Let’s Do the Time Warp Again: Celebrating 50 Years of The Rocky Horror Picture Show

Step behind the curtain of The Rocky Horror Picture Show with photographer Mick Rock. Photo: Barnes & Noble.

Celebrating 50 Years of The Rocky Horror Picture Show

This year marks the 50th anniversary of the cult classic The Rocky Horror Picture Show. At first a box-office flop in 1975, it went on to gross nearly $225 million and earn the distinction of being the longest-running theatrical release in history, fueled by decades of raucous midnight screenings.

But Rocky Horror is more than a movie. It became a movement — a communal ritual of fishnets, call-backs, and liberation that continues to ripple through fashion, nightlife, and music culture. From Vivienne Westwood’s SEX boutique to RuPaul’s Drag Race, its unapologetic celebration of queerness and nonconformity endures. (Magnum PR, 2025)


Mick Rock’s Lost Archives

Legendary photographer Mick Rock (1948–2021), often called “the man who shot the seventies,” had exclusive access to the set during the film’s original production. This fall, his long-lost archives are being unveiled in a stunning new book:

Rocky Horror: A Behind-the-Scenes Look at the Cult Classic
📅 Release Date: September 30
📖 Available now for pre-order

This electrifying collection brings together rarely seen photographs and intimate behind-the-scenes moments, offering fans the ultimate visual time capsule of the film that redefined camp, glam, and queerness on screen. (Barnes & Noble, 2025)


Inside the Book

The book captures the raw magic of Rocky Horror through candid moments with Tim Curry, Susan Sarandon, and Richard O’Brien, alongside intimate shots of the cast between takes. Every page immerses readers in the bold, bizarre, and beautiful world that transformed a low-budget musical into a global cultural phenomenon.

Highlights include:

  • A foreword by creator Richard O’Brien
  • Hundreds of rare photographs and contact sheets
  • Behind-the-scenes anecdotes from the original set
  • VIP interviews with cast, crew, and celebrity fans including Joan Jett, Billy Corgan, Courtney Love, Juliette Lewis, Jinkx Monsoon, Trixie Mattel, Peaches, Norman Reedus, Cassandra Peterson (Elvira), and many more

Exhibitions & Celebrations

To mark the release, special exhibitions in New York and Los Angeles will showcase rare prints and unseen contact sheets from Mick Rock’s archives. The Los Angeles event will coincide with Rock’s birthday, featuring appearances from collaborators and cultural icons who continue to carry Rocky’s torch.


A Visual Love Letter to Rocky Horror

Whether you’re a longtime devotee or just discovering the Time Warp, Mick Rock’s Rocky Horror is dripping with the glam, grit, and rebellious spirit that made the movie a revolution in platform heels.

✨ Don’t just shiver with antici—pation. Dive into this timeless tribute and celebrate a phenomenon that continues to resonate with audiences, generation after generation.


Mick Rock still taken from SHOT! The Psycho-Spiritual Mantra Of Rock, Directed by Barnaby Clay. Used with permission.

Photo: (c) Estate of Mick Rock 1974, 2025. Used with permission.

Opening soon: Photographic Justice: The Corky Lee Story

From Photographic Justice: The Corky Lee Story, Corky Lee on 42nd St. Photo: Jennifer Takaki, used with permission.

Documentaries are windows into real-life narratives, offering insights into diverse subjects. They captivate audiences by illuminating untold stories, exploring historical events, or shedding light on societal issues. They not only provoke thought, challenge perspectives, and foster empathy, they also serve as educational tools, imparting knowledge on topics ranging from science and history to culture and politics. Documentaries play an important role in shaping public discourse and fostering understanding of the world around us. One example is Photographic Justice: The Corky Lee Story.

All Is Well Pictures, in association with Ford Foundation and Scandobean productions, presents Photographic Justice: The Corky Lee Story. It will be released theatrically in New York (DCTV’s Firehouse Cinema) on April 19 and in Los Angeles (Laemmle Glendale) on April 26 with a regional expansion to follow. (EG-PR, 2024)

Official Selection: DOC NYC, CAAMFest, Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival (LAAPFF), Asian American International Film Festival (AAIFF), and many more.

Photographic Justice: The Corky Lee Story – For 50 years, Chinese American photographer Corky Lee documented the celebrations, struggles, and daily lives of Asian American Pacific Islanders with epic focus. Determined to push mainstream media to include AAPI culture in the visual record of American history, Lee produced an astonishing archive of nearly a million compelling photographs. His work takes on new urgency with the alarming rise in anti-Asian attacks during the Covid pandemic. Jennifer Takaki’s intimate portrait reveals the triumphs and tragedies of the man behind the lens.

Running Time: 87 minutes
Language: English
Not Rated
Documentary Feature (USA)

Corky Lee was born in 1947 in New York to Chinese immigrants who owned a laundry in Queens. He majored in history at Queens College and became a community organizer in Manhattan’s Chinatown in the 1970s. Over the next five decades he photographed countless protests and cultural events in the Asian American Pacific Islander community. Lee’s photographs documented the birth and growth of the Asian American movement for social justice and he became known as “The Undisputed, Unofficial, Asian American Photographer Laureate.” When he died in  2021 at the age of 73 due to Covid, the press mourned his death worldwide.

Filmmaker Jennifer Takaki is a fourth generation Japanese American from Colorado. She began her career in journalism at a Denver TV station and later moved to Hong Kong to work with Encore International. In Hong Kong, she produced English-based news programming broadcast in China, India, and the Middle East via Rupert Murdoch’s STAR-TV. In New York, she produced and directed “Photographic Justice: The Corky Lee Story” which premiered at DOC NYC and was supported by the Ford Foundation and The Center for Asian American Media (CAAM). She was awarded the prestigious Better Angels Lavine Fellowship in 2023.