Rebel without a cause or a clue at an elite but uptight college discovers some of his classmates have formed an even more elite clique more or less hell-bent on ridding the school, and quite possibly American society, of what they deem to be its undesirables because of ethnicity, politics, etc. Our hero recruits a teacher and some other "less desirable" classmates to undermine the elitists, and, naturally, things get quite violent.
John Stockwell
Randy McDevitt
John Edward Peck
Donny Lennox
Carey Lowell
Julie
Bradford Bancroft
Krooger Raines
Don Michael Paul
Ripper
Thom Mathews
Brian Rigletti
Gerard Christopher
Lang Bridges
Madison Mason
Corrigan
Anthony De Longis
Smith Raddock
Carmen Argenziano
Molly
Miguel A. Núñez Jr.
Leon Biggs
Dedee Pfeiffer
Nikki
Karen Lorre
Betsy
Greg Finley
Morelli
Debra Berger
Ms. Hoffman
Angel Tompkins
Ms. Waters
Rosalind Allen
Mrs. McDonald
David Boyle
Mr. McDonald
Adam Gifford
Mark Durbin
Eric Bartsch
Pete Bentley
Joe Nipote
Steve
Tony Kienitz
Paul
Dru-Anne Perry
Barbie
Paul Mitchell Rosenblum
Toby
Kelly Chapman
Bobbi Page
Rebecca Cruz
Vanessa
Noelle Nelson
Dispatcher
Tom Fridley
Student
Dan Bradley
Bouncer
Brian Maguire
Police Sergeant
William Zimmerman
Policeman
Deborah Hanan
Member of 'Lost Pilots' Band
Larry Key Hancock
Member of 'Lost Pilots' Band
Russell Scott Ziecker
Member of 'Lost Pilots' Band
Brad Willis
Member of 'Lost Pilots' Band
Robert Rusler
Director
Albert Pyun
Screenplay
John Stockwell
Screenplay
Scott Fields
Screenplay, Story
Marty Ross
September 14, 2023
7
**_A (superior) Massacre at Central High_**
An underprivileged teen (J. Eddie Peck) attends an upper-class school near the coast in SoCal where a group of students, organized by a teacher who’s a Vietnam vet, guard the school from thuggish behavior. The leader of the Sentinels (John Stockwell) tries to woo him into his increasingly arrogant group.
“Dangerously Close” (1986) had the same producer as "Massacre at Central High" from ten years prior. I point this out because the plots & settings are similar, albeit this one doesn’t have the awkward twist of the second half of “Massacre” and is an all-around improvement. It’s similar to "Tuff Turf" from the previous year, but more focused (“Tuff Turf” is entertaining, but tried to be too many things). There are also bits reminiscent of "Eddie and the Cruisers," minus the band angle.
The soundtrack is a highlight, featuring 80’s pop rock and new wave bands, with notable songs like “Stripped” by Depeche Mode and “Blood and Roses” by The Smithereens.
Carey Lowell is serviceable on the female front, as are Dedee Pfeiffer and Karen Lorre, but not enough is done with them. On the other side of the spectrum, Don Michael Paul is effective as a member of the Sentinels marked by “toxic masculinity.”
If you like similar 80’s teen movies like "Valley Girl" and "The Karate Kid," you should appreciate this undeservedly obscure one. It influenced "Some Kind of Wonderful," which came out the next year, but focuses on the intense clash of the male students rather than romance.
The film runs 1 hour, 35 minutes, and was shot in the greater Los Angeles area, including Glendale (high school), Malibu Creek State Park in Calabasas, Marina del Rey and Redondo Beach.
GRADE: B+
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$2,390,525.00