Shop for Fast Times at Ridgemont High at ml-shopping.com

 
Web www.ml-shopping.com

 
Web www.ml-shopping.com

Fast Times at Ridgemont High

Fast Times at Ridgemont High
Directed by Amy Heckerling
Produced by Irving Azoff
Art Linson
Written by Cameron Crowe
Starring Sean Penn
Jennifer Jason Leigh
Judge Reinhold
Phoebe Cates
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Released August 13, 1982
Running time 90 min.
Language English
Budget $4,500,000 (estimated)
IMDb profile

Fast Times at Ridgemont High is a 1982 American teen film directed by Amy Heckerling and written by Cameron Crowe (who wrote both the screenplay and a book of the same name which inspired the movie). Crowe's screenplay was nominated for a WGA Award for Best Comedy Adapted from Another Medium.

In 2005 it was added to the list of films preserved in the United States National Film Registry. The film also ranked #87 on the AFI's 100 Years... 100 Laughs list.

Contents

Plot summary

The story is loosely inspired by the year Cameron Crowe, then in his early 20s, spent impersonating a high school student at Clairemont High School in San Diego, California. He went undercover to do research for his 1981 book Fast Times at Ridgemont High: A True Story, about his observations of the high school and the students he befriended there.

Students Stacy Hamilton (Jennifer Jason Leigh), an incoming freshman, and Mark Ratner (Brian Backer), a sophomore, are both looking for love, and they are helped along by their older classmates, Linda Barrett (Phoebe Cates) and Mike Damone (Robert Romanus), respectively. Another character in the film is Jeff Spicoli (Sean Penn in an early film role and one for which he is still often remembered), a perpetually stoned but savvy surfer who faces off against uptight history teacher Mr. Hand (Ray Walston), who is convinced that all students are on "dope." The film features small parts by many actors who later achieved some degree of fame: Anthony Edwards, Eric Stoltz, Nicolas Cage, and Forest Whitaker.

Response

Despite Universal feeling the film would have no appeal outside of California, the movie ended up making over $27 million in its theatrical run, six-times its $4.5 million budget.

The film is most memorable to some for a semi-nude scene fantasized by Stacy's older brother Brad (Judge Reinhold) in which Phoebe Cates' character, Linda Barrett, emerges from a swimming pool wearing a red bikini, and—in slow motion, and with constant eye-contact with the camera—she removes her bikini top, exposing her breasts, with The Cars hit Moving in Stereo playing in the background. The fantasy ends with Linda embracing Brad and kissing him. Brad masturbates in the bathroom to this mental image until Linda, in real-life, accidentally walks in on him. Disgusted and embarrassed, she flees--upon which, Brad utters the memorable line: "Doesn't anybody ever fucking knock anymore?"

Filming Locations

Fast Times was filmed in the San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles (although it is never explicitly mentioned as such in the film), and many people identify the movie with that area and the teen culture that existed there, or was perceived to exist there, in the early 1980s. "Ridgemont" is a fictional name, however; there is no California community by that name. Most of the exteriors of Ridgemont High School were shot at Van Nuys High School, and other scenes were shot at Canoga Park High School. The "Ridgemont Mall" shown in the film was actually the Sherman Oaks Galleria, with its exterior shot at Santa Monica Place. "The Point" was filmed at the Encino Little League Field in Encino.

TV Spinoff

The movie Fast Times at Ridgemont High inspired a short-lived 1986 television series called Fast Times, featuring Courtney Thorne-Smith as Stacey, Wally Ward as Mark, Claudia Wells as Linda, Patrick Dempsey as Mike, Dean Cameron as Spicoli, James Nardini as Brad, Ray Walston reprising his role as Mr. Hand and Vincent Schiavelli reprising his role as Mr. Vargas, the biology teacher at Ridgemont High.

Trivia

  • According to the DVD extras, many video store owners reported that their copy of the VHS video of the film had tracking errors during Phoebe Cates's nude scene. The owners presumed this was caused by customers continually rewinding and playing the scene over and over again.
  • There are solo songs in the soundtrack by four different members of The Eagles.

External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: