Rock 'N' Roll High School
Published August 12, 2004
Most of us have movies that we regularly return to, films that rarely fail to make us feel good whenever they appear on-screen. For me, one of these cinematic touchstones is Alan Arkush's Rock 'N' Roll High School (1979), a flick I happily re-watched on DVD this past weekend.
To be sure, part of my love for this drive-in masterwork derives from my fannish infatuation with punk rock pioneers, the Ramones, who are the celebrity stars of this low-budget (reportedly made for less than $300,000) rock movie musical. But that's not the only factor. Even without the boys and their music (happily all over the movie, including a five song concert), this Roger Corman produced cheapie has plenty goin' for it: great non-Ramones tracks (Nick Lowe, Eno, "Smokin' In the Boys' Room," MC-5's "High School," and more) anarchic throw-it-against-the-wall comedy (note the presence of a neophyte director Jerry Zucker in the credits as an A.D.); always-entertaining Corman Stock Company Regulars, Paul Bartel, Mary Woronov and a too-briefly seen Dick Miller ("These are ugly, ugly people!" this character mug observes when he sees the New York punkers for the first time); plus big-eyed B-Movie Diva P.J. Soles at her most unstoppable as Riff Randell, Number One Ramones Fan.
The story (written by Arkush and Joe Dante, who in the spirit of quick-shoot filmmaking also lensed a few uncredited scenes) is set at Vince Lombardi High School in the late seventies. The school's in chaos and its new principal, Evelyn Togar (Woronov), has just taken on the task of whipping the students into line. Togar is Woronov at her most comically imperious: few actresses could be so simultaneously sexy and off-putting as Woronov. With the aid of two toadying hall monitors named Hansel & Gretel (Loren Lester and Daniel Davies), she cracks down on the student body, which, of course, means stomping out that nasty ol' rock 'n' roll music.
Down at the student level, we have would-be songwriter Riff, bookish girl genius Kate Rambeau (Dey Young), doofus quarterback Tom Roberts (Vince Van Patten) and school dealmaker Eaglebauer (played with Bilko-esque glee by Clint Howard). Riff dreams of having one of her songs done by the Ramones and hopes to meet the band during their big concert at the Rockatorium. (In one priceless scene, she has a stoned fantasy about the boys serenading her in her bedroom, guitarist Johnny strumming in a running shower.) Kate dreams of making it with Tom; Tom, who is totally inept with women, just plain wants to score. He goes to Eaglebauer for advice, and Eaglebauer signs him up for practice sessions with Kate. A fairly typical teen flick romance, though it's played here at a heightened level of goofiness.
Arkush (abetted by screenwriters Richard Whitley & Russ Dvonch, the latter playing a perpetually victimized freshman) shoots this all at a frenetic pitch: with a slew of irrelevant side gags and exaggeration. In one memorable moment, for instance, Togar demonstrates the dangers of rock 'n' roll to Bartel's stuffy music teacher, Mister McCree, by subjecting a lab mouse to high decibels of the Ramones' music. The poor mouse explodes. Later on the flick, we see a human-sized rodent trying to get into the band's concert appearance, carrying headphones to protect itself. During the film's finale, when all of the students' parents have been called in to witness their kids' transgressions, we see a large mama mouse (courtesy of Rob Bottin) in an apron that says, "I hate mouse work." Silly? Sure. Though not as outlandish as Arkush would get with his later rock concert comedy, Get Crazy.
- Rock 'N' Roll High School
- Published: August 12, 2004
- Type:
- Section: Video
- Filed Under: Video: Music, Video: Comedy
- Writer: Bill Sherman
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Comments
When "Eating Raoul" came out, I got to interview Paul Bartel with some other stewdent journos. And we wound up spending all most all of the time talking about "Rock and Roll High School".
That is one of my favourite rock and roll movies, and best shows that, in a lot of minds, the Ramones were the best Top 40 band ever.
Great review, and I'm glad to read that I'm not the only R&RHS fan out there. I only watch two movies over and over, this one and Airplane; I've only seen two big-time rock bands live, this one and George Thorogood. The Ramones live in a small club were absolutely beyond belief, a loud nonstop wall of sound created with just three instruments. The movie captures the magic.








Excellent review Bill, and my own thoughts just about exactly - the preposterousness fo the plot is totally punk rock and the energy bulldozes all objections - thanks!