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Fast Times and Mean Girls

The Atlantic

|

July 2025

What the great teen movies tell us about American adolescence

- Hillary Kelly

Fast Times and Mean Girls

In the early spring, I caught a preview at my local Alamo Drafthouse Cinema for its forthcoming stoner-classics retrospective: snippets of Monty Python’ Life of Brian; Tommy Boy; a few Dada-esque cartoons perfect for zonking out on, postedible. The audience watched quietly until Matthew McConaughey, sporting a parted blond bowl cut and ferrying students to some end-of-year fun, delivered a signature bit of dialogue. “Say, man, you got a joint?” he asked the kid in the back seat. “Uhhh, no, not on me, man.” “It'd be a lot cooler if you did,” he drawled. The crowd, including me, went wild.

Richard Linklater's Dazed and Confused, in which a fresh-faced McConaughey appears as Wooderson, the guy who graduated years back but still hangs with the high-school kids, is that kind of teen movie: eternally jubilance-inspiring. Set in 1976 and released in 1993, it's a paean to the let-loose ethos of a certain decade of American high school. And boy do these kids let loose.

On the final day of the school year, a group of ris-ing seniors in small-town Texas set out with custommade paddles to whack the bottoms of soon-to-be freshmen, and then take a couple of them to a “beer bust” out by a soaring light tower. Along the way, they shoot some pool, cruise the town, smoke joint after joint. If the film has a point, it’s that the teens want to party all night and still wake up in time to buy Aerosmith tickets in the morning. (The last frame shows them driving into the sunrise.)

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