Male Restroom Etiquette

Male Restroom Etiquette is a 2006 American short subject created by Phil R. Rice and produced by his company Zarathustra Studios. The film is a mockumentary about unwritten rules of behavior in male restrooms and is intended to be a parody of educational and social guidance films. Narrated by Rice, Male Restroom Etiquette states restroom customs to be followed and depicts a scenario of social chaos if they are violated. The film was made using the machinima technique of recording video footage from computer games, namely The Sims 2 and SimCity 4. Male Restroom Etiquette won multiple awards and was listed by Guinness World Records Gamer's Edition in 2009 as the most popular Sims video uploaded to YouTube.

Male Restroom Etiquette
A scene showing one of the rules explained in Male Restroom Etiquette: adjacent urinals should be avoided
Game(s)The Sims 2
SimCity 4[1]
Genre(s)Mockumentary[2]
Running time10 min.
Directed byPhil Rice
Written byPhil Rice
VoicesPhil Rice
Craig Howe[1]
Production companyZarathustra Studios
Release(s)September 13, 2006[2]
Website
vimeo.com/267608/description

Synopsis

The narrator (Phil Rice) states that increased cultural diversity has necessitated the exposition of previously unwritten rules regarding the use of male restrooms. According to these rules, males should use restrooms as quickly as possible, maximize physical separation from each other when using urinals, flush urinals when they contain concentrated urine, avoid stalls with unflushed toilets, and avoid eye contact and communication with others. The film depicts a scenario in which excess communication leads to a mess in the restroom and thus deficient hygiene and homeostasis, the latter of which is in the lowest tier in Maslow's hierarchy of needs. As the scenario continues, the restroom occupants turn to violence, leading to police and biological hazard team involvement that closes the restroom. Forced to go elsewhere, other men repeat the scenario, eventually leading to complete societal breakdown.

Background and production

In an interview with The Sydney Morning Herald, Phil Rice stated that the ideas in Male Restroom Etiquette were based on observational humor that he had first seen in 2000 on the collaborative Internet site Everything2. In 2006, he decided to take a temporary hiatus from making machinima and to produce a short humorous work when he returned. He felt that the ideas about restroom behavior on Everything2 were well-suited for visual humor[2] and adapted them into a screenplay.[3] According to Rice, the film "is rooted in the Juvenile humor that most men retain a secret fondness for, but don't get many opportunities to celebrate[, ...] but if the movie is too focused on that kind of humor, you'd lose the intelligent audience that I wrote the film for."[2] Intending to make a parody of educational and social guidance films, Rice considered distributing the film in black-and-white, but decided against it.[2]

Rice originally started to film using id Software's 1997 first-person shooter (FPS) video game Quake II but, after three months of pre-production, was dissatisfied with the game's visual quality. After experimenting, he chose The Sims 2, a 2004 life simulation game published by Electronic Arts. His audio work for Strange Company's 2006 film BloodSpell delayed the start of Male Restroom Etiquette's production. However, after he was able to start, he finished after about two weeks of work. He recorded himself for the narration, and a friend for background voices. He edited audio in Steinberg Cubase SX3 and video footage from the game in Sony Vegas 6.[2]

Reception and impact

Although Rice hosts Male Restroom Etiquette on his own site and uploaded it elsewhere,[3] the film became popular on YouTube, where, after being featured on the front page in early October 2006,[4] it was viewed 2 million times by December 2006,[5] 3.2 million times by February 2007,[3] and 5 million times as of March 21, 2009.[6] According to the Guinness World Records Gamer's Edition, it is the most viewed Sims film on YouTube.[7] Citing this popularity, Elijah Horwatt credits the work with increasing public interest in machinima.[8] The film has won awards, including Best Writing at the Academy of Machinima Arts & Sciences' 2006 Machinima Festival,[9] and Best of the Web from Animation World Network (AWN) in 2007.[10] Television networks were interested in airing Male Restroom Etiquette, but the work uses game-provided content, and Rice was unable to obtain the required permission from Electronic Arts, the copyright owner of that content.[4]

Writing for machinima.com, Grove praised Rice's decision to base Male Restroom Etiquette on educational films because Male Restroom Etiquette shows truthfully and parodies male customs in restrooms. Grove also stated that the music, an original soundtrack, fits well.[2] In highlighting the film in their Best of the Web showcase, AWN stated that the it "shows that a skilled filmmaker can create compelling performances and stories in machinima".[10] Grove stated that, for many, the work served as their introduction to machinima.[2]

Notes

References

Further reading

  • Rice, Phil (October 2, 2006). "Why It Worked". Overman's Blog. Zarathustra Studios. Archived from the original on October 26, 2006. Retrieved 2009-04-24.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.