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How Pene­lope Spheeris cap­tured the wild side of Amer­i­can youth culture

01 Sep 2021

Words by Anton Bitel

A crowded gathering of people in colourful clothing, with hands raised and expressions of excitement or celebration.
A crowded gathering of people in colourful clothing, with hands raised and expressions of excitement or celebration.
In 1983’s Sub­ur­bia and 1985’s The Boys Next Door, the Rea­gan era is a place of lay-offs, layabouts and gen­er­al decay.

May 10th, 1968. Mark and I are going to be very hap­py here. The air is clean, skies are blue, and all the hous­es are brand new and beau­ti­ful. They call it sub­ur­bia and that word’s per­fect because it’s a com­bi­na­tion of sub­urb and utopia… I’m sure with Mark’s job at Lock­heed I’ll nev­er have to work again… Oh and by the way, diary, we want to have a child soon. Suburbia’s a great place for children…”

These words come from the diary of Tina John­son (Don­na Lamana), express­ing all the hopes and opti­mism of her youth in the late 60s. But now, in the 80s, her teenaged son Evan (Bill Coyne) reads the old diary with the cru­el ben­e­fit of hind­sight. His father Mark is long gone, and Tina, now a sin­gle moth­er to Evan and his much younger broth­er Ethan (Andrew Pece), works all day, drinks all night, and inter­acts with her eldest by throw­ing bot­tles at his head.

So Evan has left home, and joined Jack Did­dley (Chris Ped­er­sen) and a coterie of oth­er young punks in a squat on the neighbourhood’s out­er lim­its. As Evan and Jack dri­ve through that same sub­ur­bia which Tina had been describ­ing, and which now looks the worse for wear, Jack com­ments, They didn’t realise they’d be the slums of the future.”

Pene­lope Spheeris is per­haps best known for direct­ing SNL com­e­dy spin-off Wayne’s World in 1992. But she had for the pre­vi­ous decade been a chron­i­cler of LA’s under­ground scenes in her The Decline of West­ern Civil­i­sa­tion doc­u­men­tary tril­o­gy, and in her ear­ly fea­tures. Her debut Sub­ur­bia serves as the low-rent down­side to John Hugh­es’ more sani­tised vision of 80s youth cul­ture. For here Reagan’s Amer­i­ca is seen as a place of lay-offs, layabouts and gen­er­al decay. All the kids in the squat – lit­er­al­ly brand­ed with the ini­tials TR (for The Reject­ed’) – come from bro­ken homes, and are form­ing their own unruly fam­i­ly togeth­er on the edge not just of town but of all their decade’s ide­o­log­i­cal bromides.

These young peo­ple are unam­bigu­ous­ly delin­quents – van­dal­is­ing prop­er­ty, get­ting into fights, steal­ing what­ev­er they can. But in a film of uneasy jux­ta­po­si­tions and sym­me­tries, they are also shown to be a prod­uct of the very envi­ron­ments from which they have emerged and grown mar­gin­alised. Sub­ur­bia opens with the shock­ing spec­ta­cle of a tod­dler being attacked and killed by a wild dog. These dogs, aban­doned by their own­ers, are rumoured to have inter­bred with local coy­otes, and now prowl near the squat.

One of the gang, Raz­zle (played by Flea of the Red Hot Chilli Pep­pers), who keeps a pet rat, is also try­ing to domes­ti­cate a pair of the dogs. The dogs serve as an obvi­ous ana­logue for the kids, them­selves con­demned by oth­ers as wild teenagers” and met­al rejects run­ning wild on the streets”, and them­selves form­ing a domes­tic pack togeth­er in response to their own rejec­tion and abandonment.

If the mem­bers of TR are often seen throw­ing bot­tles, we first saw a bot­tle sim­i­lar­ly used as a pro­jec­tile by Evan’s moth­er. If an attempt by TR mem­ber Skin­ner (Tim­o­thy Eric O’Brien) to chat up a girl in a club ends with her being stripped of her dress and pub­licly humil­i­at­ed by the male audi­ence (“You guys have minds this big,” declares the band’s front­man in dis­gust), lat­er Skinner’s friend Sheila (Jen­nifer Clay) will have her night­dress torn off by sup­pos­ed­ly law-abid­ing cit­i­zens Jim Triplett (Lee Fred­er­ick) and Bob Skokes (Jeff Pret­ty­man), who have tak­en it upon them­selves to break into the squat at night and ter­rorise the young res­i­dents, in the same way that this adult pair hunts and shoots the wild dogs.

Upon hear­ing that a girl was found dead at the squat, Jim and Bob plot their indig­nant revenge against TR, even as these two mar­ried men’s moral out­rage is off­set and iro­nised by the fact that they are in a strip club when they make their plan, and by our knowl­edge that the girl in ques­tion is Sheila, dri­ven to sui­cide after the same men’s ear­li­er assault on her proved the last straw. Sheila’s father (J Dinan Myrte­tus) too, in his tie and suit, may assert his supe­ri­or­i­ty over her unkempt friends at the funer­al ser­vice, but as a man who molest­ed, beat and per­ma­nent­ly scarred his own daugh­ter, he wears his respectabil­i­ty thinly.

It is this hypocrisy in the adults around them that TR shun and resist, and that Spheeris’ film expos­es in an inter­gen­er­a­tional dialec­tic rem­i­nis­cent of Jonathan Kaplan’s Over the Edge. The screen­play here is nev­er two-dimen­sion­al. Near the begin­ning, Jack tells Evan about how his father was killed in Viet­nam, and his new step­fa­ther is a cop, before adding: That’s not the worst of it, though – he’s black.”

It is a jaw-drop­ping­ly casu­al piece of racism, which even Evan, our cicerone through this sub­ur­ban nether­world, seems to endorse with the response,”God, what a drag!” Yet lat­er we will meet Jack’s much maligned black cop step­dad Offi­cer Bill Ren­nard (Don Allen), who will turn out to be the most decent char­ac­ter in the entire film, and the only adult who extends any respect or sym­pa­thy to these run­away ado­les­cents – even as they show him lit­tle but contempt.

Sub­ur­bia ends as it begins – with the death of a child – and so, even if it cap­tures spir­it­ed live per­for­mances by the likes of DI, TSOL and The Van­dals along the way, these are framed by bleak scenes of a com­mu­ni­ty vio­lent­ly bereft of its future. Here punk is not just an atti­tude, or a kind of music, but two despair­ing fin­gers held up to a cal­lous, frag­ment­ing soci­ety whose once sun­ny dreams have long since fall­en into hos­til­i­ty, alien­ation and dystopi­an darkness.

Two young shirtless men, one with blond hair and the other with dark hair, standing in a room.

Released two years lat­er, Spheeris’ fol­low-up The Boys Next Door is even bleak­er. Its theme is estab­lished from the start – a mon­tage of recent young male ser­i­al mur­der­ers ripped from the head­lines, with com­men­tary from hor­ri­fied pun­dits and the killers them­selves. This intro­duc­tion evokes Shel­don Renan and Leonard Shrader’s mon­do doc­u­men­tary The Killing of Amer­i­ca, but the nar­ra­tive which fol­lows is a fic­tion, track­ing a pair of high-school grad­u­ates as they go on a vio­lent spree one week­end, and pre­sent­ing them in a con­tra­dic­to­ry light of empa­thy and abhorrence.

It is clear, on their last day at school, that there is some­thing off about Roy Alston (Maxwell Caulfield) and Bo Richards (Char­lie Sheen). Pre­fig­ur­ing Beav­is and Butt-Head by sev­en years, they are a duo of dumb, snig­ger­ing mis­fits whose only friends are each oth­er and whose weird, sex­ist, unpleas­ant jokes are amus­ing only to themselves.

Pari­ahs among their peers, they have to crash the grad­u­a­tion par­ty to which every­one else has been invit­ed. And while their prep­py fel­low pupils are all head­ed to col­lege, work­ing-class Roy and Bo know that the fol­low­ing Mon­day they will be start­ing local fac­to­ry jobs that will trap them for the rest of their lives. Much like Roy’s fac­to­ry-work­ing father, who is so uncom­mu­nica­tive, so obliv­i­ous of his son and so absent even in his own trail­er home, that Roy has to sup­ply his dad’s lines him­self while engag­ing in imag­i­nary con­ver­sa­tions with him that are strict­ly one-way.

Over­looked and unloved, Roy is always angry. I’ve got stuff inside me,” he con­fides in Bo. He even con­tem­plates join­ing the Marines, imag­in­ing that a state sanc­tion to kill peo­ple might help him work some of the aggres­sion out of his system.

Bo too has stuff inside him. Where Roy is filled with rage, Bo is extreme­ly randy. Yet reject­ed sex­u­al­ly as well as social­ly, he is won­der­ing whether he will ever be able to turn all his boast­ful fan­tasies to real­i­ty. With $200 in their pock­ets – a grad­u­a­tion gift from Bo’s grand­fa­ther – the two delin­quents head off in Roy’s Ply­mouth Road­run­ner to Los Ange­les, where Ray starts ran­dom­ly beat­ing, hos­pi­tal­is­ing and killing peo­ple, and Bo, far from stop­ping his friend, declares their LA jaunt Cave­man Day’, where they can just be total­ly prehi-fucking-storic.”

This is to be their last hur­rah to youth­ful dreams, a week­end of per­ni­cious play before work and slow rot take over for­ev­er. Mean­while LAPD Detec­tives Mark Woods (Christo­pher McDon­ald) and Ed Han­ley (Hank Gar­rett) fol­low the trail of destruc­tion, strug­gling to com­pre­hend such sense­less out­rage – and are con­front­ed with col­leagues who har­bour as much prej­u­dice against the city’s harm­less punk girls, BDSM per­verts’ and gay men as against bona fide homi­ci­dal delinquents.

Ray too hates fag­gots”, even though it seems obvi­ous that his feel­ings for Bo go beyond the mere­ly homoso­cial. And so it appears that this angry young man with an uncan­ny knack of find­ing a gay bar, and of (repeat­ed­ly) parad­ing him­self shirt­less before his friend, and of vio­lent­ly inter­ven­ing (like a jeal­ous lover) when­ev­er a woman catch­es Bo’s eye, has become dis­af­fect­ed not just by his social mar­gin­al­i­sa­tion and trou­bled home life, but because of an unspo­ken desire – stuff inside him – that makes him deny and loathe him­self as much as others.

It is a messy, dispir­it­ing por­trait of two rebels with­out a a cause who go off the rails as they come of age, leav­ing only suf­fer­ing and death in their wake. The Boys Next Door keeps us with them all the way on their road to nowhere, get­ting us to hope, impos­si­bly, that these errant boys, and we too, might learn some­thing – any­thing – con­struc­tive from all this point­less, ruinous chaos.

It is easy to see the influ­ence of these two films on the sub­se­quent oeu­vre of Gregg Ara­ki, but Spheeris is a pio­neer in limn­ing (with­out judg­ment) the sub­cul­tures and coun­ter­cul­tures of her own time and place, as well as all the angst, anomie and anar­chy of ado­les­cence. These films are dyna­mite, explod­ing the more main­stream image of cosi­ly aspi­ra­tional 80s Amer­i­ca, and find­ing a nihilis­tic blank­ness in the bedrock beneath.

Sub­ur­bia and The Boys Next Door are avail­able on dig­i­tal from 30 August and on sep­a­rate Blu-rays from 6 Sep­tem­ber via 101 Films’ Black Label.

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