Pump
Up the Volume (2002)
Rated R
Starring: Christian Slater, Samantha Mathis,
and Ellen Green
Rating:

out
of

|
From the basement of an otherwise innocent looking suburban Arizona household,
a voice travels on the radio waves that decries all that is sacred in
the world. The government is corrupt. School is a joke. But at the root
of all of his ranting, this voice has a message. People are, no matter
what kind of front they put on, all looking for the same thing: acceptance.
This is the voice of Hard Harry (Christian Slater.)
By day, Harry is really Mark Hunter, a gifted but shy student who recently
was brought to his new Arizona home by his parents from Manhattan. His
father accepted the role of the area's new school commissioner in a district
that prides itself on its high academic scores. Mark, however, sees what's
really going on in the school from a student's eye view. As Harry, he
takes to the air every night at 10 PM to expose the administration's dark
underbelly. He gives the students an outlet for their confused feelings
and reaches them in a way that the school will never be able to do. Unfortunately,
when one of Harry's fans can't cope any longer and commits suicide, an
inevitable clash between Harry and the authorities is set into motion.
Harry finds an ally in Nora (Samantha Mathis), who urges him to continue
his broadcasts and to keep delivering his message to those who need it
most.
Christian Slater's performance
as Hard Harry cemented him as a leading man back in the early 1990s.
It gave him another showcase for the cocky,
self-assured persona he played so well in Heathers, a film that Pump
Up the Volume is often compared to. Samantha Mathis made her feature film
debut in the film and gives an adequate performance as Nora (or the "Eat
Me Beat Me Lady" as she's known to Harry initially.) They have a
nice chemistry in the few scenes they actually share together.
This film was released in 1990 and, surprisingly, it holds up well by
today's standards. Sure, some of the clothing and hairstyles look a little
dated, but its message of hope is as potent today as it was back then.
While that message is a good one, the film itself isn't necessarily a
classic. Pump Up the Volume tries but falls short of adequately providing
that feeling that the teenage years are the worst of your life. That honor
still belongs to the king of teenage angst films, Over the Edge, starring
Matt Dillon and Vincent Spano.
While
the the movie never rises above being a mediocre teen angst flick, it
does have a lot to say about being a teenager and surviving it. That
message and the way it's so eloquently delivered by Hard Harry earn it
merit as a film to watch -- especially if you're between the ages of 13
and 19.
Trivia: Christian
Slater became physically ill several times during filming due to all
the cigarette smoking he had to do. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |