Shock Treatment



""Not a sequel... not a prequel... but an equal.""

Shock Treatment is a 1981 movie musical from the makers of The Rocky Horror Picture Show, with many key cast members -- but although Brad and Janet are once again major characters (albeit played by different actors), it isn't a direct sequel and few characters aside from them return.

Denton ("The Home of Happiness"), the town that the now-married Brad and Janet Majors (Cliff DeYoung and Jessica Harper) call home, isn't what it used to be. It's now dominated by DTV, a TV station run by fast food mogul Farley Flavors, and most of its residents serve as a permanent audience for its programming. Indeed, the entire movie unfolds within the giant studio. Brad and Janet have lost the passion in their marriage, and when they're chosen to be part of Marriage Maze by kooky host Bert Schnick (Barry Humphries), it doesn't take much convincing for Janet to allow her "emotional cripple" husband to be committed to the asylum/SoapOpera Dentonvale to see if he can't be cured by Doctors (and siblings) Cosmo and Nation McKinley (Richard O'Brien and Patricia Quinn). Actually, Farley Flavors is manipulating these events from behind the scenes -- he is interested in molding Janet into his newest star, and she's easily enticed into forgetting about Brad. The only people who see through the smoke and mirrors of Farley and his crew are Betty Hapschatt (Ruby Wax) and Judge Oliver Wright (Charles Gray), and they set out to find out the truth behind them and reunite the couple before it's too late...

The movie was not a success, and the makers were disappointed with how it turned out. It was originally conceived as a direct sequel (Rocky Horror Shows His Heels, which would have involved Dr. Frank-N-Furter being restored to life among other things), but for many, many reasons ranging from Tim Curry not wanting to play Frank again to the 1980 Screen Actors Guild strike, it was gradually transformed into a media spoof that is far removed from the kinky farce of the original. Within the Rocky Horror fanbase it generates mixed reactions, but it does have its own fan club, the presidents of which provided an audio commentary on the 2006 DVD release.

This film contains examples of:

 * Acting for Two: Cliff DeYoung plays both Farley Flavors and Brad Majors.
 * Alliteration: "Farley Flavors' Fabulous Fast Foods Feed and Fortify Families for a Fabulous Future!"
 * Audience response: "F*ck the Fabulous Future!"
 * There is no audience participation response.
 * Audience Participation: As with The Rocky Horror Picture Show, "shadowcast" productions with audience props and callbacks have been mounted over the years. Aside from the film being less popular, a likely reason there haven't been more stagings is that far more performers are required.
 * Also, in-universe, with the Studio Audience. They sing along with some of the songs, and even have a couple of dance numbers, along with getting prompted by the show hosts.
 * Bedlam House: Dentonvale.
 * Canon Discontinuity: No attempt appears to be made at all to tie the plot of this film in with Rocky Horror Picture Show. To be fair, it's presented as a Spiritual Sequel rather than a direct sequel, albeit with some of the same characters from the previous movie.
 * Call-and-Response Song: Duel Duet
 * Casting Gag: Most of the Expy characters are played by their RHPS equivalents. Cosmo and Nation not only share actors with Rocky Horror's Riff Raff and Magenta, but both sets of characters are incestuous siblings who are in the employ of the villain.
 * Possibly Charles Gray as Denton's "foremost sociologist", Judge Oliver Wright. They don't say it. They don't imply it. But they know you're thinking it.
 * What, that he has No Fucking Neck?
 * Celebrity Is Overrated: Partially due to realizing this trope,
 * Character Name Alias:
 * Corrupt Corporate Executive: Farley Flavors.
 * Crap Saccharine World: See Stepford Smiler and Eagle Land.
 * Crowd Song: "Denton U.S.A." Justified in that it's apparently the town's theme song.
 * Dark Reprise:
 * Does This Remind You of Anything?: Farley Flavors' logo features five F's (standing for Farley, Flavors, Fabulous, Fast, and Foods) arranged in a circle, all joined at the tail. It was designed to be reminiscent of a swastika.
 * The song Breakin' Out plays over scenes of  escaping from the asylum. But listen to the words, and it seems to be about another kind of coming out entirely...
 * Eagle Land: Denton is striving to be a commercialized embodiment of Type 1. "You'll find happy hearts and smiling faces/And tolerance for the ethnic races/In Denton."
 * The Eighties: Very early Eighties, most notably in the new wave (and Punk) stylings of the songs.
 * The Eleven O'Clock Number: "Duel Duet".
 * Evil Costume Switch: See The Little Black Dress below.
 * Evil Twin:
 * Expy With regards to the Rocky Horror characters, we have...
 * Doctors Cosmo and Nation McKinley for Riff-Raff and Magenta
 * Nurse Ansalong for Columbia
 * Judge Oliver Wright for the Criminologist
 * Farley Flavors for Dr. Frank-N-Furter
 * Bert Schnick for Dr. Scott
 * Bert Schnick was originally Dr. Scott in the Brad and Janet Show, and Riff Raff and Magenta were supposed to impersonate doctors in Rocky Horror Shows his Heels.
 * Fan Nickname: "Shocky."
 * Guilty Pleasure
 * Hannibal Lecture:  tries this on Brad in "Duel Duet". Brad doesn't go along with it.
 * Heteronormative Crusader: Janet's father. "Thank God I'm A Man" is one giant "I hate" song, despite being rife with what is arguably, Hard Gay imagery.
 * Hey, It's That Guy!: Barry Humphries (aka Dame Edna Everage) as Bert Schnick.
 * "I Am" Song: "Thank God I'm a Man" for Janet's dad is all about his manly man philosophy.
 * Little Black Dress: Provides the title of a song, as Janet gets this as part of her celebrity makeover.
 * Opening Chorus: "Denton U.S.A." "Denton, Denton, you've got *clap* no pretention..."
 * The Other Darrin: Of the four returning characters from Rocky Horror (Brad, Janet, Betty, and Ralph), only Ralph is played by his original actor.
 * Reality TV: Parodied before its time. Instead of filming real life and using Manipulative Editing to make it more dramatic, they manipulate their actors into behaving in a way suitable for a studio audience.
 * The Renfield: Bert Schnick.
 * Separated at Birth:
 * Show Within a Show: All of DTV's programming.
 * Smug Snake: Ralph Hapschatt, who loves lording his success over his ex-wife Betty.
 * Stepford Suburbia: As a hybrid of a TV station and a town, Denton encourages its residents to be shallow, smiling consumers, or as "Denton U.S.A." puts it, "The acceptable face/Of the human race".
 * Studio Audience: Implied to be the entire population of Denton.
 * "The Reason You Suck" Speech: Duel Duet is two of them at the same time, directed at each other.
 * Viewers Are Geniuses / What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic: The seagull Vince brandishes threateningly at Betty.
 * Villain Song: Farley has the aptly titled "Farley's Song".
 * Villain with Good Publicity: Farley Flavors.
 * Women's Mysteries: Betty can pick locks and fix cars with just her hair pin.
 * You Look Familiar: The major returning cast members from Rocky Horror (Richard O'Brien, Patricia Quinn, Nell Campbell, and Charles Gray) all play new characters here. Ralph Hapschatt is played by the same actor -- he had a minor role in the first one, though.