Release Date: Aug 26, 2003 Region: 1 Runtime: 109 mins Studio: Universal Studios Audio:
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC] ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Mono [CC]
Video:
Widescreen 1.85:1 Color (Anamorphic)
Subtitles: Spanish, French Packaging: Keep Case Rating: R Features:
Includes Hot New Music Video "Shout" Remade by Hit Music Group MxPx! Where Are They Now? A Delta Alumni Update - A Hilarious New Mockumentary Featuring the Original Cast Did You Know That? Universal Animated Anecdotes About the Original Production of the Film The Yearbook: An Animal House Reunion
Release Date: Aug 26, 2003 Region: 1 Runtime: 109 mins Studio: Universal Studios Audio:
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC] ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Mono [CC]
Video:
Standard 1.33:1 Color
Subtitles: Spanish, French Packaging: Keep Case Rating: R Features:
Includes Hot New Music Video "Shout" Remade by Hit Music Group MxPx! Where Are They Now? A Delta Alumni Update - A Hilarious New Mockumentary Featuring the Original Cast Did You Know That? Universal Animated Anecdotes About the Original Production of the Film The Yearbook: An Animal House Reunion
Release Date: Oct 13, 1998 Region: 1 Runtime: 109 mins Studio: Universal Studios Audio:
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Mono [CC] SPANISH: Dolby Digital Mono FRENCH: Dolby Digital Mono
Video:
Widescreen 1.85:1 Color (Anamorphic)
Subtitles: Spanish, French Packaging: Keep Case Rating: R Features:
Interactive Menus "The Yearbook"--An Animal House Reunion, Documentary with interviews from director, writers, actors, and producers Behind-the-Scene Footage Theatrical Trailer Cast & Filmmakers' Bios Web Links
A groundbreaking screwball caper, 1978's National Lampoon's Animal House was in its own way a rite of passage for Hollywood. Set in 1962 at Faber College, it follows the riotous carryings-on of the Delta Fraternity, into which are initiated freshmen Tom Hulce and Stephen Furst. Among the established house members are Tim Matheson, Peter Riegert and the late John Belushi as Bluto, a belching, lecherous, Jack Daniels guzzling maniac. A debauched house of pranksters (culminating in the famous Deathmobile sequence), Delta stands as a fun alternative to the more strait-laced, crew-cut, unpleasantly repressive norm personified by Omega House. As cowriter the late Doug Kenney puts it, "better to be an animal than a vegetable".
Animal House is deliberately set in the pre-JFK assassination, pre-Vietnam era, something not made much of here, but which would have been implicitly understood by its American audience. The film was an enormous success, a rude, liberating catharsis for the latter-day frathousers who watched it. However, decades on, a lot of the humour seems broad, predictable, boorish, oafishly sexist and less witty than Airplane!, made two years later in the same anarchic spirit. Indeed, although it launched the Hollywood careers of several of its players and makers, including Kevin Bacon, director John Landis, Harold Ramis and Tom Hulce, who went on to do fine things, it might well have been inadvertently responsible for the infantilisation of much subsequent Hollywood comedy. Still, there's an undeniable energy that gusts throughout the film and Belushi, whether eating garbage or trying to reinvoke the spirit of America "After the Germans bombed Pearl Harbour" is a joy.
On the DVD:Animal House comes to disc in a good transfer, presented in 1.85:1. The main extra is a featurette in which director John Landis, writer Chris Miller and some of the actors talk about the making of the movie. Interestingly, 23 years on, most of those interviewed look better than they did back in 1978, especially Stephen "Flounder" Furst. --David Stubbs
Release Date: Feb 4, 2002 Video:
Wide Screen
Features:
The Yearbook An Animal House Reunion Menu Music Original Theatrical Trailer Weblink Production Notes Filmographies