Ex-TV commercial director Adrian (Flashdance, 9½ Weeks) Lyne made his feature film debut with this slick movie about four 16-year-old girls growing up in the San Fernando Valley, California, and their problems with life and men.
A young Jodie Foster is Jeanie, the straight-arrow sorting out her friends at “boring” North Hollywood High, including podgy, unloved Madge (Marilyn Kagan), compulsive liar Deirdre (Kandice Stroh), and abused hooker Annie (ex-Runaways band member Cherie Currie).
Jeanie clashes with her mother, Mary (Sally Kellerman), who does a lousy job of balancing family, school, and work; Madge attempts to set up housekeeping with an older man named Jay (Randy Quaid); Hottie Dierdre plays adolescent romantic games, breaking hearts along the way; and doomed Annie functions as a one-woman cautionary tale against bad boys and hard drugs.
Foster’s Bugsy Malone co-star Scott Baio provides the male interest as Brad, but it’s really one to watch for the girls, who all overcome a clichéd script to give a good depiction of what it was like to be a teenager at the end of the 1970s.
Former British pop star Adam Faith has a small role as Jeanie’s tour manager father and a young Laura Dern appears briefly in an early role.
Jeanie
Jodie Foster
Madge
Marilyn Kagan
Annie
Cherie Currie
Deirdre
Kandice Stroh
Mary
Sally Kellerman
Jay
Randy Quaid
Brad
Scott Baio
Mrs Axman
Lois Smith
Bryan
Adam Faith
Debbie
Laura Dern
Director
Adrian Lyne