This is topic What was the best Snarky Kids Adventure movie of the 1980s? in forum Books, Films, Food and Culture at Hatrack River Forum.


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Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
You know the type. Get a group of wise-cracking misfit kids. They have an attitude right out of an old school issue of MAD magazine. They get involved in an incredible (or at least unlikely) series of adventures, usually involving an element (or at least a hint) of something fantastical.


Iconic examples include:

The Goonies

Explorers

The Monster Squad

Adventures in Babysitting

Honey, I Shrunk the Kids

...there were many more, of course. [Smile]

What film did you like best?

I ask because it seems to be making a comeback. Monster House deliberately modeled itself on this type of film. The idea for a Goonies 2 refuses to die. Remakes of Adventures in Babysitting and Monster Squad are on the way. The cashing in on my childhood will apparently not be limited to toy lines.
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
Goonies
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Adventures in Babysitting.
 
Posted by Primal Curve (Member # 3587) on :
 
Of those choices, I'm going to have to go with Explorers.
 
Posted by MEC (Member # 2968) on :
 
Goonies first I think, then Adventures in Babysitting and Honey, I Shrunk the Kids.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
To clarify: You aren't limited to these choices, these are just the first examples that sprang to my mind of that type of movie. [Smile]
 
Posted by breyerchic04 (Member # 6423) on :
 
I was going to suggest a movie I loved but IMDB says 1993.
 
Posted by Trent Destian (Member # 11653) on :
 
Little Monsters
 
Posted by MEC (Member # 2968) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by breyerchic04:
I was going to suggest a movie I loved but IMDB says 1993.

Sandlot?
 
Posted by Lostinspace (Member # 11633) on :
 
Goonies and Explores definately..D.A.R.Y.L. is a great one too, but not sure since its only two kids and a sister, that it really counts.

[ August 04, 2008, 04:55 PM: Message edited by: Lostinspace ]
 
Posted by Joldo (Member # 6991) on :
 
Newsies was just barely out of the 80s, but still had a very 80s feel.
 
Posted by Irami Osei-Frimpong (Member # 2229) on :
 
I thought Goonies would win in a walk, but then I remembered, "Flight of the Navigator."
 
Posted by Lostinspace (Member # 11633) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Irami Osei-Frimpong:
I thought Goonies would win in a walk, but then I remembered, "Flight of the Navigator."

Can you really classify that as a group though?
 
Posted by The Genuine (Member # 11446) on :
 
The Goonies, followed by Explorers.

Didn't The Goonies 2 come out already? I think it was on Ninendo instead of video, however.
 
Posted by xnera (Member # 187) on :
 
The Goonies. I have large portions of that movie memorized because my sisters and I watched it so many times.
 
Posted by Lostinspace (Member # 11633) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by xnera:
The Goonies. I have large portions of that movie memorized because my sisters and I watched it so many times.

Ditto and I even watched other things because they had actors from that movie in them. I followed Sean Astins Career after seeing that movie..I honestly thought that group would be the next brat pack.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Genuine:


Didn't The Goonies 2 come out already? I think it was on Ninendo instead of video, however.

According to Sean Astin (Mikey), a sequel to The Goonies is all but completely certain. In fact, there was almost a Goonies animated series that fell apart in 2006-2007 due to rights to likeness issues. Other follow-ups are being looked into, due to the high DVD sales for the original film.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Joldo:
Newsies was just barely out of the 80s, but still had a very 80s feel.

That was an adventure movie? [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lostinspace:
quote:
Originally posted by xnera:
The Goonies. I have large portions of that movie memorized because my sisters and I watched it so many times.

Ditto and I even watched other things because they had actors from that movie in them. I followed Sean Astins Career after seeing that movie..I honestly thought that group would be the next brat pack.
I had a crush on Martha Plimpton for years after watching that film.

Edit: Sorry Martha. I remembered your name wrong. [Blushing]

[ August 05, 2008, 01:07 AM: Message edited by: Puffy Treat ]
 
Posted by Lostinspace (Member # 11633) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Puffy Treat:
quote:
Originally posted by Lostinspace:
quote:
Originally posted by xnera:
The Goonies. I have large portions of that movie memorized because my sisters and I watched it so many times.

Ditto and I even watched other things because they had actors from that movie in them. I followed Sean Astins Career after seeing that movie..I honestly thought that group would be the next brat pack.
I had a crush on Margaret Plimpton for years after watching that film.
Didn't we all?!?
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Irami Osei-Frimpong:
I thought Goonies would win in a walk, but then I remembered, "Flight of the Navigator."

That was a fun movie, though I recall there was only one kid, right?

(Two, if you count his little brother who becomes his twenty-something big brother due to lost time!)
 
Posted by The Genuine (Member # 11446) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lostinspace:
Didn't we all?!?

I think so.
 
Posted by Megan (Member # 5290) on :
 
Not me. [Smile]

My vote is Explorers.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
Watching Explorers as an adult, I still like it right up until the point we actually -meet- the aliens.

Then, I have to switch it off. [Razz]
 
Posted by Megan (Member # 5290) on :
 
I haven't seen any of the movies mentioned so far as an adult. I'm going strictly from childhood memories here.
 
Posted by Lostinspace (Member # 11633) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Puffy Treat:
Watching Explorers as an adult, I still like it right up until the point we actually -meet- the aliens.

Then, I have to switch it off. [Razz]

I even felt that way as a kid. If they would have not tried to do it so comedically I think it would have worked...all their knowledge from television and radio waves. But they made the aliens look so cartoonish and the one act like Orson Wells, I could never stand it.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
Here's artist Stephen Silver's take on the canned 'Goonies' cartoon

(He's done work for shows like Kim Possible, so he's no stranger to youth-oriented action/adventure comedies.)
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
I don't remember which one "The Explorers" is, but Goonies certainly.

And I was JUST humming the music to Newsies at work today. Weird. I count Newsies, it's an adventure in children's rights.
 
Posted by TL (Member # 8124) on :
 
Stand By Me
 
Posted by Nick (Member # 4311) on :
 
Goonies by a mile.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
And adventure in child rights? Fie upon you! Fie, I say. And anyway, it's a 1992 movie. Doesn't count. [Wink]

Explorers is a movie about three misfit kids- a romantic dreamer obsessed with SF, a science nerd, and a tough kid with a heart of gold. The dreamer kid, Ben, keeps having vivid recurring dreams which he believes might be a message of some sort. Working with scientist-in-the-making Wolfgang, they build a machine based on imagery seen in his dream. Soon after they meet the tough but nice new kid Darren, and then they all start to have recurring dreams that seem to be linked to the device. Turns out it can generate a force field...and that leads to further dreams that eventually result in them building a space craft of sorts. That leads to some thrilling night time escapades, reports of "UFOs" in the area...and eventually a journey to find who has been sending the messages...

The film up until they meet the alien messengers is actually really good. One of Joe Dante's better genre efforts. And I'm including the Gremlins duology in that estimation! It manages to capture the sense of wonder, discovery, and even a melancholy wistfulness quite well.

Then, they meet the aliens. And it all turns to the cinematic equivalent of eating Nerds candy that's been dipped in vanilla frosting: Like, totally grody-gooey-sickly-sweet.
 
Posted by SenojRetep (Member # 8614) on :
 
I would've said Goonies, until TL brought up Stand By Me.

But maybe Red Dawn trumps them both??

Or Space Camp! I loved Space Camp!

(Okay, those last two were almost totally facetious. Almost.)
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
If you mention Solarbabies next, so help me... *shakes fist*
 
Posted by Lostinspace (Member # 11633) on :
 
Stand by Me, Space Camp and Red Dawn are great too! What about is it Ruskies...the one where the kids go to save their parents from the Soviet interment camps.
 
Posted by Irami Osei-Frimpong (Member # 2229) on :
 
Toy Soldiers and Earth*Star Voyager(The first half is much better than the second)
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Irami Osei-Frimpong:
Toy Soldiers

No 90s movies. [No No]
 
Posted by SenojRetep (Member # 8614) on :
 
Russkies with future Acadamy Award winner Joaquin Phoenix. Second best adolescent adventure movie from the 80's involving a Russian invasion of the US mainland.

<edit>but now I see lostinspace was talking about some other Russo-centric 80's teen adventure movie. My bad</edit>
 
Posted by SenojRetep (Member # 8614) on :
 
Real Genius. Best ever.

War Games. Play thermo-nuclear war.

E.T.. E-li-ot.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
Do the WarGames characters fit the paradigm? It's been years since I've seen it, but I don't recall them seeming like the plucky wise-cracking quirky misfit hero types. [Smile]

Never saw Real Geniuses. What's it about?
 
Posted by Enigmatic (Member # 7785) on :
 
Trying to pick another 80s movie about a group of wise-cracking misfit kids on an unlikely adventure to even come close to competing with The Goonies is like asking "What early 90s time-travelling cyborg assassin movie do you like as much as Terminator 2: Judgement Day?"

--Enigmatic
 
Posted by Kwea (Member # 2199) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Puffy Treat:
Do the WarGames characters fit the paradigm? It's been years since I've seen it, but I don't recall them seeming like the plucky wise-cracking quirky misfit hero types. [Smile]

Never saw Real Geniuses. What's it about?

Geniuses.
[Wink]
 
Posted by SenojRetep (Member # 8614) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Puffy Treat:
Do the WarGames characters fit the paradigm? It's been years since I've seen it, but I don't recall them seeming like the plucky wise-cracking quirky misfit hero types.

Well, they're older teens, but you have the Matthew Broderick, socially backward, computer hacker character running off with the more popular, pretty girl (IIRC), much like Goonies if Sean Astin and Josh Brolin's characters were merged, and they'd run off with Kerri Green to save not their community but the whole world.

quote:
Never saw Real Geniuses. What's it about?
Real Genius is an early Val Kilmer vehicle about genius students at a California Polytechnic University who invent and then go on a mission to stop, a space-based tactical laser. The "mission" part (stopping the laser) is quite brief, and the characters are somewhat older (although the everyman protagonist is 15), but it has some of the same flavor. Its a pretty funny script, and Kilmer's character is a model of what every geek wishes he could be, someone who uses his genius to be incredibly cool (in a very geeky way).
 
Posted by Lostinspace (Member # 11633) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by SenojRetep:
Russkies with future Acadamy Award winner Joaquin Phoenix. Second best adolescent adventure movie from the 80's involving a Russian invasion of the US mainland.

<edit>but now I see lostinspace was talking about some other Russo-centric 80's teen adventure movie. My bad</edit>

Yeah I guess I was thinking of The Rescue. And it was North Korea not Russia but hey it was 20 years ago! But it does make me want to go back and watch a lot of these old movies!
 
Posted by Primal Curve (Member # 3587) on :
 
Real Genius, much as I love the film, cannot count as it takes place on a college campus.
 
Posted by SenojRetep (Member # 8614) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Primal Curve:
Real Genius, much as I love the film, cannot count as it takes place on a college campus.

Not entirely.

*Minor Spoilers*
Sneaking onto an Air Force Base; assumed identities to fool stupid grown-ups; hacking government computers; popcorn utopia.
 
Posted by Jim-Me (Member # 6426) on :
 
Not that it would be my first choice, but I can't believe that no one has mentioned Gremlins yet.

Back to the Future would probably be my choice.... it mostly fits, better than Real Genius. That, by the way is one of the most quotable movies of the 80s, right alongside The Princess Bride and (another movie that ought to be on this list) Better Off Dead.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
Better off Dead featured a group of snarky misfit kids on an adventure? I thought that was John Cusack's suicide attempts being played for laughs? [Big Grin]

Gremlins sort of counts, though technically it's more a nascent romantic couple featured than a group, and they're more sincere than snarky.

Back to the Future is great, but it's just one teen and a wacky adult friend. [Smile]
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
I think those are getting away from the initial parameters (Goonies, natch), but if we're including those type of teen movies, the clear winner is Ferris Bueller's Day Off.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
I don't count Ferris Bueller as an adventurer. More the Wish Fulfillment fantasy of lazy teens everywhere. [Smile]
 
Posted by Lostinspace (Member # 11633) on :
 
If we get in there and start nitpicking then we could try to put the Breakfast Club in there too.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
No one mentioned Iron Eagle yet? Come on - a wacky group of high school misfits steal an attack fighter - including arranging for mid-air fueling - to save the kid pilot's dad? Plus Lou Gosset Jr. FTW.

Edit: Favorite quote: "Attention unidentified aircraft, this is Major Dwight Smiley of the United States Air Force, you are following one of our F-16s in international airspace, do you wish to engage?

I didn't think so."
 
Posted by SenojRetep (Member # 8614) on :
 
I was going to add Iron Eagle when I mentioned Red Dawn, but...well, but then I didn't for some reason.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
The Breakfast Club kids were on an adventure?

Another adventure of Child Rights, no doubt. Feh! [Wink]
 
Posted by Jim-Me (Member # 6426) on :
 
Back to the Future involves several teens... they just happen to also be older in other movie stages. [Smile]
 
Posted by Jim-Me (Member # 6426) on :
 
Red Dawn was far superior to Iron Eagle... and that's coming from someone who had his heart set on flying an F-16 someday.

quote:
"How'd you get yourself shot down, Colonel?"

"It was five to one, I got four..."


 
Posted by Steve_G (Member # 10101) on :
 
Another one I just remembered is The Wizard.

[ August 05, 2008, 04:02 PM: Message edited by: Steve_G ]
 
Posted by Lostinspace (Member # 11633) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Puffy Treat:
The Breakfast Club kids were on an adventure?

Another adventure of Child Rights, no doubt. Feh! [Wink]

They do break out of the library and go on their little adventure. Like I said if we are going to talk about Back to the Future (no real group) Flight of the Navigator (no real group) and the likes, then we could add the Breakfast Club!
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lostinspace:
They do break out of the library and go on their little adventure. Like I said if we are going to talk about Back to the Future (no real group) Flight of the Navigator (no real group) and the likes, then we could add the Breakfast Club!

The people who mentioned those films seemed to have missed the general attributes given in the first post, though. [Smile]

(That was a pretty weak-sauce adventure if you ask me. And you didn't!) [Wink]
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jim-Me:
Back to the Future involves several teens... they just happen to also be older in other movie stages. [Smile]

The only "group" that forms is the time-lost teen and the wacky professor. The other major teen characters are the antagonist and his teen mom-to-be, who's an unwanted (and how!) source of infatuation.
 
Posted by Shawshank (Member # 8453) on :
 
I had one of my friends watch Red Dawn with me a couple years ago- he thought it was like the cheesiest movie ever. I just grew up watching it because my parents liked it (both me and my friend were born in the late 80s).

I was actually thinking of The Breakfast Club though. I didn't think that would qualify according to the OP.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
Red Dawn was far superior to Iron Eagle
I'm not surprise you think that, Mr. Cowboys Fan. *shakes head sadly at the questionable taste of some posters*
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
It seems so far that The Goonies is the popular winner. (No love for The Monster Squad? Awwww.)

Oddly enough, there are indications that the long in development hell Goonies 2 film may be close to being green-lit.
 


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