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Top 10 high school flicks.

Discussion in 'TV & Movie Discussion' started by Inamorata, Aug 10, 2003.

  1. Inamorata

    Inamorata City Girl

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    10. Rock n Roll High School (1979)
    This was designed to be a cult movie and has stayed one since its release in 1979. Helping its canonical status is the film's focal point: Punk rock super group The Ramones, a band that's maintained this picture's cool factor for the last two decades. '70s hottie PJ Soles plays a cheerleader who's so nutty about The Ramones that she'll stop at almost nothing to get tickets for their show. Meanwhile, principle Mary Woronov threatens "suspension for life." The kids? Well, they generally run amuck, attempting to ditch hall monitors and genuflecting to The Ramones, especially how Joey "slithers pizza into his mouth." Stupid, rockin' fun.



    9. High School Confidential (1958)
    Jerry Lee Lewis, who opens the film pounding on his piano in the back of a truck. The picture stars Russ Tamblyn as a tough Chicago kid who's the new kid in town, pining for pretty Diane Jergens, a babe who belongs to John Drew Barrymore. Trouble brews for Russ, who also experiences the passes of his sex crazed Aunt heavy flirting with his hot teacher and a boatload of hep lingo. A lot of words end with "ville" (like "squaresville") and you'll hear what's "nowhere" or what causes a "flipout" or the greatest line: "Tomorrow's a drag, the future's a flake." Campy, beatnik-inspired, funny and even, oddly profound in its silly way, this movie is the swingingest, man. You dig?



    8. Heathers (1989)
    A startling, darkly funny teen picture, "Heathers" -- starring Winona Ryder and Christian Slater -- remains a nice antidote to all those life positive '80s John Hughes' films. Here, the jocks and the snobs, particularly a Nazi-like regime clique of girls all named Heather, get theirs in creative, incredibly mean style. Heather-ette Ryder longs for something more than the "diet coke heads." When new boy Slater swaggers into the lunchroom, she's smitten. The two become a homicidal duo, engaging in a murder spree that look like a rash of suicides (one involves a cup of Drano). The humor's positively black and the dialogue is priceless: "Heather why do you have to be such a mega bitch?" Answer? "Because I can be."



    7. Grease (1978)
    Classic story: Bad boy meets good girl. The two fall in love during a wildly romantic summer break but when school starts, what to do? They can't run around in bathing suits, hiding the fact that one's an Australian goody-goody while the other's an all out greaser. The film follows the shenanigans of the 1950's gangs the T-Birds and the Pink Ladies while they generally hate school, mess around at a mixer, toy with fresh faced Sandy, neck, and sing and dance. A musical that has stood the test of time and one that fills a certain population of Gen-X-er's with great memories. "Grease" is the classic that taught you how to get your man. Teased hair and black hot pants. Terrific fun, especially for all those songs and most particularly for the charismatic Travolta.



    6. Carrie (1976)
    Wow, High School can really suck. Especially if you're a quiet little red-haired wallflower with a psychotic overly-religious mother and a violent dose of telekinetic powers that are unleashed when angry. And if you're Carrie White you've got plenty to make you angry. Brian De Palma adapted Stephen King's novel perfectly, making High School a playground for the cruel and unusual, reflecting the real-life horrors of later, adult life and the surging, hormonal complications of becoming a teen. When Carrie is invited to the prom as a trick, we watch with deep compassion as she dresses herself into the truly beautiful young woman she is, only to be doused with pig's blood when crowned Prom Queen. Spacek made history with this role speaking for all the teenage disenfranchised with her finale act of retribution (destroy ALL!). The finale is strangely liberating but also terribly sad. This remains an absolutely touching classic that transcends its genre.
     
  2. Inamorata

    Inamorata City Girl

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    5. Donnie Darko (2001)
    OK, there's much more to "Donnie Darko" than simply high school but it belongs here because the film wouldn't work in any different milieu. Young filmmaker Richard Kelly directed Jake Gyllenhaal as our titular hero Donnie Darko in this intriguing combination of science fiction, teen drama, romance, '80s nostalgia and teen film satire. And more. Its 1988 in affluent Middlesex, Virginia where a sleepwalking Donnie Darko receives news from a horrifying six foot charred bunny -- in 28 days, 6 hours, 42 minutes, and 16 seconds away the world's gonna end. When a jet engine smashes into the bedroom of his house while Donnie's walking the night, he realizes that creepy rabbit just saved his life. What to do? Explore the significance of the event while attending school, arguing about the sexuality of The Smurfs, falling in love, outing a pedophile teacher, attending hypnosis sessions with a psychiatrist and enduring the self help mumbo jumbo of a teacher who feels love and fear are the polar extremes that guide our life. You know, normal high school stuff. The film also features some brilliant musical sequences showcasing Tears for Fears and Echo and the Bunnymen tunes. Unseen on first release but discovered on DVD, "Donnie Darko" is now a deserved, bona-fide cult classic where popular revivals are filled with the rightfully obsessed.



    4. Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982)
    You were probably wondering when we'd get to this one. Writer Cameron Crowe went undercover in an '80s Southern California High School (when you see his auto-biographical "Almost Famous" you understand how he was able to achieve such a feat) coming up with a smorgasbord of inside info that is now part of our popular vernacular. Directed by Amy Heckerling, the picture follows the new sexual exploits of mall-working Valley Girl Jennifer Jason Leigh and her more experienced older friend Phoebe Cates. Poor Leigh takes advice from all the wrong people, resulting in some sexual moments that never play as merely titillating, but incredibly pathetic and disturbing, especially in a comedy like this. Making up for Leigh's dramatic dilemma's however, is the comedic icon of surfer/pot-head Jeff Spicoli, whose stoned-out stupidity belies a clever sarcasm that's not as dumb as it looks. Terrific music, smart, funny performances and genuinely touching, "Fast Times" still works. Must we quote? OK one: "All I need are some tasty waves, a cool buzz, and I'm fine." Alright one more, "Aloha, Mr. Hand."



    3. Dazed and Confused (1993)
    We know some of you will get angry not seeing George Lucas' "American Graffiti" gracing this list but Richard Linklater's "Dazed and Confused," a film that's been compared to Lucas' is better. Chronicling one day in the life of a group of Texas high school students circa 1976, the picture walks us through the drama of eight seniors who wonder about their future, search for Aerosmith tickets and haze incoming Freshmen. The picture's filled with future stars, all who give terrific, authentic performances, like Matthew McConaughey, Ben Affleck, Parker Posey, Adam Goldberg, Joey Lauren Adams, Cole Hauser and the lovely Milla Jovovich. Linklater really captures what the last day of school feels like (then and now) but also the issues of the era, like drugs, Watergate, feminism and other topics relevant to the '70s. Like "Graffiti," we really wonder and care about what'll happen to these teens as they cruise around to some of the era's greatest music. And we also laugh a lot. A landmark in teen cinema.



    2. Rebel Without a Cause (1955)
    "You're tearing me apart!" Who can forget young James Dean struggling with his meek father and shrew of a mother while attempting to fit in as the new kid in a '50s Los Angeles High School? Directed by the great Nicholas Ray in vibrant color and gorgeously stylized eschew angles, the film's title alone has become a catch phrase for the smart loner who wants to make any kind of mark, but living in such an existential world, only ends up lashing out. In Dean's most popular movie, the method actor begins life in town first in a police station where he's picked up for being publicly drunk. There he meets two other misfits who will later become his best friends, Sal Mineo and Natalie Wood, who's got some serious daddy issues. The three form a deep, but somewhat bizarre bond after a deadly chicken race, holing up in an abandoned house where the cops and other gang members can't find them. A deeply philosophical film, Ray's picture is filled with layered musings. Dean's family life involves a lot of talking but not listening while high school means initiation by knife. The picture is also incredibly homoerotic with Mineo and Dean engaging in some intriguing subtext attraction. There's a reason this film's so famous, of course for the iconic performance, cool, sensitivity and gorgeousness of Dean, but also for its emotionally charged subject matter. "The Catcher in the Rye" of cinema, generations of young men and women have deeply related to this film.



    1. Rushmore (1999)
    Co-written and directed by then-relatively unknown Wes Anderson and co-written and co-produced by Owen Wilson, "Rushmore" is one of the most creative, touching, and hilarious pictures to come out in the past few decades. For some, "Rushmore" is more than a movie -- it's a sublime milestone. "Rushmore" is named for the posh prep-school academy that the film's main character, 15-year-old Max Fischer, attends with an enthusiasm that borders on pathological. Unlike the rich kids at Rushmore, Max is there on a scholarship, though he's barely passing any of his classes. But he's got tons of spirit and heavy doses of arrogance. He's driving the administrators at Rushmore crazy but he's also made a friend in Herman Blume, a millionaire, whose speech to the students of Rushmore makes a strong impression on Max. However, thanks to a bizarre love triangle, Max will learn what heartbreak is and in one of the film's saddest moments, be kicked out of Rushmore, only to attend the drabness of regular high school. Beautifully filmed, scored, acted and so genuinely sweet, "Rushmore's" the kind of movie that makes you cry from your well of bittersweet memories, many from your high school years. And it's got one of the greatest soundtracks in film history. When Blume asks Max, "What's the secret?" Max tells him: "Find what you like to do and do it for the rest of your life. For me it's going to Rushmore." Amen.
     
  3. Nytdreamer

    Nytdreamer Ex-pizza Slut

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    No "Breakfast Club"?
     
  4. smashmouth5

    smashmouth5 Fly Eagles Fly

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  5. Vincent Vega

    Vincent Vega Full Access Member

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    Donnie Darko and Rushmore are wonderful movies
     
  6. twentybelow0

    twentybelow0 Full Access Member

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    spring break
     
  7. The Brain

    The Brain Defiler of Cornflakes

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    Can't believe you left off American Pie
     
  8. The_professor

    The_professor ★☆☆☆

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    i can....
     
  9. Nytdreamer

    Nytdreamer Ex-pizza Slut

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    that too :D
     
  10. UNCfever

    UNCfever Full Access Member

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    Right there with ya on this one. Easily top 5 imo.
     

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