friendship with director Tommy Wiseau.
In November 23rd, 2014, the book won Best Non-Fiction at the National Arts & Entertainment Journalism Awards. The judges praised the book, saying, "The Disaster Artist is not only a hell of a good read, it will make a great film if ever adapted. It's equal parts Ed Wood, American Hustle and demented Citizen Kane--with a dash of Monty Python thrown into the mix."[8][9]
In February 2014, Seth Rogan's production company acquired the book and film rights to The Disaster Artist, in which James Franco would direct and star in the film version. His brother, Dave Franco, would play Sestero. Principal photography started on December 8th, 2016 and concluded on January 28th, 2016.
A work-in-progress version of the film premiered at the South By Southwest festival in Austin, Texas on March 12th, 2017.[10]
On July 18th, 2017, the film's distributer, A24, released the first teaser trailer for the film, featuring Franco as Wiseau continually trying take after take of the infamous "Oh, hi, Mark" line. Within three months, the teaser (shown below, left) had been viewed more than 5.5 million times.
Three months later, A24 released a full trailer for the film. Within two weeks, the trailer (show below, right) received more than 3.3 million views.
With a release date of December 1st, 2017, the film, as of October 2017, has a 94% fresh rating on film review aggregator Rotten Tomoatoes.[11] New York Magazine[12] said the film "may soon join Tim Burton's Ed Wood in the ranks of great movies about terrible movies." However, The AV Club[13] called it "barely a movie."
Online Presence
Newground's[2] Tom Fulp created an 8-bit flash game tribute on 9/3/2010. It is a point and click adventure style game where you obtain items to use in puzzles to move the story along. It is fairly faithful to the original film, with quite a few extra locations and scenes. A soundboard site[2] contains isolated audio clips of some of the scenes memorable lines. A Facebook[5] fan page has 66,071 likes as of September 29th, 2011. There are several pages worth of fan art dedicated to Tommy Wiseau and The Room on the website deviantArt.[6]
Nostalgia Critic Feud
The Nostalgia Critic reviewed the film on July 18th. Soon after, the original review was taken down because of a copyright claim by Wiseau Films. In what seems to be retaliation, Nostalgia Critic created another video in which he mimics Tommy Wiseau's accent, quotes the movie many times, and talks about the copyright claim made by Wiseau Films.
Various Examples
Images
Video
Tommy Wiseau
Tommy Wiseau's early life is shrouded in mystery. Although his accent is sounds European in origin, he claims he is actually from New Orleans in a 2009 interview with Terminal Laughter.[4]
Because I grew up here in New Orleans Louisiana, I was going back to Europe back and forth, but the fact is I never think that people from other countries would like “The Room”, because we have a lot of American elements: football, you know, and other stuff.
Web Series
On September 26th, 2011, The Huffington Post[7] reported that Wiseau had started his own web series called "The Tommy Wi-Show." (shown below, left).
With a healthy dose of inspiration from Mystery Science Theater 3000, the "Wi-Show" features the embattled hero from "The Room" trapped in a Satellite Of Love-Esque space station, where he is forced to play video games by aliens.
Later on October 13th, 2013, the first episode in the web show, Tommy Explains it All, was uploaded to the channel of the same name (shown below, right).
Search Interest
A spike in searching is shown in April, which may be due to The Room's screening on Adult Swim on April Fool's day. Another spike is seen on the day of July 18th, which is around the time that Nostalgia Critic reviewed the film.
External References
[1] Newgrounds – The Room Tribute
[2] The Room Soundboard – The Room Soundboard
[3] Entertainment Weekly – The Crazy Cult of 'The Room'
[4] Terminal Laughter – INTERVIEW: TOMMY WISEAU
[6] deviantArt – tommy wiseau
[7] The Huffigton Post – Tommy Wiseau In New Web Series
[8] Wikipedia – The Disaster Artist
[9] The Hollywood Reporter -Hollywood Reporter Wins Best Publication, Website at National Arts & Entertainment Journalism Awards
[10] IndieWire – ‘The Disaster Artist’ Review: James Franco is Very Good as a Bad Actor in His Loving Tribute to ‘The Room’ -- SXSW 2017
[11] Rotten Tomatoes – The Disaster Artist
[12] New York Magazine – James Franco’s The Disaster Artist Is a Great Movie About a Terrible One
[13] The AV Club – James Franco’s The Disaster Artist gives The Room its own lazy tribute act
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