Name a movie which most accurately captures teen life from when you were a teen

We’re not talking about just your palms, now. :stuck_out_tongue:

I just thought of another one for me:

My Name Is Earl Ok, so it’s not about teens or high school, but I can relate
the characters struggle to deal with being poor.

I think “Kids” captures a certain segment of teen life from when I was a kid but not my personal experience. I was around the age of those “kids” when the movie coming out, though I couldn’t imagine doing anything they did. I grew up in a sort of combination beach resort/rural farm life area. I also transferred for my last 2 years and the 30 mile shift was a different world. Went from surfers and farmers to some sort of “Friday Night Lights” town in the north. So I couldn’t relate to big city or Midwest living. But, when I talk to people my age who grew up in a big city, NYC especially, it sounds like the movie Kids. I spent most of my time going to school and getting good grades, playing basketball, listening to music alone, not drinking or having sex, and working on the weekends.

Actually, the interiors were shot at The Carousel over south of Capitol Plaza. Did you notice that it was the old skating rink that the kids climbed on to of to dump the white paint on Been Affleck? Then they took off down Wild Ave. But yeah, there was no bar in the Violet Crown. But they did have AA meetings there for years.

(Lived on both Ruth and Brentwood in the 80s)

Breaking Away, but, then, I went to college at I.U. shortly before the movie was made. Granted, I didn’t race bikes, but it does resemble by adolescent years more than most.

It’s a tossup between "Wild In The Streets" and “Reefer Madness”.

For me, it’s the music video for the Rush song “Subdivisions”. Tempest was even my favorite video game back then.

“Blow”

My housemates and I bought kilos and sold “lids” to pay the rent and college tuition. We lived on the beach in Oceanside, California.

The beginning of the movie really brought back memories.

Hoosiers.

Except we lost the state championship.

The film accurately portrays how important school sports can be for a small town. It’s the biggest source of pride and achievement (for the hometown) imaginable.

Not really… the defining thing about our school was the single-sex aspect more than anything. Those movies’ schools were more concentrated on the boarding school aspect from what I could tell.