A Bit of History about Teen Movies...
The concept of teenager was born in the late 1940's. An intermediate stage dubbed as being a young adult, a stage between childhood and adulthood. Not long after, the teen movies came of age in the 1950's after the peculiar characteristics of teenagers were seen as being strangley entertaining.
Changing social attitudes mostly through the stages of the war fed into the emergence of teenagers. Middle class parents who had experienced the great depression and the war wanted their children to have full educations, uninterrupted by work or military service. As a result, young people found themselves with larger allowances and more free time. The dramatic possibilities of this stage of life, marked by rebellion, angst and young love, quickly became evident to movie makers again realising that teenagers are strangley entertaining for the media.
Rock'n'roll, the sound that defined 50s adolescence, figured strongly in the early teen movies. Rock Around the Clock (1956) was one of the first films to be marketed at teenagers to the exclusion of their elders. Its success induced Hollywood to exploit this new demographic.
The Gidget movies and Beach Party (1963) developed a sure fire formula in tune with the mood of the 60s, uniting music, comedy and romance with surf, Californian sun and skimpy bikinis. Much of the success of the teen movie lies in the fact that it crosses over so fluidly with other genres, and in the 70s, teens were subjected to horror (Carrie, 1976), romance (Love Story, 1970), comedy (National Lampoon's Animal House, 1978) and John Travolta musicals which include Saturday Night Fever (1977) and Grease (1978). That is a great thing about Teen movies, the films are not only based around one genre. Whatever personality, there is a teen movie for every teenager.
High school comedies were huge in the 80s, a prime example being The Breakfast Club (1985). Teen Horror entered the classroom in the Nineties with the students in Scream (1996) knew the rules of teen slasher flicks but got slashed nonetheless.
Teen comedys have a reputation of bringing classic literature texts and plays back to life with hope they will entertain the teenagers of today and hopefully make them show an interest in classics. Examples of this include 'Ten things I hate about you' (1999) which is baed on Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew and 'She's the Man' (2006) which was based on Shakespeare's Twelve Night. Other examples include 'Clueless' (1995) a modern adaptation of Jane Austin's 'Emma', 'Easy A' (2010) an interpretation of the book 'A Scarlett Letter' and 'Brigdet Jones Diary' (2001) based on Jane Austin's 'Pride and Prejudice'.
Today, the teen movie's remain successful, with the success of the High School Musical series (2006), Superbad (2007), Mean Girls (2004) and The Duff (2014).
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