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« Open Thread | Main | Official Foreign Film Submission Oscar Charts. Plus Trailers »
Thursday
Sep032015

Women's Pictures - Amy Heckerling's Fast Times At Ridgemont High

The Film Experience is proud to welcome back Anne Marie and her series "Women's Pictures" after a month long hiatus. September's episodes (each Thursday) will focus on Amy Heckerling. If you missed previous subjects, Anne Marie's series on female directors already covered Ava DuVernayIda LupinoJane CampionSofia CoppolaAgnes VardaKathryn Bigelow - Editor
 

The days are getting shorter, the weather is turning colder, and just as you perfected your righteous tan, the bell rings and it's back to school you go! Anne Marie here, after my own (all too brief) summer vacation, ready to celebrate Back To School month with the female filmmaker who has exercised as much influence on the Teen Film genre as John Hughes: Amy Heckerling! While Heckerling's ouevre has run the gamut from slapstick to parody to fantasy, she's best known for two genre-defining high school films made a little over a decade apart: Clueless (1995), which we will cover later, and Fast Times At Ridgemont High (1982), the topic of today's lesson.

When Heckerling set about making Fast Times at Ridgemont High in the early 1980s, she wasn't looking to define a genre. There wasn't yet a teen film genre to define. John Hughes was still two years away from making Sixteen Candles, and American Grafitti, now pointed to as the first teen film, was already almost decade old with few major successors. What drew Amy Heckerling to Cameron Crowe's script about high school students was the realness of its characters. Fast Times At Ridgemont High was no nostalgia-tinged look backward at youth; it was an expose written by Cameron Crowe, who'd gone undercover at a high school for Rolling Stone to observe contemporary teens. Fast Times at Ridgemont High was something new: high school from the teenager's perspective. [More...]

Sometimes that perspective is just "really stoned"

Based on Crowe's novel about his experience, Fast Times at Ridgemont High would end up structured very similarly to American Grafitti: taking place over a year (instead of a night), Fast Times At Ridgemont High follows several high school students through independent but intersecting storylines, as they learn about sex, authority, love, friendship, popularity and how not to lose your job. The cast of Heckerling's film was just on the cusp of stardom: Jennifer Jason Leigh, Judge Reinhold, Forrest Whitaker, Sean Penn, Pheobe Cates, Anthony Edwards, Eric Stoltz, Sean Penn, and a mute Nicholas Cage all (with the exception of Cage) play sizeable roles. And though Fast Times was not nearly as comic as later teen films would become, Heckerling nonetheless laid some guidelines for the nascent genre.

Though there were other proto-teen films at the time, Amy Heckerling came closest to immediately codifying genre tropes in both deep and shallow ways. Contemporary pop music - which Heckerling insisted on - is used throughout the film. (It's actually a great early 80s soundtrack: Oingo Boingo, Jimmy Buffett, and Stevie Nicks contributed.) Characters are easily broken into student archetypes - surfer, popular girl, nerd, etc - and their social status at the beginning is established in an opening scene at the mall. (This would later evolve into the requisite expository lunchroom scene parodied in Mean Girls.)

Thematically-speaking, big issues, like drugs and employment, and small issues, like popularity and masturbation, are handled with equal tension, because for teenagers, popularity and masturbation are as important as drugs and unemployment. There's also a lot of female nudity in Fast Times at Ridgemont High, along with some surprisingly frank discussions of sex and masturbation This is because, despite Sean Penn's broad surfer-bro accent, Fast Times at Ridgemont High is a film that takes teens seriously. Even though the more graphic elements of the movie would fade, this would be the most important tenet of the teen film: take the teenage characters seriously.

At least as seriously as they take themselves

 This rule actually describes Amy Heckerling's writing and directing style perfectly. After the success of Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Heckerling launched a career which, if not as obviously weighty as the other female filmmakers we've discussed in this series, was nevertheless devoted to taking comedy seriously. She became a pro at making wide-appeal comedy. Just seven years (plus two hits and one flop) after her directorial debut, Amy Heckerling would try her hand at screenwriting. Her next subjects would be even younger than high school students.

This month on Women's Pictures...

9/10 Look Who’s Talking (1989) (Amazon Instant Video) - This John Travolta/Kirstie Allie gimmick movie was a huge smash, and Heckerling's biggest hit until Clueless.

9/17 Clueless (1995) (Amazon Instant Video) (Netflix) - Like we'd skip over this classic on its 20th anniversary? As if!

9/24 Vamps (2012) (Amazon Instant Video) - Amy Heckerling's literal suckfest, which weirdly gives us hope for the future.

 

 

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Reader Comments (11)

Ooh, I didn't realize this series was coming back already - and Heckerling is a great choice.

"I could never be your woman" and "Vamps" both have serious flaws but serious redeeming features, but I'll try and hold off on the late career comments until the end of the month.

September 3, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterDave S.

I saw this movie for the first time a few months ago. I was surprised that a teen movie could be told with such frankness and lack of condescension. The direction and the editing are always very good at not letting the movie go into laugh-out-loud territory. I liked the movie, and it's story beats are definitely interesting. With that said, I somehow never felt like I was part of this group of people. I always felt I was detached, just observing them. (I think Linklater mastered this a couple of years later with "Dazed and Confused.")

September 3, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterBVR

I'm a complete, total, and unapologetic lover of Fast Times. It came out while I was in college, so high school was still very fresh. And even though my high school was worlds away from the one in the movie, all the emotional beats still rang so true to me.

I think what's especially amazing about it is its female characters, Stacy and Linda. Certainly at the time, it felt almost revolutionary to watch teenage girls muddle through romance and sex without being made to seem ridiculous or becoming objects of scorn.

September 3, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterLiz S.

Fast Times really has way more on its mind than its genre or plot description would suggest. And Jennifer Jason Leigh is so good in it.

September 3, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterKieran Scarlett

How did Ray Walston not get Oscar buzz for this? A work of genius.

September 3, 2015 | Unregistered Commenterbrookesboy

Are you going to be covering "Look Who's Talking" or the sequel, "Look Who's Talking, Too?" or both?) Roseanne was only in the latter.

September 3, 2015 | Unregistered Commenterjakey

Is AMERICAN GRAFFITI seen as the first "teen movie"? I thought that was REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE's unofficial honour?

September 3, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterGlenn Dunks

"Rebel" or even "The Wild One", although the actual ages of the bikers is indeterminate there.

I think "Rebel" is sometimes discounted for being about teens but not necessarily *for* them - still has traces of an outsider's/sociological perspective, even though it takes their lives seriously. Although if we're using that technicality, "American Graffiti" was very much made from an adult nostalgic perspective too...

But yes, let's not forget Gidget & Frankie & Annette, et al.

September 3, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterDave S.

I hope Anne Marie considers Susan Seidelman in this series. Her films have a feminist streak that are not always spot on -- but are worthy of consideration. Her latest film, The Hot Flashes, is such a letdown -- and it starred so many beloved actresses.

September 4, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterIan

Glenn & Dave - ABSOLUTELY let's not forget Gidget, Rebel without a Cause, or (for that matter) Andy Hardy! I'm going from Roz Kavaney's interpretation of Teen Film as a genre, where certain genre tropes, character archetypes, and typical plots were introduced by American Grafitti, then codified by Heckerling, Hughes, and others in the 80s. In that regard, Gidget, Rebel, etc are films *about* teens in other genres (musical, melodrama, etc) and should be seen as important ancestors to the Teen Film genre, but not necessarily part of the genre themselves.

Ian - I'm adding Susan Seidelman to the list!

September 4, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterAnne Marie

Oooh Susan Seidelman. love that idea. Under discussed!

September 4, 2015 | Registered CommenterNATHANIEL R
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