Weird Science
Two unpopular teenagers, Gary and Wyatt, fail at all attempts to be accepted by their peers. Their desperation to be liked leads them to "create" a woman via their computer. Their living and breathing creation is a gorgeous woman, Lisa, whose purpose is to boost their confidence level by putting them into situations which require Gary and Wyatt to act like men.
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- Cast:
- Anthony Michael Hall , Kelly LeBrock , Ilan Mitchell-Smith , Bill Paxton , Suzanne Snyder , Judie Aronson , Robert Rusler
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Reviews
Memorable, crazy movie
There is, somehow, an interesting story here, as well as some good acting. There are also some good scenes
One of the worst ways to make a cult movie is to set out to make a cult movie.
The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.
I grew up watching the movies of the the late John Hughes and I love a few of them dearly. Weird Science isn't one of them....not even close. I found no charm in the movie. The humor is lazy and dim-witted. I never found myself rooting for any of the characters. In many of Hughes other movies, the characters were well drawn and had depth. These characters are a deep as the average puddle. Perhaps if this move had gone the more raunchy route it could have been better. Kind of a Porky's like vibe. The one and I do mean one bright spot is the performance of the late and in my opinion great Bill Paxton. He is like a bolt of electricity when he is on screen. There are several John Hughes movies that are worth seeing. Saying Weird Science is a waste of time us an understatement.
Two boys (Gary and Wyatt) make a woman in their bedroom. What could possibly go wrong? A few things and boy they're outrageous. John Hughes has possibly directed one of the funniest comedies I have ever seen. The concept is so ridiculous by itself and the execution just puts it over the edge. There are so many good one liners and visual gags that it just puts this film into awesome territory.This film knows exactly what it is and just embraces it. Yes it can be silly,outrageous and funny but the film has heart as well. The coming of age journey that these boys go through with the help of Lisa is just really heartwarming and shows that you don't have to be popular and being yourself is all that really matters. This theme has been done many times before but the low fantasy concept breaths new life into it. Can it be dated at times? Yes a little. Can it be overly silly at times? Yes but I think that works more in the films favor rather than against it. The positives outshine the negatives.Check this film out it might surprise you. I think this film is underrated and deserves a higher average rating on the site. 8/10
Meek and socially inept computer geeks Gary Wallace (an excellent and engaging portrayal by Anthony Michael Hall) and Wyatt Donnelly (a likable performance by Ilan-Michael Smith) get more than they bargained for when they create the perfect woman in the form of Lisa (delightfully played with winning saucy charm and aplomb by the drop-dead gorgeous Kelly LeBrock), who turns their heretofore staid existences upside down. Writer/director John Hughes really lets it all hang out: The enjoyably off-the-wall story zips along at a breathless frantic pace, the zany humor occasionally reaches surreal heights of inspired lunacy, and the major big bash set piece is positively hysterical. Although Hughes eschews his trademark adolescent angst in favor of infectiously go-for-broke wackiness, he nonetheless brings a sweet surplus of pure heart to the proceedings by having Lisa give Gary and Wyatt valuable life lessons in self-worth and self-confidence. Moreover, it's acted with zest by an enthusiastic cast: Bill Paxton almost steals the entire picture with his gloriously obnoxious turn as Wyatt's overbearing older brother Chet, Robert Downey Jr. and Robert Rusler smarm it up well as a couple of jerky bullies, and Suzanne Snyder and Jodi Aronson make for fetching and appealing love interests. Vernon Wells and Michael Berryman have funny minor roles as a pair of punk thug party crashers. An absolute hoot.
What a decade the 1980's were, we'll never see a decade like it again, and that's a real shame, because it produced some of the coolest, cheesiest films ever to lace their boots on the big screen."Weird Science" doesn't make any real sense at all, and that's what makes it as great as it is..., it takes far fetched to the next level and amps it up to a thousand, pure stupidity, pure genius! Basically two teenage boys, the geeks of their high school are sick of having no friends, no luck and being repeatedly ignored, so one day they set out to create their own living, breathing woman (yeah you heard me right), this woman is a pure stereotype, every man's dream, a sexual fantasy for every young boy. The whole premise of "Weird Science" is bizarre, like whoever wrote it was seriously stoned at the time, and thank goodness they were; it has many loopholes that are left unexplained, but who cares about loopholes, right? It pretty much sums the 80's up in a just over an hour and a half..., one of those films that stays with you lingering in your mind for days, just how cool and camp it is, you never get films this bizarre and successful and long lasting these days, like Hollywood, or time itself, has lost its touch. It has a young Robert Downey Jr in a smaller role and Kelly LeBrock in the leading role, an iconic sex symbol of ever there was one. In order to enjoy "Weird Science" switch your mind off before going into it, suspend your belief and don't analyse, just enjoy it for what it is, which is a 1980's glorious masterpiece, bravo!