"THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW" Is Heading to Sphere Las Vegas for an Immersive Experience in 2027

"THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW" Is Heading to Sphere Las Vegas for an Immersive Experience in 2027

Written by: Sam Santiago

"I see you shiver with antici...pation."

As Dr. Frank-N-Furter famously purred in 1975's The Rocky Horror Picture Show, anticipation is exactly what fans are feeling today. One of the strangest, sexiest, and most beloved cult films ever made is headed to one of the strangest venues on Earth.

According to Variety, The Rocky Horror Picture Show is getting the Sphere treatment in Las Vegas, with an immersive reimagining of the legendary musical set to debut in 2027.

If you've witnessed what Sphere Studios did with The Wizard of Oz, then you already have an idea of what may be coming. Using its signature immersive technology, the company plans to enhance the 1975 cult classic and transform it into a fully immersive experience designed specifically for the massive Las Vegas venue.

Whether that's exciting or terrifying depends entirely on how protective you are of your cult movie classics.

Rocky Horror has spent the last five decades building a legacy unlike anything else in cinema. Created by Richard O'Brien and directed by Jim Sharman, the film famously bombed during its initial theatrical run before finding a second life through midnight screenings. Over time, those screenings evolved into full-blown audience participation events complete with costumes, props, call backs, and enough rice and toilet paper to make theater managers nervous.

Today, The Rocky Horror Picture Show remains the longest-running theatrical release in history, a title few films will ever come close to touching.

Sphere Entertainment CEO Jim Dolan believes the venue is the perfect next step in the film's evolution.

"Through Sphere Studios, we are building a slate of original experiences that push the boundaries of technology and storytelling for this new medium, while always keeping the audience at the center of the experience," Dolan said. "Since The Rocky Horror Picture Show premiered in 1975, it redefined audience participation and became a cultural phenomenon. With Sphere, we have the opportunity to take that spirit of immersion to an entirely new level."

The announcement arrives on the heels of the tremendous success of The Wizard of Oz at Sphere, which reportedly generated more than $400 million in ticket sales. That project also sparked plenty of controversy, with many classic film fans criticizing Sphere Studios for using artificial intelligence and digital enhancements to effectively create a new version of the beloved film.

Will Rocky Horror fans embrace the same treatment?

That remains to be seen.

After all, this isn't just another movie. For generations of outsiders, weirdos, horror fans, punks, goths, drag performers, and midnight movie addicts, Rocky Horror isn't simply a film. It's a ritual.

The story follows newly engaged couple Brad Majors and Janet Weiss, played by Barry Bostwick and Susan Sarandon, whose car breaks down during a storm. Seeking shelter, they stumble into the bizarre castle of Dr. Frank-N-Furter, portrayed by the incomparable Tim Curry in one of the most iconic performances in horror and musical history. What follows is a wild ride filled with aliens, monsters, sexual awakenings, rock music, and enough fishnets to outfit an entire army.

The prospect of experiencing classics like "Time Warp," "Sweet Transvestite," and "Science Fiction/Double Feature" inside Sphere's massive wraparound visual environment is certainly intriguing. Whether longtime fans will embrace the technological makeover is another question entirely.

One thing is certain. Rocky Horror has survived changing trends, shifting audiences, and fifty years of cultural evolution. If any cult film is bizarre enough to thrive inside a giant glowing orb in the middle of the Las Vegas desert, it's this one.

And if you're looking for even more Frank-N-Furter goodness, the definitive Rocky Horror documentary, Strange Journey, was released earlier this month, offering fans a deep dive into the film's incredible legacy.

It's astounding.

Time is fleeting.

And apparently, so is the distance between Transylvania and Las Vegas.