Pretty Persuasion, at least, remembers to include a nod to the campus, in the witty opening narration exposing, true to the form, the social terrain of the place. Pretty Persuasion focuses on at turns precocious and psychotic sophomore Kimberly Joyce (Evan Rachel Wood) enacting revenge on any number of people as she pursues an acting career itâs unclear why and if she wants.
Kimberly decides her only means to fame is notoriety, which she achieves by saying a lascivious schoolteacher actually touched her. In the end, the characters probably wouldnât have much cared if he did, and I donât think weâre supposed to either. The film does a charming job creating skits out of the series of events which led to and are set off by her actions. As Kimberly struggles to manipulate all of
Pretty Persuasion is being sold as a high school/revenge movie, and a twisted comedy. But once the instability of the lead becomes apparent, heavy-handed references to Columbine-style killers appear. I wanted, in this moment, a direct confrontation of the myth of a âpost-Columbineâ world (wherein media violence, permissive or overbearing parenting/strange fascinations with fascist hatemongering, anarchist nihilism are both new and somehow now explanations rather than excuses). I got another attempt to cue the audience this latest movie about fucked up kids should be considered relevant. And another cue that the movie in fact isnât. Or at least not as an exploration of youth. Itâs part of an impassioned refusal these days among filmmakers who are exploring mad-feeling teenagers to actually show what teenage madness feels like.
In contradistinction are 1968âs If⦠and 1988âs Heathersâthe two best high school movies ever made both are about gleeful killing sprees set during iconic high school events. The theme also popped up in Carrie, and a few B-horror movies, but If⦠and Heathers are remarkable in their acuity expressing the violence of emotion through violence. Nothing says hate like murder.
These days, the filmsâ premise is said to be dated. Today, kids do this sort of inexcusably frightening thing, and media violence presents real danger and children are impressionable. From the insistence with which teen revenge films have begun to recoil from physical violence it seems possible that some smart people might actually buy this crap. Violence is being written out of our fantasies of high school revenge, and itâs weakening them. Itâs not a cliché or even a metaphor that high school is a war zone with life and death stakesâitâs an axiom. High school is the kingdom where no one dies, unless you kill them. Anyone who believes in the cathartic power of art (and admittedly I forgot to ask if anyone still does) should hope that every so often these emotions get an expression thatâs smart, beautiful and balls out.
As of yet, If⦠is the most balls-out expression of this frustration, ever. Set at an elite British all-male boarding school, the main characters get subjected to wanton physical and sexual violence by both peers and teachers, in dorms and the gymnasium, underscoring the filmâs message that violence is at the heart of the institution and the institution is at the heart of the violence. The film follows the course of a school year, which begins with Mick (Malcolm McDowell) returning from
Itâs the quintessential teenage fantasy, to tear down, with a literal bang, the trappings which confine. But in 1968, of course, it wasnât a fantasy. If⦠is about the anxiety caused by an incomprehensible generation of youth who claimed to be set on undoing civilization brick by brick, and the anxieties which caused them to speak in such grand terms. It explores political violence and the ultra-personal scars of youth, while at the same time laugh at the fogies who were actually afraid a group of pissed-off schoolchildren would haphazardly change the world.
Heathers is most often remembered as the story of star-crossed lovers who go on a killing spree to re-order the oppressive cliques that permeate high school. But itâs also an unrelenting satire of 1980s media hysteria and the âteen suicide crazeâ that occupied and confounded parents more than cutting and voluntary asphyxiation put together.
Heathers follows the story of Veronica, a precocious, popular junior in high school, who starts killing first her best friend, and then the date rapist jocks, when she starts dating J.D., the townâs new JD. To cover their tracks, they forge suicide notes from their murder victims, with the assumption that the authorities will be quick to believe these were suicides. After all, suicide clusters were popping up everywhere. But when viewed as suicides the schoolâs worst offenders gain virtues they never had in life. The problem of high school hierarchy is exposed as institutional not personal. J.D decides that the only place high school could be a decent experience is heaven and he should stage a mass suicide during prom. In the initial script, the school does indeed blow up and the prom in heaven does indeed rock, but even by 1988 that was too much violence for a comedy hoping for wide release. The DVD extras would have you believe the change is regrettable, but in the end, the message of Heathers is the same. Even though Veronica stopped the school from blowing up and in the last scene makes nice with a fat girl, only the naïve think this time things will be different.
The best moment cut from the screenplay, however, comes in an impromptu conversation between Veronica and her guidance counselor. The counselor, refusing to hear that Veronica is not suicidal implores her to listen: âI know more about being young than you. Read my articles.â In the end, the line was cut, because in the Heathers universe, adults donât get many lines. And thatâs for the good.
The school in Heathers is named Westerburg after the singer from the Replacements, and even the town surrounding it exists only through the eyes of the young. Nothing real about the universe of Heathers is part of the adultâs world. At the boarding school in Ifâ¦, students and teachers were always shot walking away from one another, even in conversation. The reality of teenage experience is that more often than not, adults donât count for much. Recent high school genre movies like Pretty Persuasion, Election, Mean Girls, and even Elephant focus extensively on intergenerational conversation. Even at their finest, the importance placed on adult interaction is a signal that the films present an overly adult perspective on youth. And in the end, they fall short somewhere, while Westerburg High still rules.
Sarahjane Blum is a writer based in NYC.