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MusicDrama

Pump Up the Volume

- TALK HARD. STEAL THE AIR.

Mark Hunter, a lonely high school student, uses his shortwave radio to moonlight as the popular pirate DJ "Hard Harry." When his show gets blamed for a teen committing suicide, the students clash with high school faculty and the authorities.

Release Date : 1990-08-22

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : New Line CinemaSC Entertainment

Production Country : CanadaUnited States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Christian Slater

Character Name : Mark Hunter

Original Name : Christian Slater

Gender : Male

Samantha Mathis

Character Name : Nora Diniro

Original Name : Samantha Mathis

Gender : Female

Annie Ross

Character Name : Loretta Creswood

Original Name : Annie Ross

Gender : Female

Scott Paulin

Character Name : Brian Hunter

Original Name : Scott Paulin

Gender : Male

Mimi Kennedy

Character Name : Marla Hunter

Original Name : Mimi Kennedy

Gender : Female

Andy Romano

Character Name : Murdock

Original Name : Andy Romano

Gender : Male

Keith Stuart Thayer

Character Name : Luis Chavez

Original Name : Keith Stuart Thayer

Gender : Male

Cheryl Pollak

Character Name : Paige Woodward

Original Name : Cheryl Pollak

Gender : Female

Jeff Chamberlain

Character Name : Mr. Woodward

Original Name : Jeff Chamberlain

Gender : Male

Lala Sloatman

Character Name : Janie

Original Name : Lala Sloatman

Gender : Female

Holly Sampson

Character Name : Cheryl Biggs

Original Name : Holly Sampson

Gender : Female

Seth Green

Character Name : Joey

Original Name : Seth Green

Gender : Male

Robert Schenkkan

Character Name : David Deaver

Original Name : Robert Schenkkan

Gender : Male

Ellen Greene

Character Name : Jan Emerson

Original Name : Ellen Greene

Gender : Female

Anthony Lucero

Character Name : Malcolm Kaiser

Original Name : Anthony Lucero

Gender : Male

Billy Morrissette

Character Name : Mazz Mazzilli

Original Name : Billy Morrissette

Gender : Male

Ahmet Zappa

Character Name : Jamie

Original Name : Ahmet Zappa

Gender : Male

Matt McGrath

Character Name : Chris

Original Name : Matt McGrath

Gender : Male

James Hampton

Character Name : Arthur Watts

Original Name : James Hampton

Gender : Male

Nolan Hemmings

Character Name : Chip

Original Name : Nolan Hemmings

Gender : Male

Virginya Keehne

Character Name : Linda

Original Name : Virginya Keehne

Gender : Female

Lin Shaye

Character Name : PTA Parent #3

Original Name : Lin Shaye

Gender : Female

Reviews

F

Filipe Manuel Neto

@FilipeManuelNeto

2023-11-19

**A duel of generations, a school, angry teenagers and lots of rock.** This is a film for young adults that takes advantage of traditional teenage rebellion and the talent of Christian Slater, a good script and a good soundtrack. It's not masterful, but it's ideal for a Saturday afternoon and has aged very well: thirty years after it was made and marketed, it's still young and fresh. The story focuses on a clandestine radio station created by an angry and angry teenager who was forced to move house and is in a place where he doesn't know anyone and doesn't even feel comfortable. The radio is an outlet, it is a means of expressing inner anger, and it is nothing truly serious, but it becomes increasingly relevant as it acquires a very loyal local audience, who listen to him as if he were a guru without even knowing it. his identity, and allows himself to be carried away by his words in a wave of riots and protests that are directed, in particular, against the management of the local high school. The story is quite good, it is well written, and the duel between the two characters (the young teenager assumed to be the radio presenter and the plenipotentiary director of the school) mirrors not only the oldest conflict of generations but also the permanent conflict between powerful and weak in society. None of this is particularly new, but the way it is served and presented was creative and wonderfully entertaining. The problem here is that it's a film for teenagers, it's too light, and it lacks secondary characters that are at least as complete and impactful as the two central characters. Christian Slater lived in his youth, the happiest days of his career, and gave us good characters in good films. With time and success, he became a star and almost a synonym of rebellion and irreverence, an apprentice of James Dean who exploded onto the screen, guaranteeing the success of his films and the influx of young people to the cinema. Time, however, would show that Slater was, in each film, playing a single character, which was the one he tried to revive in his personal life, increasingly complicated by addictions and problems with the authorities. Annie Ross, on the other hand, gives us mature, well-developed work, suitably dark and dense, never allowing Slater to feel alone in the spotlight. On a technical level, it is in the soundtrack that we find the film's strong point. The songs include hit songs by Leonard Cohen, Pixies, Ivan Neville and Cowboy Junkies, and most of them are very easy to know for anyone who lived through the 90s and 2000s, that is, everyone or almost everyone. The rest doesn't really matter: with no mistakes to regret, it doesn't exceed the average at any particular point.