Rock 'n' Roll High School Movie Review
Rock 'n' Roll High School Review
"Rock 'n' Roll High School" Overview

Rating: PG
1979
Cast and Crew
Director : Allan ArkushProducer : Michael Finnell
Screenwiter : Richard Whitley,Russ Dvonch,Joseph McBride
Starring : P.J. Soles,Vincent Van Patten,Clint Howard,Dey Young,Mary Woronov,Paul Bartel,Dick Miller,Joey Ramone,Johnny Ramone,Dee Dee Ramone,Marky Ramone
The film legacy of The Beatles was A Hard Day's Night, and I guess the film
legacy of The Ramones is this, Rock 'n' Roll High School, the 1979 oddity about
an oppressive high school (Vince Lombardi High, where "winning is better than
losing") and its most exuberant student, Riff Randell (P.J. Soles), who only
wants to share her love of The Ramones with her fellow students.
The film's hijinks largely follow your typical school's-out-for-summer comedy.
There's hazing, there's rebellion, there's sex, there's quirky supporting
characters (including Clint Howard, who has an "office" situated in a bathroom
stall), and there's loud music. But everything's just a bit off with Rock 'n'
Roll High School, starting with its star, Soles, who at 29 years old was
playing what had to be the oldest senior on record. Soles, who would later
become known best (arguably) for playing one of the military police officers in
Stripes, is believable as a Ramones fan, though her haircut needs some
attention if she wants to be a serious punk rocker.
The movie is at its best when the Ramones -- who drive around town in a car
with the improbable license plate of "GABBA-GABBA-HEY" -- are on camera. It's
not that they're good actors, or even passable ones. They're atrocious. They
make Ringo Starr look like Alec Guinness. And that's where the film gets its
charm, from Dee Dee Ramone oohing about pizza in the two lines he has, from
their obvious displeasure at crossing guitar necks for Riff to walk through the
threshold.
26 years later, the film has been reissued on DVD with two commentary tracks
and a retrospective documentary that offers comments from virtually everyone
involved in the production (Roger Corman wanted to make Disco High School,
Reviewer: Christopher Null



