- Directors:
Todd Phillips;
Andrew Gurland - AMG Rating:



- Genre: Culture & Society
- Movie Type: Social Issues
- Themes: College Life
- Release Year: 1998
- Country: US
- Run Time: 60 minutes
Movies:
Frat House |



| WordNet: frat house |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
a house used as a residence by a chapter of a fraternity
Synonyms: chapterhouse, fraternity house
| Wikipedia: Frat House |
| Frat House | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Todd Phillips Andrew Gurland |
| Produced by | Todd Phillips Andrew Gurland |
| Music by | J.F. Coleman |
| Editing by | Salamo Levin |
| Release date(s) | 21 January 1998 (premiere at Sundance) |
| Running time | 60 mins |
| Country | USA |
| Language | English |
Frat House is a documentary film exploring the darker side of fraternity life. The film was directed by Todd Phillips and Andrew Gurland, and largely filmed at Allentown, Pennsylvania's Muhlenberg College; the majority of the film was shot in the house of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity, which has since been banned from Muhlenberg.[1] The opening fraternity, that drove the filmakers out of the college and the town, is the Beta Chi fraternity on the State University of New York College at Oneonta campus in Oneonta New York. Beta Chi is an Unrecognized fraternity in Oneonta, and was kicked off the Oneonta campus after reports of severe Hazing. it continues to operate as a rogue, unrecognize chapter in the town to this day. Other unregognized fraternities from SUNY Oneonta shown in the film include Sigma Alpha Mu, also known as "Sammy", and Tau Kappa Epsilon, who was recognized in the spring of 2007 but shortly thereafter lost their recognition from the campus. Frat House won two Sundance Film Festival awards in 1998, but has been attacked for containing sequences that were staged for the cameras.
Frat House was originally intended to be shown on the HBO TV channel, but was never aired after receiving allegations that much of the final portion of the film was staged. The sequences concerned involved 'hazing', in which aspring members of the fraternity (known as 'pledges') are seen undergoing humiliating initiation rites. The allegation is that the pledges who appear on screen were in fact already members of the fraternity: the fraternity chapter was paid $1500 to film the events, and several members were paid $50 each to pretend to be pledges and re-enact things that were rumored to happen during fratenity pledging rituals. The filmmakers signed non-binding forms stating that the school and fraternity names would not be used, and that the events did not reflect the behavior of the fraternity. The deceit was noticed because the film was shot in the Spring, but Muhlenberg College did not rush during the Spring.[citation needed]
Phillips and Garland claim their film is completely accurate, but they have not refuted the claim that pledging did not happen during the Spring at Muhlenberg College.[citation needed] While not admitting to have done it himself, Phillips argues that staging re-enactments of true events is a technique used by well-known documentarians such as Nick Broomfield and Michael Moore.[2]
| Preceded by Girls Like Us |
Sundance Grand Jury Prize: Documentary 1998 (tied with The Farm) |
Succeeded by American Movie |
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