The Real Animal House
The Awesomely Depraved Saga of the Fraternity That Inspired the Movie
-
- $9.99
Publisher Description
The creator of Animal House at last tells the real story of the fraternity that inspired the iconic film -- a story far more outrageous and funny than any movie could ever capture.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The screenplay for National Lampoon's Animal House was the brainchild of National Lampoon editor Harold Ramis, Doug Kenny and Miller, who turned Dartmouth frat life into the 1978 hit movie. Often, their stories were considered too sordid for Universal's producers to air. Ironically, what seemed too gross to put on screen in the '70s is now too boring to put in print. Yet without actors to give dimension to the zany characters, the tall tales feel like an awkward, horny sophomore faking bravado. What readers learn is Miller's obsession with puerile details and his insane desire to degrade himself. Pinto, the name he gave himself at Dartmouth, finds acceptance at a fraternity because of his "booting prowess" (vomiting skills); he witnesses the sexual victories of his pals, drinks himself sick and survives car accidents. Like the outtakes in DVDs, this book proves that Miller's frat-boy shenanigans deserved to stay on the cutting-room floor, not because of any sense of prudery, but to save the reader from testosterone-fueled overkill. Die-hard fans may be amused by the tales of "Bags" and "Seal," the two real-life inspirations for Animal House's Bluto, the role John Belushi nailed. But none of the recorded pranks have the life-spirit contained in Belushi's clarion call: "Toga!"
Customer Reviews
Enjoyable read
I have been a fan of Chris Miller since reading his stories in National Lampoon in the early 70's. I was looking for a collection of those stories when I came across this book.
I read this book very quickly. It was hard to stop, the stories flowing so fast. Much if it was familiar or sort of familiar from seeing Animal House so many times.
My only complaint was that there are a lot of typos in this e edition. Many times you have to guess what the word is supposed to be due to strange characters inserted where they shouldn't be.
Overall though, I would recommend it.
Hilarious
As someone who has seen Animal House probably 100+ times this book was the icing on the cake. An uproarious comedy.