Dayton Daily News

Check out the best back-to-school films

- ByChrisHew­itt StarTribun­e (Minneapoli­s)

Thinking about back-toschool season, I compiled a list of favorite classroom movies and realized that almost all of them have female protagonis­ts.

That could be a symptom of Hollywood misogyny _ money men have always been willing to toss aside women of experience for new blood. But an unintended benefit is that the movies have given us a lot of compelling female students (along with a few dandy male ones, such as “Diary of aWimpy Kid” hero Greg Heffley). Just as girls mature faster than boys, maybe there are more good high school movies featuring girls because girls get better faster.

The genre has not done as well by kids of color, as evidenced by a BET list of the best Black high schoolmovi­es that resorts to including three “white savior” movies that have little to do with minority students. Fortunatel­y, documentar­ies (including “Hoop Dreams,” a masterpiec­e) and college films such as Spike Lee's “School Daze” have filled in a few gaps.

One of the more exciting aspects of school-set movies is that they showcase young talent. These projects tend to be made on tight budgets _ no one ever expects them to be huge hits, though the creators of “American Graffiti” and “Grease” would like to have a word about that. As a result, they often offer first looks at novice actors who'll go on to long careers.

Think of “Fast Times at Ridgemont High,” an early vehicle for not only Jennifer Jason Leigh but also a trio of future best actor Oscar winners: Nicolas Cage, Sean Penn and Forest Whitaker. It's the gift that keeps on giving behind the camera, too, with director Amy Heckerling going on to make “Clueless” andwriter Cameron Crowe making “Almost Famous,” “Jerry Maguire” and others.

Similarly, “Dazed and Confused” offered an early glimpse of Oscar winnersin-waiting Matthew McConaughe­y and Renee Zellweger. “Kids” boasts the debuts of Rosario Dawson, Harmony Korine and Chloe Sevigny. “10 Things I Hate About You,” “Can't Hardly Wait” and others are reminders that you can trace many top actors' beginnings to a high school film.

Even a dud such as the original “Endless Love” features, way down on the credits, the movie debut of Tom Cruise. Stick with the school-themedmovi­es below, though; there isn't a dud in the bunch. ‘Clueless’ (1995) We don't talk enough about how incredible Alicia Silverston­e is in this sweet/tart update of Jane Austen's “Emma.” Emma is called Cher here and it's a really difficult role — she seems like a judgmental airhead although she's actually smart and compassion­ate — but Silverston­e captures it all. (Anya Taylor-Joy, who did not nail it in this spring's “Emma,” should have taken notes.) It's also a pitch-perfect portrait of high school life in the exact moment when “as if!” was the most withering thing a person could say.

‘The Prime ofMiss Jean Brodie’ (1969)

Maggie Smith, way before she became a Dame, won her first Oscar as a tragically deluded Scottish teacher in a dramaabout the impact of charismati­c mentors, both for good and ill. Behind its stiff upper lip, the movie (available in its entirety on YouTube) is almost a bloodless girls' school equivalent of “Lord of the Flies,” with Smith's endlessly fascinatin­g lecturer unaware that the lessons she's passing on to her smartest student will doom her to the same loneliness that Brodie endures.

‘Election’ (1999)

Like Silverston­e, Reese Witherspoo­n creates an indelible portrait of a high school upperclass­woman, albeit a much less likable one. On the surface, Witherspoo­n's class-president candidate Tracy Flick seems like your basic do-gooding overachiev­er, but Alexander Payne and JimTaylor's clever script reveals that her cheery surface rests on a fault line of anger and pain. ‘Heathers’ (1989)

“My teen angst has a body count!” criesVeron­ica (Winona Ryder) in an acidic satire that now requires a triggerwar­ning for high school violence. Ryder and Christian Slater give career-best performanc­es in a movie that launched dozens of copycats, some of which (“Mean Girls”) are almost as good.

‘Elephant’ (2003)

Gus Van Sant's Columbine-inspired drama is undoubtedl­y the toughest watch on this list. A sickly suspense develops as we realize that a seemingly ordinary day at a high school is about to erupt in violence. But Van Sant's observatio­nal approach and the naturalist­ic performanc­es, mostly by nonprofess­ionals, provide a revealing glimpse of campus life.

‘Won’t Back Down’ (2012)

The charter-schoolmove­ment it endorses has had its ups and downs, but this inspiring drama shows education from corners we don't often see depicted by Hollywood: the parents (Maggie Gyllenhaal) and the teachers (Viola Davis) who are trying to make sure children get the start they need in order to succeed. ‘Sixteen Candles’ (1984) When it comes to John Hughes' high school comedies, it's a pick-'em scenario. All have their merits and demerits (his rare nonwhite characters are not depicted withmuch sensitivit­y). “The Breakfast Club” is more concerned with high school hierarchy, but I prefer this coming-of-age charmer, with Molly Ringwald at her incandesce­nt best as a girl whose family has spaced her 16th birthday. The Cusacks, John and Joan, make early appearance­s.

 ?? 20TH CENTURY FOX FILM CORPORATIO­N ?? In the 1969 film “The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie,” Maggie Smith plays the leadwhile Pamela Franklin plays a student at theMarcia Blaine School forGirls in Edinburgh, Scotland.
20TH CENTURY FOX FILM CORPORATIO­N In the 1969 film “The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie,” Maggie Smith plays the leadwhile Pamela Franklin plays a student at theMarcia Blaine School forGirls in Edinburgh, Scotland.
 ?? VIDEO
NEWWORLD ?? Shannen Doherty (left), Lisanne Falk, KimWalker and Winona Ryder star in the 1989 film“Heathers.”
VIDEO NEWWORLD Shannen Doherty (left), Lisanne Falk, KimWalker and Winona Ryder star in the 1989 film“Heathers.”
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Paul Rudd and Alicia Silverston­e in themovie “Clueless” from1995.
CONTRIBUTE­D Paul Rudd and Alicia Silverston­e in themovie “Clueless” from1995.

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