Class of 1984 (1982)
7/10
A movie that falls into a mold of various exploitation revenge thrillers brought to life with strong performances and a dose of dark humor
22 July 2023
At Lincoln High School, new music teacher Andrew Norris (Perry King) eagerly approaches his new position while being warned to keep his expectations in check by biology teacher and new friend Terry Corrigan (Roddy McDowall). Andrew's path eventually crosses with Peter Stegman (Timothy Van Patten) a psychotic and manipulative delinquent who also operates various criminal enterprises using his status as a minor to avoid consequences. As Andrew tries to teach his students and create a good learning environment, Stegman and his gang engage Andrew in an escalating feud.

Class of 1984 is a 1982 revenge thriller made by noted drive-in director Mark Lester and marked something of a transitioning point between Lester's grindhouse work to more mainstream fare like Firestarter and Commando. Inspired by the 1955 film Blackboard Jungle as well as the decay that had overtaken his former high school. Lester collaborated with Tom Holland and John Saxton on the screenplay. While the film only performed modestly upon initial release, it received decent critical reception from many who appreciated the film's satire of decay of educational institutions as well as the performances. Class of 1984 follows a familiar template, but it does so with intelligence, humor, and a certain level of tradecraft that you just have to appreciate.

Perry King makes a likable hero as Andrew and you really buy him as someone who's dedicated to teaching and who values education and his students. King has some great moments with Roddy McDowall's Terry Corrigan who gets to exhibit a wide range of talents including subtle humor, heartbreaking tragedy, and over the top anger that it's little wonder McDowall would go onto another project with Holland leading to his iconic performance as Peter Vincent in Fright Night. But stealing every scene he's in is Timothy Van Patten as Peter Stegman who is an effortlessly hateful antagonist who has the brains and the charisma to make it look easy and really makes us want to see him knocked down a peg. Van Patten is just fantastic in this film and with both his performance and the way his character is written, he's like a James Cagney type hood filtered by way of James Dean's image and he walks that line between being legitimately threatening and also darkly humorous.

Class of 1984 is a fantastic exploitation film and it's everything you want to expect from a movie of this ilk but with that extra something that really makes it stand out.
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