Teens in trouble have been a staple in movies, although during the studio era it was more an exploitation movie thing. With the end of the Production Code Hollywood started giving us somewhat less unrealistic fare. One of those more recent films showed up on one of the FAST channels, giving me the opportunity to catch the second half of it: Over the Edge. So when TCM ran it, I recorded it to be able to watch the whole thing commercial-free.
Opening narration about vandalism gives way to a new-build community called New Granada, CO, which is not fully built out yet, which seems like a bit of a problem because who would want to bring their family to a community that's still half under construction? And as such, you can understand why the teens are in such a state of discontent. One such teen, Mark (Vincent Spano) takes his BB gun out on an overpass and shoots at a police car, which is obviously a problem. Seeing this is Richie (Matt Dillin in his film debut), who races away, but gets found by the police Carl Willat (Michael Kramer), the "good kid". They're taken to the police station, and it's intimated that this isn't Richie's first go-round with the juvenile justice system.
Carl is shown as being from an upper-middle-class family where his father (Andy Romano) is a car salesman and one of the community leaders trying to bring new business to New Granada. It's community leadership that leaves him terribly out of touch about the state of the teens in town, and a sharp contrast from what Richie's family is like. Their one hangout isn't a mall like it would be in Southern California, but a youth rec center that's a construction site of its own, with a corrugated metal roof and the one do-gooder adult in the movie running it. When the Willetts drive by what was originally planned to be the sort of bowling alley/sports place that kids could hang out at and find that its use is changing to an industrial park, it's enough to hurt poor Carl.
Since Carl isn't going to have much else to do, he falls in with Richie and the rest of the teens in town. This isn't the sort of place that has the well-defined cliques of later teen movies in the 1980s, so they all go to the same house party and otherwise hang out together at an abandoned house, as well as doing target shooting with a gun that Carl's would-be girlfriend found.
Unfortunately, all this petty criminality goes wrong, leading to Richie "borrowing" his mom's car, picking up Carl, and going for a joyride that tresults in the police following the two and shooting Richie when the policeman sees Richie's gun. Richie dies, and poor Carl is really in trouble now, much too young to be off on his own but not really able to go home. The adults are increasingly alarmed. They already held one assembly that obviously didn't work, and now they're going to hold another. This time, however, the teens come up with a way that's bound to get the parents' attention. I don't want to say exactly what happens, but I will say I was quite surprised to see the climax that the movie had.Over the Edge is supposedly based on a real story, or perhaps inspired by a story about a new-build community where things went badly wrong with the teens. I'm not certain quite how realistic the movie is, but then I should admit that my childhood was quite a lot different from a lot of people's. That, and I'd be about 10 years younger, so a late 80s adolescence was probably also rather different from a late 70s adolescence. Over the Edge is interesting, although I do have to say that I found the acting rather variable in quality. And really, is every single adult in this town that stupid and clueless?
Still, Over the Edge is a movie that's absolutely worth watching.
