Three O'Clock High
Three O'Clock High | |
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Theatrical release poster by Drew Struzan | |
Directed by | Phil Joanou |
Produced by | David E. Vogel |
Written by |
Richard Christian Matheson Thomas Szollosi |
Starring | |
Music by | Tangerine Dream |
Cinematography | Barry Sonnenfeld |
Edited by | Joe Ann Fogle |
Distributed by | Universal Studios |
Release dates |
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Running time | 101 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $5 million |
Box office | $3,685,862[1] |
Three O'Clock High is a 1987 high-school comedy film, directed by Phil Joanou, written by Richard Christian Matheson and Thomas Szollosi; the executive producer was Aaron Spelling. The plot is loosely connected to the 1952 western classic, High Noon, wherein a town sherriff is forced into a showdown with a notorious criminal at a pre-arranged time: high school student (Casey Siemaszko) accidentally offends a bully (Richard Tyson) and devotes most of his school day to avoiding a fistfight with the bully at 3:00 p.m.
The movie was filmed at Ogden High School in Ogden, Utah, but was based, in part, on Matheson and Szollosi's own high school experiences in California. Critical reception was mixed and the film did not do well at the box office; but on home video it has become something of a minor cult classic.
Plot summary
Meek high school student Jerry Mitchell (Casey Siemaszko) and his kid sister Brei (Stacey Glick) have the house to themselves as their parents are on vacation. Jerry's day begins badly when he wakes late, and gets worse when he nearly wrecks his car while driving his sister and his school friend Franny (Anne Ryan) to Weaver High School, where the students this morning are gossiping about the new student Buddy Revell (Richard Tyson), a violent delinquent who has transferred in today from Continuation, a school for at-risk students.
Jerry's first hour is at the school newspaper where his best friend, Vincent Costello (Jonathan Wise), is the editor. The teacher has the idea of doing an article about Buddy to welcome the "new kid" and she assigns Jerry to do the interview. In a men's room, Jerry sees Buddy and clumsily attempts to introduce himself and brings up the idea of the article. Through a series of poorly chosen statements, Jerry realizes he is only making Buddy angry and ultimately decides to cut his losses and tells Buddy to "...just forget this whole thing happened", giving Buddy a friendly tap on the arm. Buddy, who does not like being touched by others, responds by tossing Jerry against a wall and stating that the two must fight in the parking lot after school at 3 o'clock.
With little more than six hours until the encounter, Jerry tries different strategies to avoid the fight. Trying to reason with Buddy in the hallway doesn't work. Vincent suggests that he plant a switchblade in Buddy's locker to get him kicked out of school (which backfires). Brei advises him to simply skip school, but when Jerry tries to drive away, he finds the switchblade stuck in the steering wheel, and the car ignition wires cut. Trying to run, Jerry is caught by an overzealous school security guard, Duke (Mitch Pileggi), who finds the switchblade and takes Jerry to the office of Mr. Dolinski (Charles Macaulay), the Dean of Discipline. Seeing an otherwise perfectly clean school record, the now suspicious Mr. Dolinski informs Jerry that he will be keeping his eye on him from now on and lets him go.
Jerry makes several other attempts to avoid the fight: he steals money from the school's student store, which he manages, and pays an upperclassman to take care of Buddy; he tries to get thrown into detention by making a pass at his English teacher; he lets Buddy cheat by copying his answers during his final period math quiz. All of these efforts fail.
Ultimately after trying to befriend Buddy, he offers him the cash he took earlier to call off the fight. Buddy accepts the money, but scornfully calls Jerry "the biggest pussy I ever met in my life." Jerry, seized with self-loathing and anger, decides to confront Buddy and demand his money back. When Buddy refuses, Jerry insists that he is no coward and declares that the fight is on.
The fight begins in a parking lot, with hundreds of eager students observing. Principal O'Rourke, Mr. Dolinksi, Duke, Franny and even the guilt-plagued Vincent attempt to intervene, but Buddy easily disposes of them. Jerry, though obviously out-matched, still manages to stand his ground and ultimately uses Buddy's brass knuckles to knock out the bully and win the fight.
The next day, many students show their appreciation to Jerry for giving them such a great fight (one student had set up a betting pool and did quite well), and begin buying individual sheets of paper from the school store for $1 each (at the suggestion of a remorseful Vincent) to help Jerry make up the lost student store cash. Buddy shows up silencing the bustling crowd and begrudgingly shows respect by returning the $350. Weaver High is now filled with gossip as Jerry replaces Buddy as the hot talk of the school, with the rumors having a wide and humorous range of alignment with the truth.
Cast
- Casey Siemaszko as Jerry Mitchell
- Anne Ryan as Franny Perrins
- Richard Tyson as Buddy Revell
- Stacey Glick as Brei Mitchell
- Jonathan Wise as Vincent Costello
- Jeffrey Tambor as Mr. Rice
- Philip Baker Hall as Detective Mulvahill
- John P. Ryan as Mr. O'Rourke
- Theron Read as Mark Bojeekus
- Liza Morrow as Karen Clark
- Guy Massey as Scott Cranston
- Mike Jolly as Craig Mattey
- Charles Macaulay as Voytek Dolinski
- Caitlin O'Heaney as Miss Farmer
- Alice Nunn as Nurse Palmer
- Paul Feig as Hall monitor
- Mitch Pileggi as Duke, the school security guard
- Yeardley Smith as Cheerleader
- Brian White as Bystander
Reception
Three O'Clock High opened in 849 theatres nationwide on October 9, 1987; gaining a $1,506,975 opening weekend gross. The total lifetime gross of the film is approximately $3,685,862, earning 40.9% of its total gross during opening weekend.
Critical reviews were mixed. Rotten Tomatoes ranks the film at 67%, based on 9 reviews.[2] Roger Ebert[3] gave the movie one-out-of-four stars, declaring "[t]he plot of this movie is pretty stupid" and lamenting that the hulking bully Buddy Revell, "the most interesting character," is an underdeveloped cypher. Ebert[3] also suggests that My Bodyguard, a 1980 drama about a bullied high school student, explores the same themes as Three O'Clock High but is a far better film.
See also
References
- ↑ Three O'Clock High (1987) - Box office / business
- ↑ "Three O'Clock High". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2013-12-22.
- 1 2 Ebert, Roger (1987). "Three O'Clock High," 09 October 1987, retrieved 03 July 2012
External links
- Three O'Clock High at the Internet Movie Database
- Three O'Clock High at Rotten Tomatoes
- Three O'Clock High at Box Office Mojo
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