I was 13 years old when National Lampoon's Animal House was released. Probably a little younger than the intended audience, but as the film turned out to have remarkable influence and staying power in the culture I may in fact have been right on time because I ended up "growing into it." Having seen the movie several times I have been struck by the quality of the screenwriting, directing, and editing - it remains consistently funny throughout its 109 minutes. The dialogue is chock full of deep "wisdom," and a work colleague and I routinely quote from it almost every week. While I was an undergraduate in the 1980s the movie acquired a kind of iconic status and was so popular that actor DeWayne Jessie, who played rhythm'n'blues singer Otis Day, went on a successful concert "toga tour" of college campuses and played a gig at my campus - I even got to interview him for the campus newspaper after the show. Yes, the film is certainly not what one would call politically correct, and one of the most-used adjectives contemporary reviewers used to describe it was "tasteless;" yet director John Landis has always described its essential tone as "sweet," and he has a point because unlike many subsequent film comedies it is never mean-spirited.
So when I spotted Matty Simmons' "Fat, Drunk, and Stupid: The Inside Story Behind the Making of Animal House" on the shelf at my local library, I snapped it right up. Simmons, who had a successful business career as a press agent and as a founder of The Diners Club credit card company, entered publishing in the late 1960s and began Weight Watchers magazine before launching National Lampoon with a core editorial staff drawn from the Harvard Lampoon magazine. He presided over the magazine's rapid rise to success and supported its expansion into books, stage shows, radio, and audio recordings. By 1976, Simmons was looking to retain his now-formidable roster of writing talent and ambitious to break into film, so he teamed with Ivan Reitman (who would become his co-producer) and hired writers Harold Ramis, Doug Kenney, and Chris Miller to develop a script based loosely around a recently-published school yearbook parody and Miller's own college experiences in a fraternity. Yet it was the popularity of National Lampoon, rather than the intrinsic merits of the preliminary screenplay draft, that enabled Simmons eventually to secure a low-budget deal with Universal.
The heart of "Fat, Drunk, and Stupid," running to about 100 pages in the middle of the book, tells the story of the making of Animal House, with two chapters on casting, some amusing anecdotes about the location filming on Eugene, Oregon, and some simple techniques director Landis used to get convincing performances out of his actors, several of whom were making their first appearances in a film (e.g., Karen Allen, Kevin Bacon, Stephen Furst, and of course John Belushi). One interesting story details the experience of cast members who crashed a real frat party at the campus where they were about to start filming and getting roughed up by a gang of hostile jocks, barely escaping from a sound thrashing. Simmons was apparently able to get some help from several cast and crew members who provided him with reminiscences he quotes at length. He also samples some details from proposed sequels to the film, none of which were ever - thankfully - produced.
Nevertheless, the book is not nearly as good as it probably could have been. Simmons pads the beginning with about 40 pages of personal history and the last 60 pages with meandering filler, including a tiresome "where are they now" section. Despite Simmons' insider status as producer, the reader gets the distinct impression he was not nearly "inside" enough to witness or obtain more stories from those who participated in the filming, and he fails to compile or get new perspectives on some of the more hilarious episodes that have been reported in other publications. The result is a half-baked narrative that doesn't quite live up to the promise of the title, but fans of the film may want to check it out anyway, if only for chapters 7 through 16. One thing they will find is that "Fat, Drunk, and Stupid" is a quick read. I was able to start and finish it in a single afternoon, leaving me with enough time for a road trip.