Ben Smith
Annotated Cinema: The Prequel!
by Ben Smith - August 2, 2008 - 7:00 AM

Ed note: Here’s a new idea from the All-Star Summer Interns. They’re taking a movie everyone can easily find in their collection and developing an annotated “guide” to go with it. Each intern will watch the flick, find behind-the-scenes info and facts about the people, places, and things in the movie, and then compile their findings (along with timestamps and movie stills) in a post or pdf. Think of it as a factual Mystery Science Theater-style commentary, or an off-screen Pop-Up Video.

For an example of the sort of information they’ll be covering, intern superstar Ben Smith did a test run with a recent Youtube hit after the jump. Enjoy!

THE CINEMA:

Love in This Club (as performed by the Rockafire Explosion)


THE ANNOTATION:

  • The Rockafire Explosion was the in-house animatronic band for Showbiz Pizza locations in the 1980s and early 1990s. What made this particular show rise above the handful of other similar shows of the time were its size, construction, and programming. The “performers” took up the entire length of the Showbiz Pizza showroom, and unlike cloth and foam models (like at competitor Chuck E. Cheese), the faces of the characters were made with latex to provide more realistic movement.
  • The company that developed the animatronics used in the Rockafire Explosion also created Whack-a-Mole
  • The shows were originally programmed with reel-to-reel audio tapes with 4 tracks of audio, 2 with the performances and two with the data needed to move the characters, although the characters are now programmed with a modified Tivo. A song like “Love in this Club” usually takes about a week of programming to fully complete.
  • MGMT’s video for “Electric Feel” features the Rockafire Band in a few scenes
  • Love in this Club rocketed from #51 to #1 in its third week, giving it the fourth highest jump of all-time, behind Maroon 5′s “Makes Me Wonder” (which jumped from 64 to 1), Rihanna’s “Take a Bow” (53 to 1) and Kelly Clarkson’s “A Moment Like This” (52 to 1)
  • Nolan Bushnell, one of the founders of Atari, created the Chuck E. Cheese concept and developed the chain as a way to distribute Atari games. In the early 90s, after Showbiz and Chuck E. Cheese’s had merged, the restaurants started to phase out the animatronics in favor of “unifying concepts” and focusing on video games.
  • 1:09–Cheerleaders were originally all male
  • Lawrence Herkimer made many cheerleading innovations or improvements, such as “pom-pons,” “spirits sticks,” and “booster ribbons.” He founded the National Cheerleader’s Association and formed a Dallas company to produce cheerleading products. He is also credited with creating the “herkie” jump
  • In England, usher is a now obselete name for a schoolmaster, and the word comes from the french “huissier”
  • The original programmer of the Rockafire Explosion, Aaron Fecter, is responsible for the choreography on the youtube videos. Song requests can be made on his website for the project.
  • Usher syndrome, also known as Hallgren syndrome, is one of the leading causes of deaf-blindness.
  • 2:32–Ventriloquism as we know it began in the days of vaudeville in the late 19th century
  • Shari Lewis debuted Lambchop on the Captain Kangaroo show after she was asked to bring something other than the wooden figures she usually used.

So now that you’ve gotten a taste of what we’re looking to do, here’s where you come in: We’re trying to pick a movie for the second full installment of Annotated Cinema (the first will be a favorite of all three of us, John Hughes’ The Breakfast Club). Between the three of us we’ve suggested everything from Cool Hand Luke to Young Frankenstein. Let us know in the comments what you’d like to see in future installments, both in choice of movie and commentary.

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Comments (14)
  1. OK, I’ve never seen Love in the Club (sorry, not as big a movie buff as I thought I was!) but The Breakfast Club, Cool Hand Luke, and Young Frankenstein all sound awesome! Maybe some Hitchcock would be fun, or The Princess Bride. (I have a sorry obsession with that movie).

  2. I totally second the Princess Bride! Also, how about the Fifth Element? I think there are enough fun facts and hidden things in the background to make good trivia.

  3. How about This is Spinal Tap?

  4. I’d like to suggest Pleasantville. And perhaps Clueless.

  5. MallRats? or Clerks?

  6. I second the mention of This Is Spinal Tap. It’s the first and best movie of its kind!

  7. I’d love to see a guide to Brazil or Blade Runner.

  8. Ooh, Blazing Saddles or perhaps Princess Bride would be great!

  9. Maybe it’s the history buff in me, but I’d love to see a breakdown of a film based on actual events – Braveheart, Quiz Show, Zodiac, Tombstone, I’d even watch Titanic if it was accompanied by facts about the film, the ship, the people, and the legends surrounding the sinking.

    Just a thought…

  10. This sounds great – like ‘pop-up video’ for movies!

    How about:

    LA Story
    Matrix
    Clerks
    Dirty Dancing
    Goonies
    Whale Rider

  11. I’m glad I wasn’t the only person that thought of Princess Bride right off the bat. I think the historical context suggestion is great, too. I was watching Tombstone just the other night and thought that I’d like to look more into the events that went down there.

    That being said – I think Army of Darkness (completely not based on actual events) would be awesome.

  12. I will be succinct. The Godfather. Please!

  13. I agree with redbeki! mallrats and/or clerks would be awesome!

  14. Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure.

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