Cadets at a military academy get involved with the 60's drug culture.Cadets at a military academy get involved with the 60's drug culture.Cadets at a military academy get involved with the 60's drug culture.
Ken Michelman
- Al
- (as Ken Michaelman)
Wendy Rastattar
- Paula
- (as Wendy Rastatter)
Tracey Walter
- Space
- (as Tracey Walters)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFor people looking for David Caruso, he's the redhead seen for about 2 minutes helping to throw tires off the truck and then shortly thereafter in the truck cab offering a swig of something to the guy seated to his right.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Vintage Video Minisodes: Getting Wasted (1980) (2021)
Featured review
As one of the other commentators has mentioned, the first thing I thought of when I saw this film was POLICE ACADEMY. GETTING WASTED feels like a dry run for that '80s classic: it involves the rookie cadets at a military academy involving themselves in '60s counter culture and the usual sex and drugs of that decade.
It's also an unsurprisingly forgotten film, unsurprising because in reality it isn't very good. The jokes and humour are lame and predictable, and none of the characters are well defined or particularly likable. There are no big name actors or future stars here, just a mess of folk who never aspired to greatness.
I was also surprised at how restrained this film is. Comedies from this era are usually raunchy and padded out with copious nudity from the ladies, but there's none here (unless the version I saw was edited for TV). The drug jokes are tame and there's no real plotting or drama; just a series of loosely-linked situations playing out for supposed laughs that never transpire.
It's also an unsurprisingly forgotten film, unsurprising because in reality it isn't very good. The jokes and humour are lame and predictable, and none of the characters are well defined or particularly likable. There are no big name actors or future stars here, just a mess of folk who never aspired to greatness.
I was also surprised at how restrained this film is. Comedies from this era are usually raunchy and padded out with copious nudity from the ladies, but there's none here (unless the version I saw was edited for TV). The drug jokes are tame and there's no real plotting or drama; just a series of loosely-linked situations playing out for supposed laughs that never transpire.
- Leofwine_draca
- Nov 13, 2015
- Permalink
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- Soft Explosion
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