Haven't seen the SOUTH PARK episode yet, but the idea of characters
going into a film is nearly as old as film itself. Buster Keaton's
silent "Sherlock, Jr." (1924) is a classic example.
Regards,
Joe
And that's not actually what happens in "Imaginationland" anyway. It's more
of a "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe" or "Alice in Wonderland" type of
situation. They go with a dude in a balloon/ship (who's supposed to be a nod
to the Mr. Sophistication character from "The Killing of a Chinese Bookie")
to an actual place.
The trio of episodes won the 2008 Emmy for Outstanding Animated Program of
One Hour or More.
Matt and Trey _are_ voracious consumers of media, and likely have a lot of
influences for everything they write (and this episode particularly is like a
kitchen sink), but I've not seen anything in any interviews about
"Imaginationland" that mention The Real Ghostbusters.
By the way, you can view the episode(s) here:
http://www.southparkstudios.com/guide/1110
Amy
--
Ten Thousand Questions
A Question a Day for Journaling, Self-Discovery, and Transformation
"2009 is the Year of Questions"
tenthousandquestions.com
Not completely an actual place... it's the world's shared imagination
so it's sort of a cross between "into a film" and "to another world".
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