These teen flicks graduated with high honors in our eyes. The 50 best high school movies of all time, from Carrie to Clueless
These teen flicks graduated with high honors in our eyes.
The 50 best high school movies of all time, from Carrie to Clueless
These teen flicks graduated with high honors in our eyes.
By Mandi Bierly,
Mandi Bierly is a former senior writer at **. She left EW in 2014.
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Tim Stack is a former senior writer at **. He left EW in 2019.
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and Michelle Kung
Published on August 18, 2025 08:00AM EDT
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Molly Ringwald as Claire Standish in 'The Breakfast Club', William Gates in 'Hoop Dreams'; Stacey Dash as Dionne Davenport and Alicia Silverstone as Cher Horowitz in 'Clueless'. Credit:
It's easy to see why high school is such a popular setting for movies: Most of us have gone through it, and it's often an emotionally turbulent experience that's rife with both internal and external conflict. Between raging hormones, social pressures, and expectations from parents, those handful of years before venturing out into the real world are fraught with tension.
Our favorite high school movies reflect all of those elements, and while a coming-of-age drama like *Splendor in the Grass* (1961) may seem worlds apart from a satirical comedy such as *Mean Girls* (2004), there are certain commonalities and universal truths within both — and many others in this list — that make them timeless.
Read on for our ranking of the best 50 high school movies ever made.
50. Splendor in the Grass (1961)
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Natalie Wood as Deanie Loomis and Warren Beatty as Bud Stamper in 'Splendor in the Grass'. Everett Collection
Young love — especially when it's with the star of the football team — can feel like the most charged experience in the world. In pre-Depression, small-town Kansas, good-girl Wilma Dean "Deanie" Loomis (Natalie Wood) is so tortured by her sexual urges for beau Bud Stamper (Warren Beatty) and conflicting pressure to be moral that she attempts suicide after a school dance and ends up in a sanitarium. It's the ultimate depiction of overwhelming first love, and — sorry, religious right — a chilling PSA against the dangers of teen abstinence. —*Josh Wolk*
49. 10 Things I Hate About You (1999)
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Heath Ledger as Patrick Verona and Julia Stiles as Kat Stratford in '10 Things I Hate About You'. Richard Cartwright
There are many reasons *10 Things I Hate About You* stands the test of time better than most of its contemporaries in the glut of late-'90s teen flicks, but we'll name two of them. For starters, child-star-made-good Joseph Gordon-Levitt turned in an understated, endearing performance as Cameron, a lovelorn (and totally undercover hot) geek.
The film also served as a breakout role for a then little-known Aussie named Heath Ledger, who sang, danced, and smirked his way into the heart of ice queen intellectual punk Kat Stratford (Julia Stiles). That's without mentioning a stellar soundtrack, its brilliantly caricaturish deconstruction of high school cliquery, and a house party worthy of the name Bogey Lowenstein (Kyle Cease). —*Lanford Beard*
48. Just One of the Guys (1985)
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Joyce Hyser as Terry Griffith, Clayton Rohner as Rick Morehouse, and Toni Hudson as Denise in 'Just One of the Guys'. Everett Collection
Every generation has its variant on the girl-dresses-as-boy, girl-as-boy-falls-for-boy, boy-freaks-out tale. And this immensely fun, if minor, romp from the '80s perfectly captures the decade's raunch-lite spirit and funky fashion sense. As the cross-dresser caught in the middle, Joyce Hyser's aspiring journalist Terry learns the hard way that there's more to being a dude than just stuffing a tube sock down your pants. —*Michelle Kung*
47. Napoleon Dynamite (2004)
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Efren Ramirez as Pedro Sánchez and Jon Heder as Napoleon Dynamite in 'Napoleon Dynamite'.
The plot is insignificant, the title character (Jon Heder) is petulant, and the pace creeps along just barely faster than a John Deere. Still, this sleeper hit succeeds because it manages to mock and celebrate high school geekdom with a bone-dry, unsentimental tone. The inane one-liners, absurd non-sequiturs, and sheer silliness of the characters don't just bring back memories of adolescence, they make you feel like a teenager again, giggling at something idiotic without knowing exactly why. —*Michael Endelman*
46. Flirting (1992)
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Kym Wilson as Melissa and Nicole Kidman as Nicola Radcliffe in 'Flirting'. Everett Collection
She's a Ugandan beauty in a prep school populated by blond Aussies (including young Nicole Kidman and Naomi Watts); he's a gawky stutterer obsessed with Camus. Given their shared outsider status at their respective institutions, is there any doubt that Danny (Noah Taylor) and Thandiwe (Thandiwe Newton) end up falling for each other? Wryly tender and respectfully told, director John Duigan's coming-of-age romance is a warm and fuzzy confection that stops short of being icky. —*M.K.*
45. My Bodyguard (1980)
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Chris Makepeace as Clifford Peache and Matt Dillon as Melvin Moody in 'My Bodyguard'. Everett Collection
There's something timeless for everyone when new kid Clifford "Peachy" Peache (Chris Makepeace) enlists the mysterious, tortured classmate Ricky Linderman (Adam Baldwin) to protect him from the school bully (Matt Dillon). Lifelong scapegoats will cheer the underdogs' triumph, while former homeroom villains of all generations will shed a nostalgic tear at Dillon's showcase of evergreen bully tactics: the locker prison, the wet toilet-paper bomb, and the bathroom surprise attack. Ahh, high school: good times, good times. —*J.W.*
44. Can't Hardly Wait (1998)
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Ethan Embry as Preston Meyers and Jennifer Love Hewitt as Amanda Beckett in 'Can't Hardly Wait'. Everett Collection
It's the last night of high school, and the only thing left to do is party — and face the skeletons in the closet. By the end of this wild bash, everyone succeeds: The nerd (Charlie Korsmo) gets revenge on the jock (Peter Facinelli); the nice guy (Ethan Embry) snags his prom-queen crush (Jennifer Love Hewitt); and a pair of unlikely old friends (Lauren Ambrose and Seth Green) reunite. It may be a typical teen comedy, but the underlying message always rings true: Don't let fate pass you by. —*Lindsay Soll*
43. Stand and Deliver (1988)
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Edward James Olmos as Jaime Escalante (center) and Lou Diamond Phillips as Angel Guzman (bottom center) in 'Stand and Deliver'. Everett Collection
Any grandiose "O Captain! My Captain!" speech would only invite a *Dead Poets Society* beatdown at dilapidated Garfield High in East L.A. Instead, Jaime Escalante (Edward James Olmos) teaches in a fast food worker uniform and inspires with math problems about gigolos. He gives extra textbooks to a studious gang member (Lou Diamond Phillips) in exchange for protection and turns a mathematical truth, "A negative times a negative equals a positive," into a social one. That's *ganas, jefe*. —*Jeff Labrecque*
42. Fame (1980)
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Gene Anthony Ray as Leroy Johnson (jumping on car, center) and Irene Cara as Coco Hernandez (front) in 'Fame'. MGM/Courtesy Everett Collection
By today's standards, this Oscar-winning musical is downright gritty, with its frank and often bleak depiction of arts-inclined teenagers. Sure, they sing and act and turn lunchtime into a funk jam, but they also have abortions, fend off predatory pornographers, experiment with drugs, and contemplate suicide. *High School Musical*, it isn't. The potent shot of authenticity is sweetened by the memorable, soul-drenched musical numbers, which inspired millions to try and pirouette on a taxi. —*M.E.*
41. Can't Buy Me Love (1987)
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Patrick Dempsey as Ronald Miller and Amanda Peterson as Cindy Mancini in 'Can't Buy Me Love'. Touchstone Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection
Long before he was Dr. McDreamy on *Grey's Anatomy*, Patrick Dempsey won us over as the lovable lawn-mowing nerd Ronald Miller. After a failed attempt to buy his way into the cool clique, Ronny goes from totally chic right back to a total geek. Lesson learned: Sometimes, performing the "African Anteater Ritual" at the school dance isn't enough to get you a spot at the right lunch table. —*L.S.*
40. The Karate Kid (1984)
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Ralph Macchio as Daniel LaRusso and Pat Morita as Mr. Miyagi in 'The Karate Kid'. Everett Collection
We practiced "the crane" and wasted money on a bonsai tree. But the real reason this movie makes the cut: *Rocky* director John G. Avildsen understood that Mr. Miyagi (Oscar nominee Pat Morita) had a lot to say — about finding balance; choosing mentors wisely; disguising defensive martial arts techniques in home improvement (and yourself in a shower curtain, if it meant you could attend your high school Halloween dance undetected by Cobra Kai bullies). Perhaps that explains why only one of Daniel-san's training sessions is set to music: When Miyagi talked, we, like outsider Ralph Macchio, listened. —*Mandi Bierly*
39. The Virgin Suicides (1999)
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Leslie Hayman as Therese Lisbon, Kirsten Dunst as Lux Lisbon, A.J. Cook as Mary Libson, and Chelse Swain as Bonnie Lisbon in 'The Virgin Suicides'.
Paramount Classics/Courtesy Everett Collection
This one deserves to be on the list if only for the one terrific shot in which Josh Hartnett, as heartthrob Trip Fontaine, glides down the locker-lined hall, with his leather jacket hung over one shoulder and Heart's "Magic Man" blaring on the soundtrack as all the girls turn their heads. If guys in high school don't actually walk like that, they should. The rest of the movie, about the five Libson sisters — Lux (Kirsten Dunst), Mary (A.J. Cook), Cecilia (Hanna Hall), Therese (Leslie Hayman), and Bonnie (Chelse Swain) — in a death pact, is shot by debut director Sofia Coppola as teenage iconography at its dreamiest and most weirdly entrancing. —*Gregory Kirschling*
38. Bye Bye Birdie (1963)
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Dick Van Dyke as Albert Peterson and Janet Leigh as Rosie DeLeon in 'Bye Bye Birdie'.
High school is definitely more fun when you add a little song and dance. Ann-Margret is all big hair and energy as a lucky small-town teen who wins the chance to be kissed on television by Conrad Birdie (Jesse Pearson), a thinly veiled Elvis copy. Unfortunately, her boyfriend (Bobby Rydell) is a tad jealous of her swapping spit with a celeb. What follows is a gleeful parade, perfect for viewers who always wanted to meet the high school star crush whose posters adorned their bedroom walls. —*Tim Stack*
37. Friday Night Lights (2004)
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Billy Bob Thornton as Coach Gary Gaines (center) in 'Friday Night Lights'. Ralph Nelson
Is there a sight more wonderful than kids playing a sport just for the sheer love of the game? That's a vision entirely absent from Peter Berg's superbly unsparing, based-on-real-events examination of the diamond-forming pressure present in small-town Texas high school football. A great teen movie and a great sports movie, albeit one that may prompt more than one young ballplayer to switch to darts. —*Clark Collis*
36. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (2005)
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Alan Rickman as Severus Snape (standing), Rupert Grint as Ron Weasley, and Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter in 'Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire'. Murray Close
J.K. Rowling ingeniously blended two literary traditions, fantasy and coming-through-school fiction (à la *Tom Brown's School Days*). That's particularly true in *Goblet of Fire*, which depicts 14-year-old Harry's (Daniel Radcliffe) heightened state of adolescent anxiety — about the big (Quidditch) game, about finding a date for the big dance, and about juggling homework while saving the wizarding world from evil Lord Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes). —*Thom Geier*
35. Brick (2006)
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Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Brendan Frye and Matt O'Leary as the Brain in 'Brick'. Steve Yedlin
"Nah, bulls gum it. They'd flash their dusty standards at the wide-eyes, probably find some yeg to pin." The high school kids in *Brick* talk like this for the entire movie. With a femme fatale (Nora Zehetner), a dead girlfriend (Emilie de Ravin), and a mysterious cape-wearing drug lord (Lukas Haas), Rian Johnson's *Brick* gives you a teen flick in the guise of a noir thriller where everything is all very life-and-death. Come to think of it, that's exactly what high school is like. —*Gilbert Cruz*
34. Get Real (1998)
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Ben Silverstone as Steven Carter and Charlotte Brittain as Linda in 'Get Real'. Everett Collection
A typical first-love-with-the-school-jock story, but with a twist. Sex-on-legs track star John Dixon (Brad Gorton) really does fall for Steven Carter (Ben Silverstone), the bright, gawky student journalist who's lusted after Dixon while tiptoeing around female classmates on platonic dates. Of course, John also has an official girlfriend (Charlotte Brittain). But, when our hero yearns for a romance that's a little more public, the baton gets dropped in a way that's touchingly, poignantly real. —*T.G.*
33. Hoop Dreams (1994)
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William Gates in 'Hoop Dreams'.
This documentary follows William Gates and Arthur Agee, two kids who avoid the pitfalls of growing up in the Chicago slums by living, breathing, and playing basketball. As with any kid who plays ball, Gates and Agee fantasize about one thing: making it to the NBA. For all audiences, this is a purely inspirational tale. For some, it's nostalgic, bringing back dreams you once had of making it to the pros. —*Vanessa Juarez*
32. Scream (1996)
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Skeet Ulrich as Billy Loomis, Neve Campbell as Sidney Prescott, Matthew Lillard as Stu Macher, Rose McGowan as Tatum Riley, and Jamie Kennedy as Randy Meeks in a promotional photo for 'Scream'. Everett Collection
Aside from the awesomeness of seeing Henry "the Fonz" Winkler as a square principal, *Scream* is the supreme teen horror movie specifically because it is so self-aware of how ridiculous and formulaic teen horror movies can be — even those that are set outside of high school, in college dorms, or summer camps. And if sex equals death, as fright flicks and parents alike have tried to warn us, then how cool is it (spoiler alert!) for *Scream* to make the killer Sidney's (Neve Campbell) boyfriend (Skeet Ulrich) — the one trying to get in her pants? Scary cool, we say. —*G.C.*
31. Risky Business (1983)
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Rebecca De Mornay as Lana and Tom Cruise as Joel Goodsen in 'Risky Business'. Everett Collection
Long before Tom Cruise became a couch-jumping Scientologist, he came to prominence in this sharp satire of privileged suburban teens. The socks-and-undies dance scene is what everyone remembers, but this Reagan-era hit isn't just another teensploitation flick. It's about the soul-crushing pressure to be perfect, and the primal urges to rebel against a manicured, pre-programmed future—even if that means turning your parents' house into a brothel. —*M.E.*
30. Bring It On (2000)
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Kirsten Dunst as Torrance Shipman in 'Bring It On'. Ken Jacques
They're sexy, they're cute, they're popular to boot! Kirsten Dunst plays Torrance, the bright-eyed cheerleading captain who must save her high school's squad from a major cheeragedy: going down as the team who stole routines. In the end, we learn there's more to cheerleading than loads of hairspray, teeny halter tops, and backstabbing: These are athletes who know how to really bring it. We give this comedy five spirit fingers up! —*L.S.*
29. Gregory's Girl (1981)
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Dee Hepburn as Dorothy and John Gordon Sinclair as Gregory in 'Gregory's Girl'.
Film Movement/courtesy Everett Collection
*Gregory's Girl* is short on stars, long on soccer, and it sounds like a "Weird" Al Yankovic parody of Rick Springfield. But it is also sweetly hilarious as gangly Scottish teen Gregory (Gordon John Sinclair) falls for an out-of-his-league classmate (Dee Hepburn). The result is guaranteed to make viewers feel much better about their own post-pubescent awkwardness — unless they, too, ever tried to romance someone with the information that "When you sneeze, it comes out your nose 180 miles an hour." —*C.C.*
28. Back to the Future (1985)
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Christopher Lloyd as Emmett "Doc" Brown and Michael J. Fox as Marty McFly in 'Back to the Future'. Ralph Nelson
Easily the coolest movie ever to feature a Huey Lewis and the News song. The film ingeniously literalizes high school's sexual frustration and disdain for one's parents by having Michael J. Fox's Marty McFly getting hit on over and over again by Lea Thompson as his young, future mother (thanks to that time-traveling DeLorean). It just goes to prove that the parental units were just as horny back in the day as we were. —*G.C.*
27. To Sir, With Love (1967)
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Sidney Poitier as Mark Thackeray in 'To Sir, With Love'. Everett Collection
Way before Mr. Holland began teaching his opus and Michelle Pfeiffer's Louanne Johnson was molding dangerous minds, Mark Thackery (Sidney Poitier) was taming a room of unruly British teens with his real-life lessons and tough-love tactics (a boxing glove to the stomach, anyone?). Having himself played an insubordinate kid in 1955's *Blackboard Jungle*, Poitier's student masterfully becomes the teacher in this sappy but never maudlin tale of inspiration and tolerance. —*M.K.*
26. Pretty in Pink (1986)
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Jon Cryer as Philip F. 'Duckie' Dale and Molly Ringwald as Andie Walsh in 'Pretty in Pink'. Everett Collection
Perhaps the most controversial ending to a teen romance ever. (Behind *Romeo and Juliet*? Fine.) Should Andie (Molly Ringwald) have chased after rich, repentant Blane (Andrew McCarthy), or stayed at the prom with poor, devoted Duckie (Jon Cryer)? That we still care is a testament to John Hughes' script about love across class lines (point for Blane); the meaning of friendship and individuality (point for Duckie); and the evil nature of wealthy high schoolers in crisp, white clothing (point for James Spader). —*M.B.*
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25. Hoosiers (1986)
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Gene Hackman as Coach Norman Dale (wearing tie) in 'Hoosiers'. Everett Collection
Most school movie jocks are belligerent bullies. But Jimmy Chitwood (Maris Valainis) is part Larry Bird, part *Rain Man*, letting the swish of the basketball net do his talking. Hoops-crazed Hickory, Ind., adores him for it. His support of embattled Coach Dale (Gene Hackman) sways the town, and his skill transforms the coach from goat to genius. In the championship game, the Brylcreemed god overrules Coach Dale's last-second strategy with three words: "I'll make it." Definitely. —*J.L.*
24. Rushmore (1998)
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Jason Schwartzman as Max Fischer, Sara Tanaka as Margaret Yang, Bill Murray as Herman Blume, and Olivia Williams as Rosemary Cross in 'Rushmore'. Everett Collection
For some reason, *Rushmore* doesn't quite feel like a high school movie. Maybe that's because director/co-writer Wes Anderson's wonderful comedy doesn't feel like any other movie ever made. But it's about school days: Just the fact that Jason Schwartzman's tirelessly enterprising Max Fischer is a student at all becomes palpably bittersweet since he's too young to ever win Rosemary (Olivia Williams), the teacher of his (and anyone's) dreams. —*G.K.*
23. Cooley High (1975)
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Corin Rogers as Pooter, Joseph Carter Wilson as Tyrone, Glynn Turman as LeRoy 'Preach' Jackson, and Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs as Richard 'Cochise' Morris in 'Cooley High'. Everett Collection
Written by *Good Times* co-creator Eric Monte and directed by Michael Schultz, this tearjerker provided the blueprint for 1991's *Boyz N the Hood*. In mid-'60s Chicago, geek Leroy "Preach" Jackson (Glynn Turman) and hoop star Richard "Cochise" Morris (Lawrence-Hilton Jacobs) struggle to stay out of trouble while prepping for graduation. The soundtrack, featuring G.C. Cameron's ballad "It's So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterday," remains as beloved as the film. —*Margeaux Watson*
22. American Pie (1999)
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Jason Biggs as Jim Levenstein in 'American Pie'. Everett Collection
A frivolous teen comedy that left its mark: Jim (Jason Biggs) taught us the dangers of webcam misuse (and baked-goods abuse), while the guy who'd become Harold (of *Harold and Kumar*) — popularized the term "MILF." *American Pie* is both funnier and bawdier than *Porky's*, though that 1981 romp gets points for Kim Cattrall's outrageous orgasm scene. But even she can't top Alyson Hannigan's perfect delivery of the line (all together now): "This one time? At band camp?" —*Hannah Tucker*
21. Grease (1978)
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Olivia Newton-John as Sandy Olsson and John Travolta as Danny Zuko in 'Grease'. Paramount Pictures
*Grease* may look too pure to be "pink," but listen to those lyrics (and watch John Travolta ogle Olivia Newton-John in "You're the One That I Want") and you may find yourself blushing. Beneath the karaoke-heaven soundtrack lies a story with teen pregnancy, "pussy wagons," and good ol' "summer lovin'." Naughty but harmless, it's just like high school should be. —*M.B.*
20. Dead Poets Society (1989)
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Robin Williams as John Keating in 'Dead Poets Society'. Everett Collection
Perhaps the finest movie in a shockingly sparse mini-genre: the high school weepie. (After all, high school makes you cry sometimes.) Here, if what happens to Neil (Robert Sean Leonard) doesn't get you ("My son! My son!"), then the ending — Ethan Hawke's stirring "O Captain! My Captain!," Maurice Jarre's blaring bagpipes, and teacher Robin Williams' "Thank you, boys, thank you" — will. Only somebody too cool for school could resist. —*G.K.*
19. The Last Picture Show (1971)
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Jeff Bridges as Duane Jackson and Cybill Shepherd as Jacy Farrow in 'The Last Picture Show'. Everett Collection
Peter Bogdanovich's black-and-white film takes us to the tumbleweed burg of Anarene, Tex., where Jeff Bridges, Timothy Bottoms, and Randy Quaid vie for Cybill Shepherd, the town's No. 2 seductress. (Her mom's No. 1.) These horny, angst-ridden teens deal with sex, mortality, money, and a li'l Texas football by being themselves: subconsciously callous. But the witty banter, mostly by the grown-ups, makes it all less bleak. —*V.J.*
18. Rock 'n' Roll High School (1979)
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P.J. Soles as Riff Randell (center) with the Ramones in 'Rock 'n' Roll High School'. Shout Factory/New Horizons Pictures
Producer Roger Corman's comedy is a jiggly love affair set at Vince Lombardi High and centered on matchmaker Eaglebauer (Clint Howard), whose office is a men's room stall, and "Riff Randell, rock & roller" (pre-*Stripes* star P.J. Soles), who must rebel against Principal Togar (Mary Woronov) to see a forbidden — and very excellent — Ramones show. Think *Spinal Tap* and *Dazed and Confused* skipping study hall together to get stoned. —*Jason Adams*
17. Peggy Sue Got Married (1986)
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Nicolas Cage as Charlie Bodell and Kathleen Turner as Peggy Sue Kelcher-Bodell in 'Peggy Sue Got Married'. Everett Collection
Would you change anything if you could relive high school? Possibly hook up with that beatnik of a guy you always wondered about? Until Chevrolet makes an actual plutonium-powered time machine, we'll have to live vicariously through this humorously goofy Francis Ford Coppola flick, in which Peggy Sue (Kathleen Turner in an Oscar-nominated performance) goes back in time to figure out whether pompadoured heartthrob Charlie (Nicolas Cage) is her one and only. —*V.J.*
16. Lucas (1986)
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Corey Haim as Lucas Blye and Kerri Green as Maggie in 'Lucas'. Everett Collection
Sure, sensitive jock Cappie (Charlie Sheen) ends up shirtless for seven minutes due to a freak blender accident in Home Ec. But we remember *Lucas* for its smart, scrawny hero (an affecting Corey Haim), who showed that the strongest kid is the one who walks through the halls knowing he'll be teased. And that the most interesting person finds beauty where he can — even in the sewer system, sitting beneath a manhole cover, listening to a live symphony above. —*M.B.*
15. Carrie (1976)
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Sissy Spacek as Carrie White in 'Carrie'. Everett Collection
School can be terrifying, especially when you're an awkward telekinetic teen whose mother is a hardcore religious zealot. Poor Carrie White (Sissy Spacek) can't even get through P.E. class without being viciously mocked by her peers. But in this Brian De Palma classic, the wallflower eventually gets her revenge in the spectacularly gory prom climax (even disposing of a *Kotter*-era John Travolta). Spacek's Oscar-nominated turn in the title role is pure, silent rage. —*T.S.*
14. Easy A (2010)
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Penn Badgley as Todd and Emma Stone as Olive Penderghast in 'Easy A'. Adam Taylor
When Olive Penderghast (Emma Stone) tells a thoughtless lie about losing her virginity and gets caught in the rumor mill, she has a choice — take the hits or take over. Olive is a little bit feminist (owning her sexuality), a little bit anti-bullying crusader (letting her gay friend, played by Dan Byrd, and various school outcasts say they had sex with her), and a whole lot of sassy entrepreneur (making money all the while). Though *Easy A* deals with the abuse of power via sex and religion, it's still completely relatable and hilarious — thanks in no small part to Stone's crack timing and winsome charm. —*L.B.*
13. High School (1968)
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A student at Northeast High School in Philadelphia in the documentary 'High School'.
Although it was added to the National Film Registry in 1991, the same year as *2001: A Space Odyssey* and *Chinatown*, Frederick Wiseman's documentary is — like many of his fly-on-the-wall nonfiction films — extremely difficult to find on video. But it is essential. Thirty years before reality TV, Wiseman took his camera to Philadelphia's Northeast High School and shot what was there, editing it, without narration, into a devastating indictment of bureaucracy and enforced conformity. —*G.K.*
12. Mean Girls (2004)
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Lindsay Lohan as Cady Heron, Amanda Seyfried as Karen Smith, Rachel McAdams as Regina George, and Lacey Chabert as Gretchen Wieners in 'Mean Girls'.
Paramount Pictures
From flicks like *Freaky Friday* (2003) to *Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen* (2004), Lindsay Lohan was unequivocally the It Girl when it came to teen films of the Y2K era. Showcasing La Lohan in arguably her best role to date, this Tina Fey-scripted film also boasts a breakout turn by Rachel McAdams as evil queen bee Regina George ("Gretchen, stop trying to make 'fetch' happen! It's not going to happen!"). While *Mean Girls* is technically a comedy, its depiction of girl-on-girl cattiness stings incredibly true. —*T.S.*
11. Say Anything (1989)
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Ione Skye as Diane Court and John Cusack as Lloyd Dobler in 'Say Anything'. Everett Collection
Go on: Hoist that boom box above your head and turn up Peter Gabriel's "In Your Eyes." Stand motionless with a fixed expression of unrequited but determined love. And watch Cameron Crowe's ode to young passion, which made John Cusack the thinking teen's heartthrob and should have done the same for Ione Skye. If the postgraduation romance between an earnest kickboxer and a sheltered valedictorian doesn't win you over, repeat steps one and two and listen closer. —*H.T.*
10. Ferris Bueller's Day Off (1986)
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Matthew Broderick as Ferris Bueller in 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off'. Paramount Pictures
Who didn't want to be Ferris (Matthew Broderick) in 12th grade? Who wouldn't want school to be a magical place where you could wake up and call in sick (with an awesome hacking cough keyboard) and then see your name in a get-well-soon message painted on the side of a water tower by lunch, all while you were cruising through Chicago in a red Ferrari? Thanks to Broderick as Ferris, teenagerdom has never felt more fun or mythic. —*G.K.*
9. Election (1999)
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Reese Witherspoon as Tracy Flick in 'Election'. Bob Akester
Before taking on geezers (*About Schmidt*) and oenophiles (*Sideways*), director Alexander Payne scabrously exposed the most embarrassing shortcomings of high schoolers in an artful, hilarious way. He doesn't go easy on anybody in *Election* — not Matthew Broderick's weak, meddling teacher, nor Reese Witherspoon's *Fargo*-accented student council presidential candidate. In fact, *Election* is as mean as high school at its worst. —*G.K.*
8. Sixteen Candles (1984)
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Michael Schoeffling as Jake Ryan and Molly Ringwald as Sam Baker in 'Sixteen Candles'. Universal Pictures
It's tough to turn 16. But, when your entire family forgets your birthday, it only makes that day worse. Molly Ringwald puts on a brave face as her character endures basically the worst week of her life, whether it's having her panties taken by Anthony Michael Hall or getting groped by her grandma ("Fred, she's gotten her boobies!"). The awkwardness is all hilarious, though, especially watching a young Joan Cusack attempt to use the water fountain in orthodontic headgear. —*T.S.*
7. Clueless (1995)
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Justin Walker as Christian Stovitz and Alicia Silverstone as Cher Horowitz in 'Clueless'. Elliott Marks
It's a rare movie that makes you want to befriend the prettiest, most popular girl in school. But not all girls are Cher (Alicia Silverstone), who gets as many killer lines as fashion ensembles; learns that seeing the best in others is a way to better yourself; and discovers the joy of shopping with a well-dressed gay man (Justin Walker) — all at the ripe age of 15. Credit writer-director Amy Heckerling for making this modern-day interpretation of Jane Austen's *Emma* consistently smart and funny. —*M.B.*
6. American Graffiti (1973)
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Ron Howard as Steve Bolander in 'American Graffiti'. Universal Pictures
*American Graffiti*'s cast of teens — including Richard Dreyfuss and Ron Howard — has serious decisions to make on a late-summer night filled with rock music and hot rods, the kind that can only be made if they stay up 'til dawn. Should they ditch town for college? Should they stay with their gals? Whatever the choice, it infuses this most innocently joyous eve-of-adulthood film with that bittersweet feeling of leaving one's childhood behind. —*G.C.*
5. Heathers (1989)
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Christian Slater as Jason 'J.D.' Dean and Winona Ryder as Veronica Sawyer in 'Heathers'.
New World Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection
For those who dream about offing an obnoxious classmate, *Heathers* is the ultimate dark fantasy. Full of mordant wit, shocking violence, and savvy performances by Christian Slater and Winona Ryder, the flick was the antithesis of the earnest '80s John Hughes films — you'd never see Molly Ringwald serving up a kitchen-cleaner cocktail for Ally Sheedy. Even today, *Heathers*' spin on cliques, teen suicide, and homosexuality still has bite. —*T.S.*
4. Rebel Without a Cause (1955)
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James Dean as Jim Stark in 'Rebel Without a Cause'. Everett Collection
"You're tearing me apart," Jim Stark (James Dean) howls at his parents. For the new kid in school, it doesn't get any easier. Though he finds a friend in the extremely troubled Plato (Sal Mineo), Jim gets into it on his first day with a gang of bullies, in a knife fight, and later in a chickie run. Dean was a refreshing change from the well-scrubbed teens of earlier Hollywood films. Here was a character young audiences could finally recognize. —*V.J.*
3. Dazed and Confused (1993)
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Rory Cochrane as Ron Slater, Jason London as Randall 'Pink' Floyd, and Sasha Jenson as Don Dawson in 'Dazed and Confused'. Gabor Szitanyi
Matthew McConaughey's David Wooderson likes high school girls because even though he gets older, they stay the same age. We feel the same way about Richard Linklater's minutiae-filled comedic epic about the last day of school in 1976 — we may get older, but *Dazed and Confused* is ageless. And, for a movie featuring so many stoners, *Dazed* is mammothly ambitious: Few other films say as much about starting, sticking around in, and leaving high school. —*G.K.*
2. Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982)
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Jennifer Jason Leigh as Stacy Hamilton and Phoebe Cates as Linda Barrett in 'Fast Times at Ridgemont High'. Everett Collection
When screenwriter Cameron Crowe went undercover to observe the species *Teenagerus Americanus*, he returned with more than the usual grab-bag of anecdotes about horny, apple-pie-humping guys and the popularity-obsessed girls who must fight them off with a stick. He returned with 24-karat truth. To watch *Fast Times* today is to know exactly what it felt like to be fixated on sex, drugs, and rock & roll in Southern California circa 1982.
It also launched careers and dished out still-relevant life lessons: Jennifer Jason Leigh (relax your throat muscles when fellating a carrot), Phoebe Cates (always knock before entering a bathroom), and Judge Reinhold (lock the bathroom door). And Sean Penn's Jeff Spicoli, with his checkerboard Vans and bong-hit grin, is a geyser of catchphrases ("Aloha, Mr. Hand!"). The film never strains for coming-of-age treacle. Maybe that's why it still feels so...right. —*Chris Nashawaty*
1. The Breakfast Club (1985)
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Judd Nelson as John Bender, Emilio Estevez as Andrew Clark, Ally Sheedy as Allison Reynolds, Molly Ringwald as Claire Standish, and Anthony Michael Hall as Brian Johnson in 'The Breakfast Club'. Universal Pictures
It may lack the scope of its peers — the drinking, the driving, the listless loitering in parking lots — as well as any scenes that actually take place during school. But if hell is other people, and high school is hell, then John Hughes is the genre's Sartre, and *The Breakfast Club* is his *No Exit*.**
The concept is simple: one Saturday detention, five unhappy teens, and their scramble to prove they're each something more than a brain (Anthony Michael Hall), an athlete (Emilio Estevez), a basket case (Ally Sheedy), a princess (Molly Ringwald), and a criminal (Judd Nelson). Following the farcical fluff of *Sixteen Candles*, the issues Hughes explored — sex, drugs, abuse, suicide, the need to belong to something — are surprisingly subversive and handled with bracing, R-rated honesty.**
"'Kids movie' was a derogatory term," recalls Nelson, "and Hughes was definitely not making that." Thus, all these years later, the film still sparks intense debates about the trials of teen life. —*Whitney Pastorek*
Source: "AOL Movies"
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