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class act

 
Movies:

Class Act

  • Director: Randall Miller
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Teen Movie, Odd Couple Film
  • Themes: High School Life, Mistaken Identities
  • Main Cast: Christopher "Kid" Reid, Christopher "Play" Martin, Karyn Parsons, Alysia M. Rogers, Meshach Taylor
  • Release Year: 1991
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 98 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

Kid N' Play (Christopher Reid and Christopher Martin) star in this role-reversal comedy that plays like a badly done sitcom without the laughs. The switcheroo occurs when two inner-city high school students -- one a straight-A whiz-kid and the other an angry criminal type -- have to switch identities and are forced to live each other's lives. Christopher Reid is Duncan Pinderhughes, a student with perfect grades but who can't graduate high school unless he passes gym. Christopher Martin plays Blade Brown, whose probation officer gives him an ultimatum -- graduate high school or go to jail. Due to a mix-up in their high school records, Pinderhughes and Brown are forced to take over each other's lives. Brown ends up in a class for gifted students, and Pinderhughes finds himself skulking behind the school building to a shotgun shack that houses all the high school's troublemakers. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide

Cast

  • Christopher "Kid" Reid - Duncan Pinderhughes
  • Christopher "Play" Martin - Blade
  • Karyn Parsons - Ellen
  • Alysia M. Rogers - Damita
  • Meshach Taylor - John Pinderhughes
Rick Ducommun - Parole Officer Reichert; Pauly Shore - Julian Thomas; Raye Birk - Principal Kratz; Lamont Johnson - Wedge; Mariann Aalda - Duncan's Mom; Loretta Devine - Blade's Mom; Andre Rosey Brown - Jail Guard; Rhea Perlman - Miss Joanne Simpson; Greg Collins - Cop; Lance Crouther - 1st Bad Dude; Doug E. Doug - Popsickle; Thomas Mikal Ford - Mink; Jack Gibson - Janitor; John Hostetter - Football Coach; Lamont Jackson; Randy Jandt - Dorky Kid; Guy Margo - 1st Damita's Neighbor; Sam McMurray - Skip Wankman; Philip Perlman - Teacher; Tony Simotes - Dr. Oppenheimer; Baldwin C. Sykes - 2nd Bad Dude; Ivory Ocean - Wrestling Coach; Graham Galloway - Latin Student; Jaki Brown-Karman; Jody Savin - 1st St Peter's Student; Reginald Ballard - Fruity

Credit

Sarah Knowles - Art Director, Randall Miller - Director, John F. Burnett - Editor, Vassal Benford - Composer (Music Score), Will Yarbrough - Musical Direction/Supervision, David Snyder - Production Designer, Francis Kenny - Cinematographer, Todd Black - Producer, Joe Wizan - Producer, Jean Higgins - Producer, Maynell Thomas - Producer, Robin Peyton - Set Designer, Michael Swerdlick - Screen Story, Wayne Rice - Screen Story, Richard Brenne - Screen Story, Franklyn Ajaye - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

Can't Buy Me Love; House Party; Soul Man; House Party 2; House Party 3; Friday; House Party 4: Down to the Last Minute; Nerd Boy
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Dictionary: class act
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n. Informal
One of distinctive and superior quality: "Academy members ... tend to favor films that will make Hollywood seem a class act instead of a hotbed of money-grubbing vulgarians" (Jay Carr).


Wikipedia: Class Act
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Class Act

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Randall Miller
Produced by Jean Higgins
Joe Wizan
Maynell Thomas
Suzanne de Passe
Todd Black
Written by Cynthia Friedlob
John Semper
Michael Swerdlick
Richard Brenne
Wayne Allan Rice
Starring Christopher "Kid" Reid
Christopher "Play" Martin
Alysia Rogers
Doug E. Doug
Karyn Parsons
Lamont Johnson
Music by Vassal Benford
Cinematography Francis Kenny
Editing by John F. Burnett
Richard Leeman
Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures
Release date(s) June 5, 1992
Running time 98 min.
Country  United States
Language English
Gross revenue $13,272,113[1]

Class Act is a 1992 comedy film, directed by Randall Miller, and starring hip-hop duo Kid 'n Play. The film is an urban retelling of the fairy tale The Prince and the Pauper. It is the third of four films starring Kid 'n Play, following House Party (1990) and House Party 2 (1991), and preceding House Party 3 (1994).

Contents

Synopsis

Genius high school student Duncan Pinderhughes (Christopher "Kid" Reid) is getting ready for graduation, but is somewhat disheartened to find out that, despite his perfect SAT score and 4.0 GPA, Harvard University will not admit him unless he can pass phys. ed. Ex-convict Michael "Blade" Brown (Christopher "Play" Martin) is released from jail, and told by his parole officer (Rick Ducommun) that the condition of his release is satisfactory graduation from high school. A mishap results in their pictures being swapped on their permanent school records. In effect, Blade is surprised to find out that he is being placed in Gifted classes, while Duncan is shocked to be placed in minimal classes with substandard conditions and miscreants for classmates.

Blade realizes this, and sees Duncan as his ticket permanently out of jail, since Duncan could pass his classes with ease. He transforms Duncan into a version of himself with dreadlocks, and does his best to teach Duncan how to act and talk like a gangsta. Having no grasp of hip hop culture, Duncan's parents begin to worry about their son's new "friend"; his father especially, beginning to suspect Duncan is gay.

Blade manages to smooth-talk his way through his advanced classes, even successfully executing a dissertation on sexual intercourse (one of his favorite subjects). Duncan ends up running into a high school thug named Wedge (Lamont Johnson), and gets in trouble, but also ends up discovering an uncanny ability to kick field goals, and joins the school's football team. Both Blade and Duncan end up with girlfriends that the other would have, with Blade smooth-talking the intelligent but excitement-seeking Ellen (Karyn Parsons) and Duncan being pursued by the wild Damita (Alysia Rogers).

Blade ends up getting in trouble with a drug lord (Thomas Mikal Ford) that he worked with before his incarceration, and the movie climaxes in a chase involving Blade, Duncan, their girlfriends and one of Blade's buddies. When the girlfriends realize that their men are swapped, both guys end up dumped. Still, Duncan manages to knock out Wedge, while Blade handles the drug lord, but all end up in jail.

After the mix-up is corrected, Blade, Duncan and company are all set free. In an anti-climax, Duncan and Blade both enter a Knowledge bowl in an effort to get Blade back with Ellen. They succeed when Blade answers a tiebreaker question to win the competition, recalling a choice tidbit Ellen once told him. Afterward, both couples end up together. In a final scene, Duncan's dad finds out the hard way that Duncan is definitely not gay by catching him and Damita having sex in Duncan's bedroom.

Walking in each other's shoes dramatically changed the lives of both Duncan and Blade. In the epilogue, the audience learns that Blade graduated from high school and attended college (even wearing preppy attire), while Duncan attended Stanford on a football scholarship.

Cast

Cameo appearances by:

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Class Act" Read more

 

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