The Room Thread

I wonder: How many times have you watched The Room? I'm sure most everyone in this thread has seen it more than once, don't lie. :P

As for me, I'd say that I have watched it over 50 times so far... ;)
 
Hey, just wanted to say....

The Room just aired in San Diego last weekend, Tommy Wiseau was there. He wore sunglasses the whole time even in the theatre at midnight.

He had us ask him questions in the theatre and I was totally trashed so I raised my hand and asked him what noise a chicken made, he told me I was cute and had me run to the front of the theatre with him to ask him there (he also couldn't understand my question because this guy barely speaks English).

It was so crazy!!
 
Fialovy said:
so everyone is either Native American, a Smurf, or Caucasian?
That would probably be accurate way of summing up everyone.
 
Dunno if anyone posted this but it made me think of that fat stupid faggot ChompyRex

[youtube]mvuwldnG7c0[/youtube]
 
I don't know if anyone has posted this yet but here it is, from the guy who played as Denny from The Room.
http://vimeo.com/59931490
Philip Haldiman is making a comic about his experience during The Room.
 
darkhorse816 said:
Guess who got The Disaster Artist delivered today?

What did you think of it? I couldn't wait for my copy to arrive, so I found a pdf.
 
haina said:
darkhorse816 said:
Guess who got The Disaster Artist delivered today?

What did you think of it? I couldn't wait for my copy to arrive, so I found a pdf.

It's really good. It's really funny, but it's also really sad. Greg Sestero was Tommy's only friend.

I love how the story is spread out. It goes from production on the room, to Greg's life before the room and how he met Tommy.

It's also an important guide on how not to make a movie. Tommy was extremely unprofessional:

He'd show up 3 hours late.

He refused to allow the cast and crew to converse with each other.

He refused to listen to others' opinions.

He made a big deal out of paying checks for his actors.

After you finish filming all of the scenes in one particular set, you have to take that set down to make room for other ones. Tommy filmed one scene in the alley set, which was supposed to be the only scene (the original Denny and Chris R confrontation). Then he wanted to film ANOTHER scene in the alley, the "me underwears" one where they were tossing the football around. So they had to put up the set again.

The guy who played Chris-R by the way was everything Tommy was not. He was tall, well-built, successful, was on the Armenian bobsledding team, was a motivational speaker for the Armenian community in Los Angeles, and started up several internet companies. He was roommates with the guy who originally played Mark, and he took his part seriously, reading acting theory and stuff, and was pretty much a borderline method actor. He gave probably the best performance in The Room. And when Tommy expected him to film his scene again, he was even more pissed, and that added to his performance.
 
darkhorse816 said:
It's really good. It's really funny, but it's also really sad. Greg Sestero was Tommy's only friend.

I loved the book too, but sometimes I felt as if Tommy was being used by Greg, and parts felt like an invasion of privacy. I'm approximately 200 pages in on my second read, so I haven't gotten to those particular parts yet, so I'm interested to see how I'll feel this time around. Regardless, this is a fantastic book and I'm really surprised it isn't available in bookstores in my town. The movie has a particularly strong following here and I'm pretty sure it's been released in Europe.

It's really fascinating how Tommy accidentally made what (in my opinion) is the funniest movie of all time. I've never seen a traditional comedy that compares to it and it's very rewatchable. It's really fascinating to see how it was made. The co-author, Tom Bissell, also wrote a fascinating article on The Room called Cinema Crudite, but it's very difficult to find at the minute. Below is a link to some interesting things someone found out about Tommy.

http://www.reddit.com/r/theroom/com...ding_the_disaster_artist_i_decided_to/cd042ba
 
darkhorse816 said:
It's really good. It's really funny, but it's also really sad. Greg Sestero was Tommy's only friend.

I love how the story is spread out. It goes from production on the room, to Greg's life before the room and how he met Tommy.

It's also an important guide on how not to make a movie. Tommy was extremely unprofessional:

He'd show up 3 hours late.

He refused to allow the cast and crew to converse with each other.

He refused to listen to others' opinions.

He made a big deal out of paying checks for his actors.

After you finish filming all of the scenes in one particular set, you have to take that set down to make room for other ones. Tommy filmed one scene in the alley set, which was supposed to be the only scene (the original Denny and Chris R confrontation). Then he wanted to film ANOTHER scene in the alley, the "me underwears" one where they were tossing the football around. So they had to put up the set again.

The guy who played Chris-R by the way was everything Tommy was not. He was tall, well-built, successful, was on the Armenian bobsledding team, was a motivational speaker for the Armenian community in Los Angeles, and started up several internet companies. He was roommates with the guy who originally played Mark, and he took his part seriously, reading acting theory and stuff, and was pretty much a borderline method actor. He gave probably the best performance in The Room. And when Tommy expected him to film his scene again, he was even more pissed, and that added to his performance.
To read how unprofessional Tommy was kinda makes me wonder how many people might of quit during production of the movie due to how he acted. Also that actually does explain why his performance as Chris R. was rather good compared to the performance of everyone else. To read you post, seeing how he is everything Tommy was not is rather surprising since the guy had a small role in the film. Makes me want to actually buy a copy of The Disaster Artist.
 
c-no said:
To read how unprofessional Tommy was kinda makes me wonder how many people might of quit during production of the movie due to how he acted. Also that actually does explain why his performance as Chris R. was rather good compared to the performance of everyone else. To read you post, seeing how he is everything Tommy was not is rather surprising since the guy had a small role in the film. Makes me want to actually buy a copy of The Disaster Artist.

At least two directors of photography quit. The original Mark and Lisa were fired. Tommy built himself a $6,000 private bathroom in the middle of the studio, which had a dividing curtain instead of a door. The actor playing Denny was 26, and originally instructed to enter scenes singing his lines. Buy the book, it's amazing! Here's one of the funniest anecdotes.

Before running the scene one final time, Tommy wanted to talk to the flower shop owner about her dog. “So cute,” he said, as he petted the dog. “Hopefully he doesn’t bite me, my God.”
I think the owner somehow misinterpreted this as Tommy wanting the dog out of the next take. “Well,” she said, “he’s actually really old now. He just sits around. He won’t bother anyone. He kind of rules over this counter.”
Tommy nodded, smiling, still gazing down at the motionless little dog. “So is it real thing?”
The flower shop owner looked at Tommy uncertainly. “I’m sorry?” she said, after a
moment.
“Your dog,” Tommy said, unfazed. “Is it real thing?”
The woman kept looking at Tommy, probably trying to figure out whether this man who’d taken over her store was really asking if her dog was real. Did Tommy think it was a robot? An android pug of some kind?
“Yes,” the woman said finally. “My dog is a real thing.”
 
I just finished reading The Disaster Artist and it's kind of amazing. Like, way more amazing than I expected it to be. My first thought upon finishing it was that even if none of this stuff actually happened, even if the author turned out not to be the real Greg Sestero from the film, the book is still brilliant simply because this is what every single person secretly believes Tommy Wiseau's life is like. Imagine reading a parody of The Great Gatsby set in Hollywood with Tommy Wiseau as Gatsby.
 
I've now read The Disaster Artist, like, five times, and I'm just starting over again.

What Sestero and Bissell have done so well is what any good tell-all should do, which is to be about more than its subject matter. The book is not just about the making of a wonderfully bad film. It's about connection, about being on the outside and wanting desperately to be in. It's about dreams and the lengths people will go to achieve them. It's about the darker side of friendship, with its petty jealousies and the vague sense of competition that can color it. It's about identity and principles and how strongly someone can hold onto them and how someone else can easily thrown them away.

So yeah, read it.
 
Why didn't someone do this until now?!

The Room Characters with Sonichu Characters - Comparison


Tommy----- Chris
Lisa--------- Megan
Mark-------- Asperchu
Denny------- Sonichu
Mike-------- Wild
Michelle---- Simonla
Claudette-- Barb
Chris-R---- Blake
Peter------ Magi-chan
Steve------ Mitch Sonichu
Tommy's boss- Bob



Send me in more characters to increase the list!
 
Dork Of Ages said:
Why didn't someone do this until now?!

The Room Characters with Sonichu Characters - Comparison


Tommy----- Chris
Lisa--------- Megan
Mark-------- Asperchu
Denny------- Sonichu
Mike-------- Wild
Michelle---- Simonla
Claudette-- Barb
Chris-R---- Blake
Peter------ Magi-chan
Steve------ Mitch Sonichu



Send me in more characters to increase the list!

Bob is the unseen "son a a bitch" boss.
 
A theatre down the street from my school has the Room's poster on the side with the words "Coming soon" AUGH YEAH
 
Dr. Cuddlebug said:
A theatre down the street from my school has the Room's poster on the side with the words "Coming soon" AUGH YEAH
So does that mean they are going to do a theatre version of The Room? Can the lead actor capture the charm of Wiseau? Can the guy playing Mark have the same beard? Can they get a guy who gives an all-star performance of a drug dealer who wants his money?
 
Holy FUCKING SHIT, Greg Sestero was on the most recent Nostalgia Critic episode. I had to bite my pillow from screaming, because my roommates are asleep. Anyway, bedtime. G'night!
 
Oh baby, finally got my disaster artist and dear god does it live up to the hype. For every question answered a thousand more pop up, for every mystery unravveled a dozen more become apparant, for every piss yourself laughing scene explained the ultimate secret becomes ever more evident.

Just what the fucking fuck of fuck is up with Tommy Wiseau!?
 
Okay. I finally finished reading The Disaster Artist. It was amazing. Greg Sestero and Tom Bissell answer a lot of questions, and paint a sympathetic and portrait of Tommy Wiseau. It's so vivid, and it's interesting to hear about Greg's own career as well.

It's about friendship, it's about dreams, it's about frustration, it's about the truth.

There was one part, though, where I lost sympathy for Tommy. It's when his second DP called him a liar, after he told Tommy they needed a generator, and Tommy lied to him and said he called the generator supplier and said they were out of generators, whereas the DP called the suppliers and said that Tommy never called them, and left the set along with most of his crew. Tommy called him a faggot. I swear a lot, but faggot is one of the words I will never say. No one should ever EVER be called a the f-word. Tommy was a liar a lot of the time, but did not like being called one. But so much of the lies were part of how he built himself.

He lied about his nationality because he hated being European (he's Czech I think) and wanted to be an American. Or he lied about his experience so that people would respect him. The lies were to make him "mysterious" so that they would hide the truth he was so afraid of showing. The truth about himself even he refused to acknowledge as the truth anymore.

The moment you truly feel sorry for Greg was when Tommy made him shave his beard. Although you feel sorry for Greg throughout the book, even before you read it. Greg was hoping no one would recognize him with his beard if the movie ever came out, but then Tommy made him shave it, and Greg was not pleased.

I've said it before in my posts above, but this book is also a how-to guide of how not to make a movie, especially with production. Calling your SECOND DP the f-word is a very bad idea.
 
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