Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Screwballs

1983 film by Rafal Zielinski From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Screwballs
Remove ads

Screwballs is a 1983 Canadian teen sex comedy film[5] directed by Rafal Zielinski and released by New World Pictures. It was one of several films inspired by the success of Porky's.[6]

Quick Facts Directed by, Written by ...
Remove ads

Plot

In 1965, five boys at Taft and Adams High School try to see the bare breasts of Purity Bush, the most beautiful girl in school. After being set up, reprimanded and sent to detention by the principal because of Purity, they plot their revenge.

After several failed attempts to strip or seduce her, the boys finally strip Purity by using a powerful electromagnet to rip off her dress while she sings the national anthem at the homecoming assembly, leaving her naked in front of the entire school.

Remove ads

Production

Following the success of Porky's (1981), producer Roger Corman told Linda Shayne, who had worked for him, that he was interested in a low budget teen sex comedy. Shayne wrote one with Jim Wynorski, who did Corman's advertising and had written scripts for him. Corman liked the script, originally entitled Hide the Salami, and agreed to provide $500,000 of the budget. Shayne arranged for the balance to be found in Canada where the film was shot.[7] The rest of the money came from the Canadian Film Development Corporation, a Canadian physician and a Canadian theatre chain. Filming took place in Toronto.[8]

The movie was originally called Crazy Times and was set in 1962 but then this was shifted to 1964.[2]

Jim Wynorski designed the poster and said that he was inspired by Mad magazine.[9] Linda Shayne posed for the blonde figure on the poster.

Remove ads

Reception

Critical

Variety magazine called the film "a poor man's Porky's... full of youthful exuberance and proves utterly painless to watch, but it is so close in premise and tone to its model that negative comparisons can't help but be drawn".[10] Robert Ebert of The Chicago Sun-Times gave the film one star out of a possible four, proclaiming the movie had "a couple of good moments" and was "fairly harmless", yet spoiled by poor editing and reliance on predictable scenes which were "recycled from every dirty joke book in history."[11]

At Metacritic, the film has a score of 34 out of 100 based on seven reviews.[12]

Box office

The film was released in U.S. theaters by New World Pictures in April 1983 and grossed $2,082,215.[3]

Sequels

The film led to two sequels, Screwballs II (1985) and Screwball Hotel (1988).[13]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads