Delta House
Delta House
| 16 January 1979 (USA)
SEASON & EPISODES
  • 1
  • Reviews
    Matialth

    Good concept, poorly executed.

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    SeeQuant

    Blending excellent reporting and strong storytelling, this is a disturbing film truly stranger than fiction

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    Siflutter

    It's easily one of the freshest, sharpest and most enjoyable films of this year.

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    Aubrey Hackett

    While it is a pity that the story wasn't told with more visual finesse, this is trivial compared to our real-world problems. It takes a good movie to put that into perspective.

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    Little-Mikey

    I have fond memories of this show and looked forward each week to another episode. True, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to conclude that this series was a watered down version of a wildly raunchy hit movie nor that TV standards for prime time were strict in 1979.But the same standards were even stricter in 1972 when Gene Reynolds and Larry Gelbart were working on a prime time TV series based on another wildly raunchy hit movie where comedy, immorality and bad taste intermingled with lots of blood and guts. The end result, was a TV series that was, in spite of the restrictions (or because of the restrictions) a huge hit that outlived itself and would've lasted a few more years had it not been for the decision to end it all with a big bang in February 1983. That series was MASH.If only DELTA HOUSE had been aired on CBS with Gene Reynolds and Larry Gelbart on the team, the series would've been a lot funnier (in spite of the restrictions) and a lot more successful.The first episode which introduced "Blotto", a seemingly hopelessly uncool loser until he chugged down a pitcher like it was nothing, was a gem! "I didn't know Bluto could write!" "I didn't know Bluto could read!" Another episode that stood out was the one where the Omegas built a fallout shelter and the Deltas managed to convince the Omegas that the "big one" had just been dropped.It would've been be nice if the series would come out on DVD.But according to the "Where are they now?" featurette of the ANIMAL HOUSE DVD, the events that followed ANIMAL HOUSE, leading to what would become DELTA HOUSE, never occurred. So we must accept the fact that DELTA HOUSE will probably never see the light of DVD reissuing.

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    F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

    "National Lampoon's Animal House" was one of those rare films that changed the entire film industry. A huge box-office hit, it spawned dozens (maybe hundreds) of imitations. Naturally, television wanted some of the gravy. In the 1979 TV season, all three U.S. TV networks rushed frat-house sitcoms onto the air. The ones on CBS and NBC were outright crap, and died quickly. 'Delta House', on ABC, was likewise crap, but had the advantage of being the *official* TV version of 'Animal House', due to casting several of the film's actors in their same roles here.John Belushi, who had starred as 'Bluto' Blutarsky in the film, was (no surprise) unwilling to commit to a weekly sitcom. In this show's one piece of cleverness, a surrogate Bluto was cast in the form of actor Josh Mostel as 'Blotto', Bluto's brother. Josh Mostel is a talented actor: his physical type makes him difficult to cast, but he has a far broader range than his father, the grossly overrated Less-Than-Zero Mostel. (In an interview, Josh Mostel revealed the one and only piece of showbiz wisdom ever imparted to him by his father: 'Just before you go on stage, suck on something red so your tongue will show up.') It would have been intriguing if Belushi had guest-starred in 'Delta House'. Despite his absence, the scriptwriters made running references to his character. In one episode, Blotto announced that he'd received a letter from his brother Bluto, prompting a Delta brother to respond 'I didn't know Bluto could write' and another Delta to riposte 'I didn't know Blotto could read.' We did get to learn a bit more about the characters (and actors) who were carried over from the original movie ... for example, actor Bruce "D-Day" McGill demonstrating his ability to dislocate his joints so that his legs are reversed from hip to ankle!The most obvious flaw in 'Delta House' was that network television simply could not offer the bawdy humour, drugs references, and obscenity-laced dialogue which had made 'Animal House' so popular. Much as Blotto was a bowdlerised version of Bluto, this sitcom was an antiseptic version of a film which was a hit precisely *because* of its skanky elements. Without any 'Animal House' shenanigans, 'Delta House' fell back on the lowest sitcom humour. A typical gag: in one episode, an attractive co-ed walked through the frat house wearing an army uniform. She went into a room, closed the door, then *immediately* opened the door and came out again wearing a sexy miniskirt and high heels. The laugh track guffawed uproariously, but the unfunny effect was clearly achieved by a very obvious jump cut.For modern viewers, the single biggest attraction of 'Delta House' is a glimpse of the young Michelle Pfeiffer, early in her career. But Pfeiffer's role on 'Delta House' was extremely small, and she was given nothing to do beyond the standard bimbo bits. Pfeiffer has aged in an interesting way; I find her far sexier the way she is now (as I write this) than as she was at the time of 'Delta House' ... and she's a better actress now, too. The only alumnus of 'Delta House' to graduate with honours is make-up man Michael Blake, who is now the leading authority on the life and career of Lon Chaney. Really, there's nothing much going on here.

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    M. C. Brennan (penelopedanger)

    In the 1970s, no hit film was safe from the clutches of ambitious TV producers. "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore" became "Alice," "Private Benjamin" became, um, "Private Benjamin", and let's not even talk about ABC's ill-fated attempt to turn "The Deer Hunter" into a sitcom vehicle for Norman Fell. In that vein, "Delta House" had the potential to be a worthy follow-up to "Animal House." It reunited much of the cast of the debaucherous 1978 classic as well as many of the original's creative team. Trouble was, "Animal House" was a raunchy R-rated movie, and in 1979, television was so squeaky-clean you couldn't even say the word "pregnant." ABC, land of "Three's Company"'s wacky-till-it-bleeds double-entendres, stuck "Delta House" in an early-evening timeslot worthy of "The Waltons" and surgically excised any trace of the original's humor, leaving the cast with nothing to do but pass around tone-deaf anti-establishment banter that even Dean Wormer would have found square. "Delta House" got promising ratings despite all this, but perhaps sensing the creative impossibility, ABC pulled the plug. The cast and crew deserve a medal for trying, but there was just no way to adapt a screamingly funny R-rated film for broadcast TV in 1979, and thankfully there still isn't. John Belushi's Bluto would have smashed this show to bits on a staircase.

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    sarahjones1982

    I recently was watching the TV land cable network and saw a TV program featuring some familiar characters. I quickly contacted my boyfriend in the other room and he immediately recognized them as the characters from the classic film Animal House.The show was called Delta House, and while the Animal House movie was quite entertaining this very predictable and unfunny sitcom is not. The character played by John Belushi is not present and the characters in the show are all watered down compared to their original version. I'm actually befuddled considering I (nor anyone else I asked about it) had never heard of the show, which is quite unusual considering the popularity of the movie. After watching just two episodes it's very easy for me to see why this show only lasted one season. It's a terrible bastardization of a great film.

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