Fast Times at Ridgemont High</I>

Fast Times at Ridgemont High</I>

McNair Scholars Journal Volume 9 | Issue 1 Article 16 2005 Fast Times at Ridgemont High and Porky’s: Gender Perspective in the Teen Comedy Kerri VanderHoff Grand Valley State University Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/mcnair Recommended Citation VanderHoff, Kerri (2005) "Fast Times at Ridgemont High and Porky’s: Gender Perspective in the Teen Comedy," McNair Scholars Journal: Vol. 9: Iss. 1, Article 16. Available at: http://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/mcnair/vol9/iss1/16 Copyright © 2005 by the authors. McNair Scholars Journal is reproduced electronically by ScholarWorks@GVSU. http://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/ mcnair?utm_source=scholarworks.gvsu.edu%2Fmcnair%2Fvol9%2Fiss1%2F16&utm_medium=PDF&utm_campaign=PDFCoverPages Fast Times at Ridgemont High and Porky’s: Gender perspective in the teen comedy Abstract Teenage boys fantasizing about This study examines gender representation teenage girls—a normal and common in teen comedy with an emphasis on occurrence in everyday life, no doubt two films from the genre. Fast Times at about it, and a common subject in Ridgemont High (1982) was directed movies as well. Consider the following by a woman, Amy Heckerling. Porky’s scenarios from two teen comedies: (1981) was directed by a man, Bob Clark. In Fast Times at Ridgemont High This research reveals the different ways (1982), one boy, Brad, who has just male and female directors portray teenage returned home from his fast food job, girls and encourages a re-evaluation of the peeks out the bathroom window. His values conveyed to young viewers when younger sister’s friend, Linda, dives into the perspective represented in Hollywood the backyard pool. entertainment films is predominantly male. In Porky’s (1981), another boy, Tommy, who has just crawled under the school foundation with his buddies, peeps through a hole in the wall of the locker room. The girls’ gym team starts to shower. As Brad closes the window, his point Kerri VanderHoff of view (the object of his gaze) is framed McNair Scholar in the camera for the movie viewer. This framing signals that the narrative perspective has shifted into a subjective fantasy state. The film begins to move in slow motion and the soundtrack of The Cars “Moving in Stereo” begins thumping. Linda emerges from the pool, shimmering and beautiful, and says “Hi Brad, you know how cute I always thought you were.” With that, she seductively steps out of the pool and walks toward Brad, who is suddenly looking very successful in a business suit. She unclasps her bikini top and exposes her breasts to Brad, then reaches up to kiss him. Abruptly, the film cuts away from Brad’s fantasy point of view and replays the scene objectively. The music stops. Linda, bikini intact, emerges from the pool in search of a cotton swab to clean the water out of her ears. The view of the camera is now following Linda’s perspective as she goes into the house and down the hall to the bathroom. She opens the door without knocking and is Toni Perrine, Ph.D. completely taken aback by the sight of Faculty Mentor Brad masturbating. She slams the door closed and the sequence cuts to a shot of Linda’s horrified reaction. To say the least, a definite end to Brad’s fantasy! GVSU McNair Scholars Journal VOLUME 9, 2005 145 Tommy, meanwhile, is enjoying the their privacy. The scenario is seamlessly demonstrate specifically what is not sight of the nude girls. The viewer cut into the movie as a whole and being represented when one gender watches the showering from the point portrayed as a normal course of action. lacks inclusion in the industry. Because of view of the boys. Tommy’s friend The narrative styles described above of the nature of the impressionable PeeWee is having trouble seeing past are not limited solely to teen comedies young audience, along with the window an obese girl who is standing in front of course. However, the examples do of opportunity for female directors in of the peephole and, in his frustration, raise important questions in terms of the low budget teen comedy genre, it is he inadvertently shouts out for her to the influence of the director, specifically a reasonable place to start the process. move. The boys’ presence is now known. with regard to the director’s gender and There are many factors involved in Two of the girls leave the shower room what is represented in films viewed movie production. It is a large-scale quickly, but the remaining girls laugh by teenagers. In the scenarios above, a collaborative effort and the many and move closer to the peephole to flirt woman (Amy Heckerling) directed the influences, from producer to writer to with the boys. The camera framing cuts first sequence about Brad. A man (Bob audience demand, must be examined. A back and forth from close-ups on the Clark) directed the second scenario logical first step is to analyze individual boys in the crawlspace to the view of the about Tommy. films to understand the formal elements girls. The teens enjoy themselves until In terms of prestige in the Hollywood and identify key areas for comparison. the gym coach breaks up the fun. The film industry, the teen comedy generally The purpose of this study is to film cuts to the next scene and the boys’ rests near the bottom of the list. The examine and identify the portrayal story continues. genre rarely attracts the A-list of of female characters and narrative At first glance, the fantasy sequences directors in the film business and teen perspective in two selected films. The seem similar enough, but a closer look comedies are usually produced on a difference in structure between the two reveals obvious differences. low to medium budget. Despite the films is a significant point of departure In the first scenario with Brad, the reputation of the films, the audience in context of the statistics concerning fantasy sequence is clearly indicated for them is a substantial block of the small number of women directors as such. Linda’s exhibitionist actions consumers. Whether or not critics in Hollywood. Evidence of a difference are placed in the context of Brad’s and parents approve of these films, in directing styles between men and imagination. The slow-motion film the young generation comes out to women will demonstrate that the female speed, the filters, the music, and the see them—and what is represented in perspective is compromised by lack of framing depict the fantasy scene and them. That the established directors films directed by women. contain it to Brad’s perspective. When in Hollywood are reluctant to work in Amy Heckerling’s Fast Times at the film shifts to Linda’s perspective, teen comedy has helped make possible Ridgemont High (Fast Times) and Bob the sequence takes on a much different the hiring of a small number of female Clark’s Porky’s are similar in terms of interpretation of the same set of events. directors over the years—still quite a the storyline and the year in which they There is a balanced perspective between rarity in mainstream cinema (Speed, were released. Fast Times and Porky’s male and female, fantasy and “reality.” par. 4). Does the director’s gender are teen comedies set in a high school In the second scenario with Tommy, make a difference in terms of character location and have a cast consisting of the sequence is not clearly represented representation to this young audience? students and teachers. as fantasy. The sequence is from the This essay argues that the gender of Lesley Speed has aptly labeled the male perspective from start to finish and the director does make a discernible subgenre of these two movies “low- the narrative is portrayed as realistic difference. Considering the ongoing comedy” (Speed, par. 10). This type of throughout. There are no indications criticism about the exclusion of women film tends to make repeated references that the scene is anything but a natural in the film business, it is important to functions of the lower body, with series of events. The male fantasy to focus attention on the differences plenty of toilet humor and sex jokes. version of the shower room scene, with that exist in form and content between Low-comedy is also the great equalizer; no female point of view, is unbalanced films which are directed by men and no matter what your class or social yet represented in this film as the male those directed by women. Structurally situation, lower body operations are and female perspective. The females in defined differences—that is, differences universal (Hollywood translation: wide the shower act how the boys would like based on the creative choices regarding audience appeal). Speed notes that this them to act, not necessarily how girls formal elements such as framing, camera subgenre has “a tendency to construct might typically respond to violations of angles, and mise-en-scene—would comic scenarios around themes such 146 Fast Times at Ridgemont High and Porky’s: Gender perspective in the teen comedy as masturbation, oral sex, and sexual assumptions so insistently embodied The first convention is the idea of fantasy” (Speed, par. 12). While both in and reinforced by the classical same-sex friendships, depicting two films employ this type of humor, Hollywood cinema” compiled a partial or more characters that generally portrayal of gender perspective is where list to “make conscious…concepts with develop throughout the course of the the differences are evident. which we are all perfectly familiar” movie and support each other. In In film criticism, text based analysis (Wood, par.

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