After School (1988) Poster

(1988)

User Reviews

Review this title
7 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
5/10
Passion for the Priest
ElijahCSkuggs26 March 2009
Based on the cover, it looks like some 80s summer fun comedy flick with babes in bikinis, everyone in sun glasses, boom boxes on shoulders, a geeky side-kick...you get the picture. But it's not really any of those things. More than anything though, it's not a comedy. It's just this weird drama that revolves around a priest who's realizing he may be missing out on the good things in life. Meaning he's finally grown into his good looks and the hot babe of the college is all up on him.

The story is pretty much that simple. Does Father Mac keep it in his robes or does he invite her into the confessional for some extra praying? After School was a weird one. It doesn't do anything really that well. There aren't many scenes of humor, that are intentional anyways. The acting is pretty average all the way around, with all characters being kinda bland. The flick keeps you entertained solely on the end goal. Does the priest succumb to his animal desires? And the other big reason you keep watching is for those weirdass prehistoric scenes. There's just these flashbacks to prehistoric times that, I think, just show the current dilemma in a more symbolic and animalistic fashion. Pretty weird and kinda stupid, but at the same time, all the cave women in the prehistoric times were naked, and some were smoking hot. So you get a decent amount of nudity in this one, which is always a plus.

It's overall a pretty average flick, but with the nudity and the surprisingly interesting story, you're kept watching. If you find the priest/sex issue to be an intriguing issue, and if you like super silly 80s fashion, and a plethora of boobs, I'd say give this a shot.
17 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
A very odd exploitation of eternal social and religious questions.
edinman7 February 2007
Set on a contemporary college campus with flashbacks to prehistoric times, this very odd film attempts to question the meaning of love, the nature of God, and the role of the church in establishing societal boundaries. It's also one of relatively few films to feature perennial 70s-80s TV talk show host Dick Cavett on the big screen. Cavett, who rarely shied away from controversial subjects, appears as himself. Sam Bottoms plays a young priest who teaches religion at a Florida Catholic college. A rising star within church hierarchy, Bottoms is selected to go on Cavett's show to defend traditional church teachings about God against an author (and ex-priest) who has written a book suggesting God was created within the human mind. Bottoms accepts the assignment, but at the same time begins to have his own doubts about his commitment to the priesthood. Despite his vow of celibacy, he finds himself increasingly infatuated with a beautiful young student (Renee Coleman) who makes a play for his affections. Coleman, whose role is part naive schoolgirl, part calculated seductress, seems to have little trouble getting under Bottoms' skin or challenging his orthodox beliefs. The priest becomes increasingly obsessed with her while at the same time trying to maintain a state of denial about their mutual sexual attraction. Many of the issues raised here are eternal, if hardly original, and I found the film reasonably entertaining. Least effective, I thought, were the repeated flashbacks to prehistoric times. While apparently intended to be symbolic about the origins of concepts of God, these scenes really didn't tell or add much to the otherwise contemporary story, in my opinion. If anything, they just seemed calculated to add more nudity to the film. This reminded me more of a classic drive-in B-movie from the golden days of exploitation in the 70s rather than one from the late 80s. Within that context I thought it was pretty good.
14 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
What happens after school... and what happened before time?
Groverdox1 January 2019
As a viewing experience, "After School" isn't so much bizarre as inexplicable.

Sure, it's a fairly run-of-the-mill drama about a relationship between a priest and a college girl that threatens to become romantic, and this culminates with an actually fairly pointless debate the priest has with an atheist on the "Dick Cavett show" - with Cavett playing himself.

What's inexplicable is that throughout this tale, scenes of prehistoric people are intercut. Why? What was the point of that? I do not believe that these scenes really tell a story of their own. Why were they included?

It is true that for a brief second, the characters discuss evolution. Does that justify making half the movie "Quest for Fire-lite"?

Of course, the prehistoric people are all almost naked, and played by obvious models chosen for their looks. So it does add nudity. But couldn't they have worked some of that in, in the present day? You know, like every other movie with topless actresses? Why did they have to go back in time just to show some skin?

This is one of the most perplexing filmmaking decisions I have ever witnessed the result of.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Eve's apple had worms in it.
mark.waltz22 July 2021
Warning: Spoilers
You know with a female character named September that the priest she lusts after is heading for a fall. It doesn't matter that Sam Bottoms as the motorcycle riding priest and college student Renee Coleman have absolutely no chemistry because they barely even seem to be acting. She's surface beautiful, but he's got an early 80's fro that looks absolutely ridiculous on him, and perhaps that explains why he looks so distracted. He had nearly 20 years of experience in acting when this was made, yet his screen magnetism here is a zero, and hers is even lower. The writers thought that it would be clever to have her eating an apple while taking a bubble bath would be a clever metaphor, but it is eye rolling bad.

Then there are scenes that take us back to the caveman days and this is where the film becomes unexplainable and this is where the film becomes unbelievably stupid. This isn't even on the level of a bad 70's TV show, and even as a commentary on religious confusion, it completely fails. Everything about this film falls into the category of amateurish, and it's not even fun in a bad 80's way.

In fact, while advertising and video box covers indicate a light hearted look at the angst of teens or young adults, there is nothing funny or magical or nostalgic about it. I'd refer to it as the biggest disaster of 1988, but that's far too much of a compliment. There's nothing artistic in the mixture of the two storylines other than the fact that I'd rather go back and watch "Sheena, Queen of the Jungle" than accidentally come across any sequence of this ever again.
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Don't let the cover fool you
Horror_Junkie_60717 January 2022
I thought this was supposed to be of those raunchy 80s comedies but it's not what I expected. I was thinking its a movie like Porkey's or that direction. Pretty dull and boring and with the before time scenes it felt like there's 2 movies going on.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Exploitative Trash...
denisef500024 April 2001
Steer clear of this film, it was just a bad idea all away around. Sam Bottoms performance is laughable, he chews up dialogue more than the Cookie Monster. The story (or lack of) deteriorates into a fantasy film in which several characters go back to prehistoric time. Then its time to add some Playboy Playmates (the terrible "actress" Sherrie Rose for example) for mere eye candy. Just a dud overall.
5 out of 22 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Odd mixture of morality tale and exploitation movie
lor_1 April 2023
My review was written in February 1989 after watching the movie on Academy video cassette.

Intriguing but disappointing, "After School" attempts to mix exploitation elements with the traditional morality tale. Pic received a modest regional release last year ahead of video.

Format of present-day moral crisis mirrored by intercutting with primitive man's behaviour thousands of years ago is a throwback to silent cinema, especially the work of Cecil B. DeMille. Confusion of content is reflected in pic's title changes, ranging from "Before God" and "Return to Eden" to distributor's racier "Private Tutor" and finally "After School".

Sam Bottoms toplines as a young priest teaching at St. Joseph's Catholic College in Florida who is selected to defend the faith on the Dick Cavett tv talk show against ex-priest Robert Lansing's book "Before God", which claims man created God in his own image.

While prepping for the debate, Bottoms falls in love with beautiful student Renee Coleman, whose own perceptive classroom questioning of church dogma adds to his doubts and ultimately forces Bottoms to go his own way, leaving Lansing victorious.

Pic's use of primitive man footage is a bit suspect, since it includes lots of topless scenes of beautiful cavewomen Alison Woodward, Jacqueline Rodriguez and Catherine Williams that are extraneous to the main action. Director William Olsen managed to juggle the commercial realities of exploitation filmmaking and thoughtful themes far more convincingly in his 1983 feature "Getting It On".

Bottoms is earnest in an old-fashioned style and the film drags on repetitively rather than developing its religious ideas. Coleman as his love interest is a fresh new actress worth watching (also seen to good effect as the kidnapped beauty in the recent release "Who's Harry Crumb?").

Tech credits are fine, with colorful lensing in the Orlando, Florida area.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed