Midnight Madness is a 1980 cult comedy film from Walt Disney Pictures, starring David Naughton. The film is about a group of college students who participate in an all night puzzle solving race. This is Michael J. Fox's first film role.
Tagline: The most fun you'll ever have... in the dark.
DVD Tagline: A Wacky College Adventure
The film did poorly at the box office and was panned by critics, but later gained a cult following, and has served as the inspiration for many real-life puzzle and alternate reality games.
Leon, a genius, summons five college students to his apartment and challenges them to participate in his latest game creation: The Great All-Nighter. He tells them about his game and instructs them to form teams. At first, the leaders refuse to play, however, rivalries between them lead all five to change their minds by the game's start time.
The game works like this:
Leon, as "game master," keeps track of the teams locations with a giant map, and various radio equipment. The teams also supposed to call and check in at each clue (though many of the teams end up skipping at least one location).
Starting at sundown, the five teams meet and are given envelopes with the first clue. They travel around Los Angeles, deciphering new clues in various locations, including the Griffith Observatory, a piano museum, the Pabst Blue Ribbon brewery, a restaurant, a mini golf course, the Los Angeles International Airport, and a video arcade. The first team to reach the final destination wins the game.
The movie focuses mainly on the struggle between the yellow and blue teams. The adventures of the other three teams are subplots, as well as the situation at Leon's apartment ("Game Control"). Here, along with his female assistants (Candy and Sunshine), Leon monitors the progress of the game. Already unpopular with his landlady, Mrs. Grimhouse, for the amount of noise he makes, Leon faces eviction if any of the other tenants complain. Several of them do show up to complain, but as Leon explains the mechanics of the game to them, they become fascinated with it and help run it, much to the annoyance of Grimhouse.
The game culminates in race-to-the-finish at the Bonaventure Hotel, followed by a huge party.
Following a limited release and bad reviews, the film achieved a small cult following after it began airing on the HBO cable network. After a 2001 DVD release from Anchor Bay Entertainment, Midnight Madness was rereleased in 2004 by Disney DVD with the "Walt Disney Pictures Presents" logo--the first time that Disney has officially associated itself with the film.
Midnight Madness inspired many other Alternate Reality Games (ARG) (such as The Game). Every December, a real all night puzzle solving race called Midnight Madness is played in Hot Springs, Arkansas. Midnight Madness follows the same premise and ideas as the Great All-Nighter.
The stop motion animation program Robot Chicken (shown on Adult Swim) featured two brief homages to Midnight Madness in Episode 10: Badunkadunk. Two scenes from the film are reenacted, one where Leon reveals himself to the team leaders, another where Blue Team member Barf assembles the letters of a clue into the nonsense word "Fagabeefe."
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It uses material from the
"Midnight Madness".
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