The Hollywood Reporter (Weekly)

Kiss Meets the Phantom of the Park Was a Sci-Fi Dud

- — SETH ABRAMOVITC­H

With Studio 666 (out Feb. 22), The Foo Fighters continue in a long, not-always-successful tradition of bands attempting movie stardom. The new horror-comedy is a spiritual successor to 1978’s Kiss Meets the Phantom of the Park — one of the most critically maligned yet passionate­ly loved kitsch oddities to emerge from that decade. The hard rock band’s elaborate costumes, face makeup and pyrotechni­c stage shows helped turn them into one of the biggest acts in the world at the time (between 1977 and 1979, they sold $100 million in records and merchandis­e, roughly $400 million today), and their manager, Bill Aucoin, wanted to take it to the next level. Curiously, Hanna-Barbera, the animation studio behind The Flintstone­s and

The Jetsons, was chosen to produce the TV film for NBC. Phantom shot at Magic Mountain near L.A. and followed a mad scientist (Anthony Zerbe) whose animatroni­c Kiss members do battle with the real ones (who happen to have superpower­s like fire-breathing and laser eyes). “I embrace it like an ugly child,” says Kiss cofounder Paul Stanley. “You have to realize that we were like these imbeciles who got to take over the school. We knew nothing about acting, nothing about filmmaking. We were sold the idea of the film in a sentence that was virtually,

‘A Hard Day’s Night meets Star Wars.’ Well, it was far from either.” If anything, it ended up closer to The Star Wars Holiday Special, which debuted a month later on CBS: an embarrassm­ent that grew into a fan favorite over time.

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