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Shock Treatment

  • 1981
  • 12
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
5.7K
YOUR RATING
Shock Treatment (1981)
Janet and Brad become contestants on a game show... but wind up as captives instead.
Play trailer2:38
1 Video
99+ Photos
Dark ComedyParodyPop MusicalRock MusicalSatireComedyMusical

Janet and Brad become contestants on a game show and wind up as captives.Janet and Brad become contestants on a game show and wind up as captives.Janet and Brad become contestants on a game show and wind up as captives.

  • Director
    • Jim Sharman
  • Writers
    • Richard O'Brien
    • Jim Sharman
  • Stars
    • Jessica Harper
    • Cliff De Young
    • Richard O'Brien
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    5.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jim Sharman
    • Writers
      • Richard O'Brien
      • Jim Sharman
    • Stars
      • Jessica Harper
      • Cliff De Young
      • Richard O'Brien
    • 132User reviews
    • 44Critic reviews
    • 36Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Original Trailer
    Trailer 2:38
    Original Trailer

    Photos455

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    Top cast40

    Edit
    Jessica Harper
    Jessica Harper
    • Janet Majors
    Cliff De Young
    Cliff De Young
    • Brad Majors…
    Richard O'Brien
    Richard O'Brien
    • Dr. Cosmo McKinley…
    Patricia Quinn
    Patricia Quinn
    • Dr. Nation McKinley
    Charles Gray
    Charles Gray
    • Judge Oliver Wright
    Ruby Wax
    Ruby Wax
    • Betty Hapschatt
    Nell Campbell
    Nell Campbell
    • Nurse Ansalong
    Rik Mayall
    Rik Mayall
    • 'Rest Home' Ricky
    Barry Humphries
    Barry Humphries
    • Bert Schnick
    Darlene Johnson
    Darlene Johnson
    • Emily Weiss
    Manning Redwood
    Manning Redwood
    • Harry Weiss
    Wendy Raebeck
    Wendy Raebeck
    • Macy Struthers
    Jeremy Newson
    Jeremy Newson
    • Ralph Hapschatt
    Betsy Brantley
    Betsy Brantley
    • Neely Pritt
    Pierre Bedenes
    • Neely's Camera Crew
    • (as Perry Bedden)
    Rufus Collins
    Rufus Collins
    • Neely's Camera Crew
    Christopher Malcolm
    Christopher Malcolm
    • Vance Parker
    • (as Chris Malcolm)
    Ray Charleson
    Ray Charleson
    • Floor Manager
    • Director
      • Jim Sharman
    • Writers
      • Richard O'Brien
      • Jim Sharman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews132

    5.75.6K
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    Featured reviews

    belialprod

    It's a comment on the whole RHPS phenomenon

    "Shock Treatment", aside from being a hellava lot of fun, seems to be Richard O'Brien's dig at the whole RHPS phenomenon.

    Forget about this being a RHPS sequel. It's not. The whole tone is different. RHPS was an affectionate salute to B-science fiction movies of the 50's married to the seventies punk rock movement. "Shock Treatment", if it is related to RHPS at all, is a satire of the whole RHPS fan culture. Consider: "Shock Treatment" takes place in a TV studio where the audience lives 24/7. They live for the highs received from Denton TV, yet are a pretty conservative lot on the whole. Isn't that like the typical RHPS audience where straight laced Brad and Janet types go to the show, enjoy the freakiness for two hours, then go back to their normal, suburban lives? "Shock Treatment" goes to great lengths to satirize the horrors of suburbanity, and the costumed entertainers they worship. The most blatant example? Two of the main characters, who profess to be doctors, turn out to be character actors. Character actors who have great fun in costume and in the end, drive off into the sunset, in a cool new car, back to suburban normalcy.

    And you know what? I have barely scratched the surface of what makes "Shock Treatment" so clever. If you've read anything recent written about it, you know the film is a huge piss take on reality television, and a prescient(by over 20 years)parody of our current culture which makes stars of...well, whomever the TV industry, film industry, and Hollywood publicists tell us we should think of as stars. Paris Hilton? Vin Diesel? Even Jude Law. Did we discover these people? No, they were foisted upon us,we were TOLD they were stars, much as Janet is in "Shock Treatment". When Janet wakes up and realizes she wants her real life back, another cute chick is pimped up and easily accepted.

    "Shock Treatment" is a very smart movie that works on the intellectual level RHPS did not. Hey, I love RHPS, but it operates from a gut, instinctual level. "Shock Treatment", if you give it a chance, will make you think about the media's grip on society, make you take a second look at the "stars" adorning the covers of magazines such as Entertainemt Weekly, give you a whole new take on the audiences lining up for RHPS every Halloween (unlike the 80's when we went every month or weekend), and, having been made in 1981 (!) add no surprise to the fact that Richard O'Brien is a prescient futurist who made a killing in the stock market.

    Heck, I haven't even talked about the fact that "Shock Treatment"s use of primary colors, editing, and music video style sequences, predates the birth of MTV by at least a year. This movie could be called a template for the 80's music video boom.

    Lastly, I have to comment on one facet which will either a) draw RHPS fans and non fans to check this move out or b) disregard this entire review. I absolutely, unequivocally, LOVE the music in this movie. Every song is fun in the best tradition of the short lived "rock musical" genre (I often sing a somewhat edited version of "Lullaby" to my kids at bedtime)and, on screen, every song is presented with a strong sense of atmosphere. Come to think of it, this IS "Shock Treatment"s greatest commonality to RHPS, except in RHPS, the atmosphere was dark and cluttered, in "Shock Treatment", it's bright and sterile. Two different settings. Two different themes. Both brilliantly achieved.
    zmaturin

    You're not looking at the king of anything- you're looking at an ace!

    I had heard a lot of bad things about this "sequel" to "The Rocky Horror Picture Show", and I can see how people expecting a return to the sexual hi-jinx of that classic would be disappointed. I found this to be great in a completely different way. Save for a few RHPS character and location names, this is pretty much unrelated to that flick. This stands on it's own as an excellent musical-comedy with great songs and characters.

    "Shock Treatment" takes place entirely in the television station of DTV, a local TV station that probes into the lives of its town's citizens. Brad and Janet (who act differently and are played by different actors than in RHPS) discuss their marital strife and appear on "Marriage Maze". Brad is found to be in need of help, so he's shipped off to "Dentonvale", the channel's bizarre medical show, while Janet is groomed to be the new star of "Denton Dossier", a show that tells people how great Denton is. Meanwhile, nefarious fast food mogul Farley Flavors is conspiring to take over the town and Janet with his latest show, "Farley Flavor's Faith Factory".

    Jessica Campbell (who has worked with Dario Argento AND Woody Allen) is superb as Janet, and Cliff De Young plays Brad and Farley so excellently it's hard to tell it's the same actor (he even has a duet with himself!). The rest of the cast is populated with British comedians (Ruby Wax, Barry Humphries, and "The Young Ones"' Rik Mayal, who should have had a bigger part) and RHPS vets including Patricia Quinn, Little Nell, Charles Grey (also a former Blofeld!), and composer Richard O'Brian.

    O'Brian's songs are fantastic and some exceed the quality of tunes in the better known "Rocky Horror". Clever lyrics and catchy tunes abound in classics like "Bitchin' in the Kitchen", "Little Black Dress", and the haunting "Lullaby". The choreography is great too, like the brief mirror-dance that accompanies "Look What I Did To My Id".

    "Shock Treatmet" gets T-E-N, that's ten out of ten!
    Warlock-5

    I thought it was better than RHPS

    Shock Treatment is an extremely strange movie, the plot is all over the place, the songs are weird and the confusion factor for the viewer is high. But Shock Treatment is a good movie. Forget everything about RHPS, there are no singing tranvestites or Meat Loaf getting hacked to bits with an axe, Shock Treatment is very different. It is a funny satire about how television has become an obsession. It's also about Brad and Janet Majors, who become contestants on a show called Marriage Maze and Brad is committed into a mental asylum, placed convieniently inside the TV studio. It's funny to see most of the cast return for a great big musical full of memorable songs. But a warning to the gay community, one song contains the lyrics.."Faggots are maggots-thank god I'm a man!"

    Australian Classification

    PG

    No consumer advice but it really doesn't need any. There's nothing that troubling.
    Schlockmeister

    Good movie for Rocky Horror types

    This movie does match and surpass "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" in many ways. You can tell that Richard O'Brien and the film's producers had a bigger budget to work with. The songs are a match to the original (same song writer, same style...). Visually, a little too heavy on the reds, but this WAS 1981, after all. This movie will be enjoyed by those who will get the Rocky Horror references that are scattered throughout. Too bad Barry Bostwick and Susan Sarandon weren't there to provide a little more continuity to their characters. Jessica Harper does a great job though, she appeared in several off-beat movies in the 70s ("Phantom Of The Paradise" and "Suspiria" spring to mind) so playing in a Richard O'Brien movie was not too much of a stretch for her it seems. This sequel was, to me, a lot sexier than RHPS. The original seemed to center on campiness and shock value, it's here as well, but there is a lot more eye-candy in this sequel.

    I'm still waiting for a Richard O'Brien / John Waters musical collaboration. Imagine the possibilities!
    8bromley001

    A good film!

    A decent movie, and nowhere near as bad as everyone makes out. Whereas Rocky Horror is weird in it's transvestite/alien way, this is actually better for a mainstream audience - it may be weird, but in a surreal/escapist way. Nice to see Ruby Wax in a lead role - she actually has a pretty big part as Betty, And the Rocky Horror actors - Richard O' Brien, Pat Quinn, Charles Gray and Nell Campbell are all great too (although it would have been nice to see a bit more of Nell) Keep a look out too for a pre-'Young Ones' Rik Mayall, playing Nell's love interest, interestingly enough. My advice is, if you can find a copy, get it - it's well worth investing in, whatever people may say.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      While Richard O'Brien dislikes this film due to its confusing plot as a result of its many rewrites, he does praise the music and the fact it foretold reality TV by two decades. Although, An American Family (1973) is seen as the first reality TV show.
    • Goofs
      During the finale, as the four singers rise from the bleachers, Ruby Wax trips and places her hands against Charles Gray's back to keep from falling over.
    • Quotes

      Janet Majors: Hi, Brad, I've just come to tell you how fabulous I am.

    • Alternate versions
      All DVD releases cut the original End credit version of the Denton "Overture" in half, and then prematurely fade out the single version of "Shock Treatment" when the credits are over. The original version features the complete "Overture" playing over the credits with "Shock Treatment" playing over a black screen as exit music. The edit shortens the film from 94 to 92 minutes.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Rocky Horror Treatment (1981)
    • Soundtracks
      Overture
      Written by Richard Hartley & Richard O'Brien

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    FAQ

    • How long is Shock Treatment?
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    • Who plays the Make-up artist (commonly seen beside Imogen Claire's Wardrobe Mistress character)?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 30, 1981 (West Germany)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Brad and Janet Show
    • Filming locations
      • Lee International Studios, Wembley, London, England, UK(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $3,500,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 34 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Stereo

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