THIS DAY IN HISTORY – Fast Times at Ridgemont High debuts – 1982

Via History.com

On this day in 1982, the teenage coming-of-age comedy Fast Times at Ridgemont High opens in theaters around the United States. Written by Cameron Crowe and directed by Amy Heckerling, the film follows a year in the life of high school students Stacy (Jennifer Jason Leigh), Linda (Phoebe Cates), Mark (Brian Backer) and Mike (Robert Romanus) and their assorted classmates and teachers. The ensemble cast also featured the (then relatively unknown) future A-list actors Sean Penn, Nicolas Cage and Forest Whitaker, as well as Judge Reinhold, Eric Stoltz, Ray Walston and Anthony Edwards.

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One of the film’s most memorable characters was the surfer-stoner Jeff Spicoli (whose lines included his greeting of Walston’s teacher character with the salutation “Aloha, Mr. Hand”), played by Sean Penn. The actor, who was born in 1960, made his feature-film debut in 1981’s Taps. Following Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Penn went on to a lengthy list of critically acclaimed performances in such movies as Bad Boys (1983), At Close Range (1986), Casualties of War (1989), Dead Man Walking (1995), for which he received an Oscar nomination for Best Actor, and The Thin Red Line (1998). He earned another Oscar nomination for his starring turn as a jazz musician in Sweet and Lowdown (1999) and a third for playing a mentally disabled man in I Am Sam (2001). He finally took home the Oscar for Best Actor for 2003’s suspenseful drama Mystic River. Penn is also an accomplished filmmaker who wrote and directed 2007’s Oscar-nominated Into the Wild.

Following his minor role in Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Nicolas Cage, who was born in 1964, eventually went on to star in a long string of movies, including 1995’s Leaving Las Vegas, for which he won a Best Actor Academy Award, and 2002’s Adaptation, which earned him a Best Actor Oscar nomination. Forrest Whitaker, who was born in 1961 and also had a small part in Fast Times, won a Best Actor Oscar for his performance as the Ugandan dictator Idi Amin in 2006’s The Last King of Scotland.

Fast Times at Ridgemont High marked Cameron Crowe’s feature-film debut as a writer and was based on a 1981 book of the same name that he penned after going undercover to research it at a San Diego high school. Crowe, who was born in 1957, went on to write and direct another classic teen movie, Say Anything (1989), starring John Cusack, as well as Singles (1992); Jerry Maguire (1996), which starred Tom Cruise and was nominated for five Oscars (Cuba Gooding Jr. won for Best Supporting Actor); and Almost Famous (2000), which was based on Crowe’s real-life experience as a teenage journalist for Rolling Stone magazine. Almost Famous was nominated for four Oscars (Crowe won for Best Original Screenplay). His other movie credits include Vanilla Sky (2001) and Elizabethtown (2005). After Fast Times at Ridgemont High, the director Amy Heckerling was best known for the comedy Look Who’s Talking (1989) and Clueless (19995), a sharply written update of Jane Austen’s classic novel Emma set in a Southern California high school.

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6 Comments
Maggie
Maggie
August 13, 2017 9:27 am

I will add Sean Penn to the list of people whose fault this moral decay belongs to. Him and that skank Madonna.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Maggie
August 13, 2017 10:31 am

I’ve often wondered, does the entertainment industry lead the moral decay or is the decay leading the industry?

It can be argued both ways, but one think I don’t think can be argued is that they operate off of money and the people giving them the money, their viewers and such, are accepting and practicing that decay instead of demanding something else in its place.

Do the people want it and the industry provides it or does the industry provide it and the people lustfully consume it?

Either way, it wouldn’t be happening if we didn’t accept it (sort of like a vampire not being able to enter your house without your permission, but after you give it permission it is free to kill you at will).

People embrace Satan because they don’t understand him and how he operates.

razzle
razzle
  Anonymous
August 13, 2017 11:49 pm

The adults who watch the media put it in the appropriate “haha… look how not-normal this is haha” fantasy interpretation. It’s clear to most adults that the Sean Penn character is a mockery and a joke in the real world.

The kids watch it and get an entirely different reaction to it. They don’t see Sean Penn’s character as an absurd character being made fun of, some will actually aspire to mimic him. Continue this cycle for a couple of generations and the end result is 100% predictable. Especially since the stuff that was edgy for the adults but normal for the kids becomes nostalgic when the kids become adults and “quaint” for the grandkids.

overthecliff
overthecliff
August 13, 2017 12:08 pm

…I don’t know but Phoebe Cates still looks pretty good, for 53.

Pieter in ZA
Pieter in ZA
  overthecliff
August 13, 2017 1:05 pm

I still follow the wisdom of Mike Damone’s Five Point Plan…

rhs jr
rhs jr
August 13, 2017 11:42 pm

Shouldn’t we call them Low Schools now? Or Prison Prep Schools?