At Adams College, a group of bullied outcasts and misfits resolve to fight back for their peace and self-respect.At Adams College, a group of bullied outcasts and misfits resolve to fight back for their peace and self-respect.At Adams College, a group of bullied outcasts and misfits resolve to fight back for their peace and self-respect.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Julia Montgomery
- Betty Childs
- (as Julie Montgomery)
James Cromwell
- Mr. Skolnick
- (as Jamie Cromwell)
Featured reviews
I recall watching this film in a drive-in as part of the double-bill. We had just finished watching the phenomenal Ghostbusters and having this follow it was a pleasant surprise indeed.
It's pretty much a 'Rocky'-type plot. The underdogs fighting back to win it BUT it's how these types go about it that makes this movie so charming!
Being an 80's film, political correctness was not considered...at all!
Thank-god!
I hunted this movie down after trying several video stores to no avail and finally after popping it in and showing it to family and friends (some of whom were too young to have seen it or not born at all during this film's release!) enjoyed it thoroughly! It's nearly timeless!!! Watching Bernie Casey listening to 'Swing Low Sweet Chariot' had us all on the floor!!! We're black and we weren't offended in the least! Why should we? It's a harmless comedy with good ol' dirty humour for all.
Porky's and Animal House are the only ones of this era that could be considered part of the holy Teen-age comedy trilogy! All the rest, and there were a few, just don't measure up.
My folks and I enjoyed this film almost 20 years ago in that old drive-in (which has long-been shut-down now), while leaving my dad cited that it was a rare event to watch two great comedies back-to-back like that...two great nostalgic classics...very rare indeed!
It's pretty much a 'Rocky'-type plot. The underdogs fighting back to win it BUT it's how these types go about it that makes this movie so charming!
Being an 80's film, political correctness was not considered...at all!
Thank-god!
I hunted this movie down after trying several video stores to no avail and finally after popping it in and showing it to family and friends (some of whom were too young to have seen it or not born at all during this film's release!) enjoyed it thoroughly! It's nearly timeless!!! Watching Bernie Casey listening to 'Swing Low Sweet Chariot' had us all on the floor!!! We're black and we weren't offended in the least! Why should we? It's a harmless comedy with good ol' dirty humour for all.
Porky's and Animal House are the only ones of this era that could be considered part of the holy Teen-age comedy trilogy! All the rest, and there were a few, just don't measure up.
My folks and I enjoyed this film almost 20 years ago in that old drive-in (which has long-been shut-down now), while leaving my dad cited that it was a rare event to watch two great comedies back-to-back like that...two great nostalgic classics...very rare indeed!
Typical 1980s teen comedy that is near the top of its unspectacular genre. The title says it all as college freshmen led by Anthony Edwards and Robert Carradine learn that university life is even worse than high school life as they are bullied by a fraternity of football players led by Ted McGinley. Revenge does take place as a civil war of students ensues and is fueled by gross-out jokes, sexual situations, and all sorts of other crazed perversions. When all is said and done the film is a curious over-achiever in the end. The main reason is the cast is so likeable. Donald Gibbs steals the show as one of the crazed football players and established actors like James Cromwell, John Goodman, and David Wohl also leave lasting impressions. Former NFL star Bernie Casey is also great as the nerds' fraternal sponsor. Far from excellent, but still an enjoyable little film. 3.5 out of 5 stars.
With the resurgence of the raunchy teen comedy, now seems like as good a time as ever to go back and study its roots. What kinds of films influenced American Pie and Road Trip? It is easy to point out films like Porky's, Animal House and Fasttimes, but somewhere forgotten in all this is Jeff Kanew's hilarious flick REVENGE OF THE NERDS. This is not only entertaining and funny, but it contains what has to be considered a blue print for success in campus comedy. Take lots of people getting drunk, jocks ostracizing nerds from there way of life, the weak rising up to take back what is just as much a right as it is to others, and of course lots of nudity featuring an abundance of gorgeous women. What you have here is a great recipe for success.
What made Revenge work is that it didn't try to pretend to be something that it wasn't. This was an exploitive sex-fest and it worked well. What it also had was a funny script and one that we could all relate to. I mean, who hasn't felt left out or relegated to the side lines while someone else gets all the glory? Besides being extremely funny, this film touched on something that we all can relate to.
Revenge of the Nerds is another of the teen films that was hilarious and it ended up spawning a slew of sequels. Avoid them and see this one again. It's worth it, especially if you were a teen when it came out. And if you are a teen now, this is a treat to watch. This is one of the films that writers study when they are thinking what they can put into their film to make it crude, rude and raunchy. This should be a must see!
9 out of 10
What made Revenge work is that it didn't try to pretend to be something that it wasn't. This was an exploitive sex-fest and it worked well. What it also had was a funny script and one that we could all relate to. I mean, who hasn't felt left out or relegated to the side lines while someone else gets all the glory? Besides being extremely funny, this film touched on something that we all can relate to.
Revenge of the Nerds is another of the teen films that was hilarious and it ended up spawning a slew of sequels. Avoid them and see this one again. It's worth it, especially if you were a teen when it came out. And if you are a teen now, this is a treat to watch. This is one of the films that writers study when they are thinking what they can put into their film to make it crude, rude and raunchy. This should be a must see!
9 out of 10
Friends Lewis Skolnick (Robert Carradine) and Gilbert Lowe (Anthony Edwards) are excited for their first year at Adams College only to be met with the cruel reality that the social hierarchy dictates one's enjoyment and privileged at Adams with the two labeled "Nerds" by the lunkheaded but also established and cruel Alpha Beta fraternity of jocks overseen by Stan Gable (Ted McGinley), Danny Burke (Matt Salinger), and "The Ogre" (Donald Gibb). After the Alpha Betas take control of the freshmen dormitory (after burning down their own house and avoiding consequences due to their University connections), all Freshmen, including Lewis and Gilbert, are reduced to living in a cordoned off part of the college gym. While the university allows displaced freshmen to join fraternities, Lewis, Gilbert and a handful of others branded "nerds" due to race, age, and sexual orientation are rejected by all Adams fraternities. With no other options, the nerds band together and find a dilapidated house and restore it through teamwork and their intelligence, but with cruel vandalism and pranks by the Alpha Betas the nerds take it upon themselves to upend the Alpha Betas' reign of Adams College.
Revenge of the Nerds is a 1984 college comedy which took inspiration from a news paper article about Silicon Valley computer programmers gaining respect and applied the themes of the article to the framework of college and sexual shenanigans comedies that had become in the wake of films like Animal House and Porky's with their low budgets and high returns making them a routine staple of 80s movie-going throughout the decade. While there was some support for the film, notably from Siskel and Ebert who praised the likable human element in the two leads and themes of the movie, there were many others who lumped the film in with the other sex/college comedies of the time that were produced cheaply and quickly. Despite not attaining major support from the outset, the film nonetheless became a major hit earning $60 million domestically against a $6-8 million budget. Revenge of the Nerds does certainly have many of the crude and raunchy elements of its contemporaries, the thing that gives it an edge is in its characters and its anti-prejudice themes.
As noted by some of its supporters at the time, Robert Carradine and Anthony Edwards are perfectly matched and very likable together. While Carradine's Lewis provides the spark with his more mischievous smart alecky character, Edward's Gilbert serves as the emotional anchor as he's established as being the sweetest and most sensitive of the group and sort of the glue that holds their found family of nerds together. The rest of the nerd collective is made up of a variety of memorable personalities like pre-pubescent wunderkind Harold Wormser (Andrew Cassese), the crude and gross "Booger" (Curtis Armstrong), and the openly flamboyant and gay Lamar (Larry B. Scott) who despite embodying many of the exaggerations is positive for the time especially when you consider the nerds are welcoming and (relatively) none-judgmental of him. And of course, what good are your heroes without some loathsome villains?, and Revenge of the Nerds gives us some real loathsome heels in the form of Ted McGinley's Stan despite being the "smartest" of their group is also the most openly sadistic carrying an arrogant and superior smirk on his crafted features that makes him an excellent foil to the nerds as his confidence that he can't be punished for his actions makes his downfall all the more satisfying. The movie also has good supporting players such as Bernie Casey's U. N. Jefferson who as head of a national Black fraternity becomes an unlikely ally to the nerds, or John Goodman's Coach Harris who serves as a secondary antagonist ignoring or even outright encouraging the Alpha Beta's reprehensible behavior.
In terms of the movie's humor you could certainly say it was "of the time" (though filming location University of Arizona had reservations even back then of allowing filming due to the film's portrayal of campus life) and this has led to some reassessment since it's release. Here's the thing, comedy by its nature exists in a flexible reality where the absurd is often as acceptable as the mundane in order to convey jokes or serve story beats and that's the best way to look at Revenge of the Nerds, not as reality but as funhouse mirror image of reality that although distorted carries some truth. One of the notable aspects that has been re-evaluated is the romantic subplot between Lewis and Stan's girlfriend Betty played by Julia Montgomery and the means by which the two get together. Per Montgomery's role in the film, she felt Betty secretly wanted to be with Lewis and leave Stan (and there are hints of this in the movie, albeit in a slightly fleeting manner until a few minutes before the event happens) and much like the funhouse mirror exaggerations of certain persons on display, this is best approached as something of a spin on the "Sleeping Beauty" trope (and I mean the original version where it was MUCH more than a kiss....). This will depend on a person-by-person basis, but I feel like the movie places its values at the forefront (particularly in the ending climax) while sort of bending and twisting them when necessary for the sake of either a joke or plot mechanic.
While Revenge of the Nerds is certainly of the time in many ways, it also has its heart and occasionally head in the right place so it isn't cynical like Private Lessons or Preppies which helps to explain why it's endured in pop culture (and spawned an ill-advised media franchise). Definitely a good time, just be aware that like a funhouse mirror, the thing reflected is occasionally real but not necessarily reflective of reality.
Revenge of the Nerds is a 1984 college comedy which took inspiration from a news paper article about Silicon Valley computer programmers gaining respect and applied the themes of the article to the framework of college and sexual shenanigans comedies that had become in the wake of films like Animal House and Porky's with their low budgets and high returns making them a routine staple of 80s movie-going throughout the decade. While there was some support for the film, notably from Siskel and Ebert who praised the likable human element in the two leads and themes of the movie, there were many others who lumped the film in with the other sex/college comedies of the time that were produced cheaply and quickly. Despite not attaining major support from the outset, the film nonetheless became a major hit earning $60 million domestically against a $6-8 million budget. Revenge of the Nerds does certainly have many of the crude and raunchy elements of its contemporaries, the thing that gives it an edge is in its characters and its anti-prejudice themes.
As noted by some of its supporters at the time, Robert Carradine and Anthony Edwards are perfectly matched and very likable together. While Carradine's Lewis provides the spark with his more mischievous smart alecky character, Edward's Gilbert serves as the emotional anchor as he's established as being the sweetest and most sensitive of the group and sort of the glue that holds their found family of nerds together. The rest of the nerd collective is made up of a variety of memorable personalities like pre-pubescent wunderkind Harold Wormser (Andrew Cassese), the crude and gross "Booger" (Curtis Armstrong), and the openly flamboyant and gay Lamar (Larry B. Scott) who despite embodying many of the exaggerations is positive for the time especially when you consider the nerds are welcoming and (relatively) none-judgmental of him. And of course, what good are your heroes without some loathsome villains?, and Revenge of the Nerds gives us some real loathsome heels in the form of Ted McGinley's Stan despite being the "smartest" of their group is also the most openly sadistic carrying an arrogant and superior smirk on his crafted features that makes him an excellent foil to the nerds as his confidence that he can't be punished for his actions makes his downfall all the more satisfying. The movie also has good supporting players such as Bernie Casey's U. N. Jefferson who as head of a national Black fraternity becomes an unlikely ally to the nerds, or John Goodman's Coach Harris who serves as a secondary antagonist ignoring or even outright encouraging the Alpha Beta's reprehensible behavior.
In terms of the movie's humor you could certainly say it was "of the time" (though filming location University of Arizona had reservations even back then of allowing filming due to the film's portrayal of campus life) and this has led to some reassessment since it's release. Here's the thing, comedy by its nature exists in a flexible reality where the absurd is often as acceptable as the mundane in order to convey jokes or serve story beats and that's the best way to look at Revenge of the Nerds, not as reality but as funhouse mirror image of reality that although distorted carries some truth. One of the notable aspects that has been re-evaluated is the romantic subplot between Lewis and Stan's girlfriend Betty played by Julia Montgomery and the means by which the two get together. Per Montgomery's role in the film, she felt Betty secretly wanted to be with Lewis and leave Stan (and there are hints of this in the movie, albeit in a slightly fleeting manner until a few minutes before the event happens) and much like the funhouse mirror exaggerations of certain persons on display, this is best approached as something of a spin on the "Sleeping Beauty" trope (and I mean the original version where it was MUCH more than a kiss....). This will depend on a person-by-person basis, but I feel like the movie places its values at the forefront (particularly in the ending climax) while sort of bending and twisting them when necessary for the sake of either a joke or plot mechanic.
While Revenge of the Nerds is certainly of the time in many ways, it also has its heart and occasionally head in the right place so it isn't cynical like Private Lessons or Preppies which helps to explain why it's endured in pop culture (and spawned an ill-advised media franchise). Definitely a good time, just be aware that like a funhouse mirror, the thing reflected is occasionally real but not necessarily reflective of reality.
I was late to the party, though I grew up on films like this I never got round to watching the Revenge Of The Nerds movies but I'm really glad I finally did.
I expected Porkys (1981), I expected a semi-brainless raunchy 1980's comedy but what I found was SO much more.
With an immensely talented varied cast ranging from those who became huge stars like John Goodman to underrated talents like Curtis Armstrong this near perfectly crafted comedy benefits from an outstanding cast who make the film that much more special.
Side splittingly funny, well written, excellent 80's soundtrack, feel good vibe and without excess T&A the Revenge Of The Nerds ticks every box twice and entertained me in a way I never expected and haven't experienced from a comedy like this in recent memory.
I personally cannot wait to get around to the sequels and find out what our Nerd friends get up to next.
I expected Porkys (1981), I expected a semi-brainless raunchy 1980's comedy but what I found was SO much more.
With an immensely talented varied cast ranging from those who became huge stars like John Goodman to underrated talents like Curtis Armstrong this near perfectly crafted comedy benefits from an outstanding cast who make the film that much more special.
Side splittingly funny, well written, excellent 80's soundtrack, feel good vibe and without excess T&A the Revenge Of The Nerds ticks every box twice and entertained me in a way I never expected and haven't experienced from a comedy like this in recent memory.
I personally cannot wait to get around to the sequels and find out what our Nerd friends get up to next.
Did you know
- TriviaThe other actors were protective of Andrew Cassese, who played Wormser, and along with director Jeff Kanew made sure that the young actor did not witness or play a main role in the many scenes that earned the film its R rating. Cassese, however, was allowed to see the film when he was still below 17 years old and was very surprised by what he'd missed in filming.
- GoofsDuring the fraternity house party, the blond, curly-haired nerd with the black fedora dances behind Lewis and his date, while simultaneously standing behind Poindexter in the kitchen.
- Quotes
Stan Gable: [to Booger] What are you looking at, nerd?
Booger: [to himself] I thought I was looking at my mother's old douche-bag, but that's in Ohio.
- Crazy creditsThe title appears on screen immediately following the 20th Century Fox logo, before the Fox Fanfare concludes.
- Alternate versionsUK cinema and video versions were complete. The 2003 TCF DVD featured a re-edited print which was changed for legal reasons to remove a genuine telephone number on the "For Rent" sign.
- ConnectionsEdited into Revenge of the Nerds (1991)
- SoundtracksRevenge of the Nerds
Performed by The Rubinoos
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- La venganza de los nerds
- Filming locations
- Catalina Park Inn - 309 E. 1st Street, Tucson, Arizona, USA(Pi Delta Pi Sorority House)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $8,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $40,874,452
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $1,513,090
- Jul 22, 1984
- Gross worldwide
- $40,874,452
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