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. 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. As far as raunchy college sex comedies go, I think this one falls somehwere on the higher end of the scale, but just slightly above the average mark. It's a good movie, but it doesn't quite have the intelligence or amazingness to be at the level of true satirical brilliance like Animal House.
It's a fun movie though, and deep down, I think we can all relate, maybe not to being full on nerds, but to definitely being picked on at some time or another. I myself fully admit to being a nerd, but I object to being compared to the nerds in this film. If anyrhing, these guys aren't really nerds, but super mega geeks and dweebs.
Or they are nerds, but they are the stereptypical kind who give us "somewhat normal" nerds a bad name and reputation. This film tries to add a little depth but having some diatribes on being a minority that could have really been potent, but mostly come off as a litle cheesy and pedictable . There are some parallels to stuff like Civil Rights, but it's played lightly and, being an 80s comedy, there are some jokes that don't really fly nowadays which kinda undercuts what parallels one might try to pull out of it. God, I'm rambling now, and making more out of this than I probably need to. Basically this is the classic stroy of a bunch of marginalized nerds who finally decide to get revenge on the people who make their lives miserable. There's a lot of good moments, most of them really silly, but some of the jokes are actually pretty smart.
The cast is pretty good, and I really liked seeing Bernie Casey, John Goodman, and James Cromwell show up. All of the nerds are pretty likeable, but I think my favorite is probablyCurtis Armstrong's Booger- the rebellious bad ass of the group. As I said, I don't think this film is really terrific or anything, but it's funny and has a nice knd of charm to it. Revenge of the Nerds starred then-unknowns Anthony Edwards, Robert Carradine, Curtis Armstrong, James Cromwell, Larry B. Scott, John Goodman, and Timothy Busfield.
In the movie, the jock-filled Alpha Beta fraternity bullies the geeks on the campus of Adams College, so to fight back, they form a frat chapter under black fraternity Lambda Lambda Lambda (Tri-Lambs), and take down the jocks. The movie's plot and title come from a magazine article published around that time about Silicon Valley innovators—who just happened to be nerds. Kavanaugh's nomination to the Supreme Court has surfaced its share of Gen X ephemera—including, perhaps most oddly, the British reggae band UB40, in connection with a New Haven bar fight. It's the ultimate power fantasy for the dispossessed adolescent male.
Rock one of these Revenge of the Nerds shirts and represent Tri-Lam with Pride. Revenge of the Nerds chronicles the campus adventures of a group of smart but socially awkward freshman displaced and harassed by a jock fraternity, the Alpha Betas. Show everyone that "Their time has come" with one of these Revenge of the Nerds t-shirts. The project is set up at 20th Century Studios, as the original was released by 20th Century Fox. Jeff Kanew directed that first film, which starredRobert Carradine and Anthony Edwards as a couple of nerds who team up with their fellow Tri-Lambs to take down the Alpha Betas, a group of jocks led by the dashing Ted McGinley. The original movie and its 1987 sequel grossed a combined $70 million at the domestic box office and spawned a pair of TV movies.
The Tri-Lambdas, a college fraternity of super brains who mostly struggle with ordinary human social interaction, are heading to a South Florida beach fraternity meeting. They're bent on being accepted by the more conventional -- that is, dumber-- frat boys who tried so hard to eradicate them in the previous nerd movie. The Alphas put up roadblocks to the Lambdas' goal based on their narrow-minded prejudices against geeks. They create constitutional propositions designed to terminate the membership of the nerds' fraternity. They kidnap the nerds and drop them on a desert island. They conspire to have them arrested on false charges.
As one might expect, the nerds manage to prevail. During the 80's there have been countless teen comedies that have made their mark. Revenge of the Nerds is a fun and entertaining comedy that has a good plot with effective humor throughout. There are things that could have been improved upon, but overall this is a pleasant comedy that is worth seeing.
This is among the better films dealing with college of the 1980's, and it is a film that should be seen if you loved movies like Animal House and Porky's. At times the film does lack, but the characters make it enjoyable to watch and it manages to overcome its flaws due to the interesting characters. Revenge of the Nerds is a good film worth seeing and it is a standout film from the 80's.
Although there are some imperfect moments throughout the film, the humor works well enough to keep you interested from start to finish. Animal House is of course the best college comedy, but this film would come in at a close second. There are plenty of good bits here that will surely make you laugh, but I do believe that the film could have used a bit more work in terms of the script, but as a whole it works and this is among the better comedies of this period. This is one of the few college comedies that has some of the most memorable characters and for that, it remains a classic college comedy that will surely entertain you.
The cast make it a fun film to watch and it is definitely a fine 80's comedy that will entertain you from start to finish. The story is simple, yet memorable in the long run. The Alpha Betas, led by star quarterback Stan Gable, are irked by the nerds' success, and Stan sets his fellow members to pull pranks against the nerds, which includes throwing a rock through the window saying "Nerds, get out".
The nerds try to get campus police to help, but the campus cops are constrained by the Greek Council that adjudicates all such pranks, of which Stan is currently president. The nerds decide to seek membership on the Greek Council by joining a national fraternity. After 29 rejection letters, the only one that considers them is the black fraternity Lambda Lambda Lambda (Tri-Lambs), led by U.N.
Jefferson is about to refuse ("After all, you're nerds.") when a fine-print-reading nerd Poindexter points out that Tri-Lamb bylaws require him to give the nerds a probationary period. The nerds set up a large party with the Omega Mu sorority, similarly made up of nerds, including Gilbert's girlfriend Judy, and invite Jefferson to attend. The party is dull until Booger provides them with high quality marijuana. The Alpha Betas and the Pi Delta Pis, the sorority which Stan's girlfriend Betty Childs belongs to, then disrupt the party by bringing and releasing pigs.
The nerds exact revenge on both groups by pulling similar pranks. Impressed with the nerds' tenacity, Jefferson grants them full membership. According to Variety, Seth MacFarlane is poised to reboot the 1984 comedy Revenge of the Nerds with the identical twins Keith and Kenny Lucas starring in the film. Rather than a remake of the dated and offensive original, the plan is to refashion the basic plot of the film and contextualize the meaning of nerd culture in the 21st century. But I think the reference to the movie was, instead, intended to downplay the real social power that Kavanaugh and his friends wielded in the summer of 1983.
They were the kinds of guys who would, even among themselves, talk about sex and women elliptically, and with sad innuendo. Surely, they must have felt like big shiny fish, but even the jocks at a place like Georgetown Prep, compared to the athletes at the big public schools that surrounded it, were nerds. Back in 2006, there was a plan to remake 1984's college comedy Revenge Of The Nerds. Actors were cast, locations scouted, and it was all set to shoot until the campus chosen for the film, Atlanta's Emory University, pulled out. It never returned in that form, but now Seth MacFarlane and twins Keith and Kenny Lucas are planning another new version, with a reboot in the works. The biggest nerd event of the year is happening in San Diego right now, and while Comic-Con will have its fair share, they're only a small sliver of the pie that includes Hollywood actors, game developers, and incredibly attractive women in spandex.
This week also happens to include the 30th anniversary of Revenge of the Nerds. And man, has the word "nerd" evolved a lot since 1984. Thirty years ago "nerd" was as far away as possible from being the hip pop culture tag it is today. Attractive girls didn't wear glasses and t-shirts that said things like "I bang mathletes." The nerds of the 80s were being shoved into lockers for their love of X-Men comics.
How does a more powerful language enable you to write shorter programs? One technique you can use, if the language will let you, is something calledbottom-up programming. Instead of simply writing your application in the base language, you build on top of the base language a language for writing programs like yours, then write your program in it.
The combined code can be much shorter than if you had written your whole program in the base language-- indeed, this is how most compression algorithms work. A bottom-up program should be easier to modify as well, because in many cases the language layer won't have to change at all. They're a bunch of interesting guys, and that's the problem with "Revenge of the Nerds II." The movie doesn't have the nerve to be about real nerds. A nerd is not a nerd because he understands computers and wears a plastic pen protector in his shirt pocket.
A nerd is a nerd because he brings a special lack of elegance to life. An inability to notice the feelings of other people. A nerd is a nerd from the inside out, which is something the nerds who made this movie will never understand. In recent scholarly debates about cultural stratification, some have argued that 'openness' and 'omnivorous' lifestyles constitute a new form of distinction.
Using qualitative interviews, we address this by focusing on adolescents from backgrounds particularly rich in cultural capital, namely students at Schola Osloensis, the most prestigious upper-secondary school in Norway. They regard this as necessary to understand contemporary avant-garde culture and achieve academic success. They also exhibit a distinctive fashion style that does not only emphasize aesthetics but also involves moral-political aspects. 'Hipster' style is criticized for being too commercial, whereas a 'nerdy' position is embraced as compatible with a quest for knowledge and insight. They also adopt political positions on feminism, antiracism and environmental protection, seamlessly interweaving these forms of position-taking in their everyday lives. Those who break key moral-political and aesthetic norms are negatively sanctioned and there are few signs of truly 'open' and 'omnivorous' lifestyles.
We conclude that an elite education in an egalitarian society such as Norway is associated with a purported non-elitist style, where liberal values such as gender equality and international solidarity are at the centre. Simultaneously, however, through their education at Schola Osloensis, these students acquire high levels of cultural capital, including symbolic mastery and an embodied ability to perform well in demanding social settings. These skills, we argue, will be useful at the top levels of a rapidly changing labour market.
In pointing to the persistent salience of 'old school' displays of cultural capital, as well as clear instances of symbolic boundary work, our study challenges core assumptions in research about cultural stratification and omnivorousness. Disaster risk reduction is so un-Instagramable, in fact, that the UNDRR does not have an Instagram account. If international aid were a movie about the American high school experience, humanitarians would be the jocks, development experts the student council, and DRR, undoubtedly, the nerds. "It would be goofy enough if they just did a panty raid and played it really nerdy," Zacharias told GQ. The upcoming version won't be a remake of the 1984 comedy, which hasn't aged all that well and has been criticized in recent years for depictions of rape.
Instead, the contemporary reimagining will pontificate about today's nerd culture and what even constitutes a geek in the 21st century. Geeky college students Gilbert and Lewis are evicted from their dormitory when the Alpha Betas -- who recently burned down their own fraternity house by accident -- confiscate the building. When the college forces the freshmen to live in the gym, Gilbert, Lewis and their fellow dorks relocate to a run-down house. When the Alpha Betas, led by jock Stan , repeatedly humiliate them, the nerds plot revenge.
William Bradley of The Mary Sue stated that after viewing the film again as an adult he "was immediately struck by the way the film plays sexual exploitation and assault for laughs". Amy Benfer of Salon wrote that the Revenge of the Nerds scene, and a similar scene in John Hughes' Sixteen Candles, were evidence that at the time of these films' productions, "people were stupid about date rape". In an interview with GQ in 2019, director Jeff Kanew and writer Steve Zacharias expressed their regret regarding the rape by deception scene, with Kanew saying, "In a way, it's not excusable. If it were my daughter, I probably wouldn't like it". Different sources report the film's budget as anywhere from $6 million to $8 million, though even $8 million was a low budget for a feature film of the time.
Exterior scenes such as the arrival of the nerds at college and the fraternity houses were filmed at the University of Arizona in Tucson, Arizona. The original Nerds residence, from which they were ousted by the Alpha Betas, was actually Cochise Hall. Their subsequent residence was University of Arizona's Bear Down Gymnasium. The original Alpha Beta fraternity house that is burned down was filmed at the Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity house , which at the time was the Alpha Gamma Rho house. Filming on the University of Arizona campus had its problems.
Just like the failed remake, the first film had college issues as well. The studio had been given permission to film on the campus, but revoked their filming privileges after reading the script. Producers had to convince the school they wouldn't harm their reputation and eventually the school gave them the "okay," with the many of the students posing as extras. Revenge of the Nerds is a classic '80s teen sex comedy, one of the rarer breed that takes place in college instead of High School. After the football team accidentally burns down their shared house in an ill-conceived 'fire breathing' stunt, they commandeer the freshman dorms as their own. The Freshmen are allowed to pledge fraternities earlier than usual so they'll have a place to live, but your typical frats' well-known aversion to scholarly types leaves the nine nerdiest new students out in the cold.
As for libraries, their importance also depends on the application. For less demanding problems, the availability of libraries can outweigh the intrinsic power of the language. Hard to say exactly, but wherever it is, it is short of anything you'd be likely to call an application. If a company considers itself to be in the software business, and they're writing an application that will be one of their products, then it will probably involve several hackers and take at least six months to write.
In a project of that size, powerful languages probably start to outweigh the convenience of pre-existing libraries. We're not hearing about these languages because people are using them to write Windows apps, but because people are using them on servers. And as software shiftsoff the desktop and onto servers , there will be less and less pressure to use middle-of-the-road technologies.
There are, of course, projects where the choice of programming language doesn't matter much. As a rule, the more demanding the application, the more leverage you get from using a powerful language. But plenty of projects are not demanding at all. Most programming probably consists of writing little glue programs, and for little glue programs you can use any language that you're already familiar with and that has good libraries for whatever you need to do. If you just need to feed data from one Windows app to another, sure, use Visual Basic. We know that Java must be pretty good, because it is the cool, new programming language.