Watch unlimited films online for $6.99.
Try MUBI for FREE.
 

Synopsis

Led by delicious bad girl Riff Randell (P.J. Soles), a group of rock-music-loving students enlist the help of the Ramones to take over their school and its newly installed oppressive administration (adults are chucked out of windows, but only when it’s essential to the plot.)

The Ramones had a gift for this kind of nonsense… remember the killer ‘Teenage Labotomy’ couplet ’I’m gonna have to tell ‘um/That I’ve got no cerebullum’?

Allan Arkush’s gloriously pop valentine to violence, rebellion, and the Ramones became an instant cult classic. Deeply silly, clearly low-budget and utterly enchanting, Rock’n’Roll High School is essential Friday night viewing. –Australian Centre for the Moving Image

Director

Original

Joe Dante

Joseph Dante Jr. was born on November 28, 1946 in Morristown, New Jersey, and raised in the nearby borough of Parisippany. His parents were professional golf players and his father wrote some books on the instructions of playing golf some of which included Four Magic Moves to Winning Golf, and Stop that Slice. After a bout with polio that nearly crippled him at age 7, he slowly recovered and decided to take up drawing rather than athletics as his parents did.

Dante studied at the Philadelphia College of Art after graduating from high school. As a teenager, he contributed to Castle of Frankenstein and Famous Monsters of Filmland magazines with various drawings, and upon graduation from he College of Art, he became a film critic for the Film Buletin newspaper for which he later became the managing editor. With a friend, named Jon Davidson, Dante cut together a series of movie clips and film trailers and edited them into his first short film which was titled The Movie Orgy (1968… read more

Original

Jerry Zucker

Along with his directing partners Jim Abraham and brother David Zucker, Jerry Zucker all but revolutionized comedy in the 1980s, starting with arguably the most famous cinematic parody, “Airplane!” (1980). Prior to that surprising commercial success, Zuckers and Abraham wrote the cult classic, “Kentucky Fried Move” (1977), an uproarious comedy of unconnected sketches that skewered kung-fu movies, exploitation films and public service announcements. After “Airplane,” Zuckers and Abraham made a failed attempt at television with “Police Squad!” (ABC, 1982), before bouncing back on the big screen with “Top Secret!” (1984). With the trio going their separate ways, Zucker began making more mainstream movies, directing “Ruthless People” (1986) and the surprisingly romantic drama, “Ghost” (1990), starring Patrick Swayze and Demi Moore. He also turned “Police Squad!” into the successful film franchise, “The Naked Gun – From the Files of Police Squad!” (1988) before helming “First Knight” (1995… read more

Wall

Displaying 4 of 9 wall posts.
Picture of Christofer Pierson

Christofer Pierson

17Feb12

Top reasons to love this movie: The Ramones and Mary Woronov

Picture of ΞRIC B∆D TASTΞ

ΞRIC B∆D TASTΞ

29Jan12

great & funny movie with a definitely awesome soundtrack & a nice presence/show by the Ramones... the only thing who sucked were the school director & the two stupid guard dogs..!

  • Picture of Christofer Pierson

    Christofer Pierson

    17Feb12

    I respectfully disagree: Mary Woronov is a sexy fascist, and I can't help laughing when I think of the hall monitors praying as they sail out the window in the rolling trash bin.

Picture of Roger Da Silva João

Roger Da Silva João

28Aug11

love the ramones, hate this film (so much).

Picture of Samantha

Samantha

11Mar11

Once I played nurse with the boy next door and got sued for malpractice.

Related Films

Fans

Displaying 5 of 153 fans.

Articles

Our roundup of essays and articles on this film.
W184

Sight & Sound Film Books Poll, Video Mixtapes, More

By David Hudson on May 4, 2010

"We asked a number of critics to choose the five film books that have proved most useful and/or inspirational and/or important to them

read article

Lists

Displaying 5 of 37 lists.

Reviews

No reviews yet — Write the first

Forum

Displaying 0 discussion topics.