Detroit Rock City 1999

Kiss The Rules Goodbye.

6.714 / 10   386 vote(s)
R
Comedy Music

In 1978, a Kiss concert was an epoch-making event. For the three teen fans in Detroit Rock City getting tickets to the sold-out show becomes the focal point of their existence. They'll do anything for tickets -- compete in a strip club's amateur-night contest, take on religious protesters, even rob a convenience store!

Release Date 1999-08-13
Runtime 1h 35m
Directors John R. Leonetti, Adam Rifkin, Richard Black, Charles Braive, Harley Cohen, Grant Lucibello, D. Joanne Malo, Tony Markes, Peter Schink, Ian Woolf
Producers Gene Simmons, Barry Levine, Kathleen Haase, Art Schaefer, Michael De Luca, Tim Sullivan, Brian Witten
Writer Carl V. Dupré

Great 70’s songs, sometimes amusing, but basically an insult to KISS fans

In 1978, four teenagers from Cleveland plan to go to a KISS concert in Detroit and have many misadventures reaching their goal. The four are played by Edward Furlong, Giuseppe Andrews, James DeBello and Sam Huntington.

“Detroit Rock City” (1999) features great rock/metal from the 70s by KISS, AC/DC, Blue Oyster Cult, Van Halen, Sweet, Thin Lizzy, Nazareth, Styx, David Bowie, Cheap Trick, Black Sabbath, Ted Nugent, the Ramones, etc. There are some fun moments, but the tone is too over-the-top for its own good and the story isn’t very compelling. Couple this with some odious bathroom non-humor, a lack of attractive women beyond Natasha Lyonne and the negative one-dimensional depiction of the protagonists and you have a curiously disappointing teen flick.

The focus on pot-obsessed dudes is disingenuous since Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons were never into the drug culture; their idea of a party was working hard creating music, performing, touring, making money and celebrating gorgeous women. Unsurprisingly, mind-blowingly beautiful females were always attracted to KISS and frequented their concerts; so were dynamic, talented males. I’m not saying pot-worshipping, denim-clad waifs weren’t an element of their fan base, but KISS devotees always involved WAY more than this.

No wonder Paul Stanley lamented: "To call it a KISS movie does it a disservice, because it does a disservice to the KISS fans, which is what it's really about."

The film runs 1 hour, 35 minutes, and was shot entirely in the Toronto area.

GRADE: C-

Wuchak