Pump Up the Volume
Pump Up the Volume
R | 22 August 1990 (USA)
Pump Up the Volume Trailers

Mark Hunter, a lonely high school student, uses his shortwave radio to moonlight as the popular pirate DJ "Hard Harry." When his show gets blamed for a teen committing suicide, the students clash with high school faculty and the authorities.

Reviews
BootDigest Such a frustrating disappointment
BroadcastChic Excellent, a Must See
ChanFamous I wanted to like it more than I actually did... But much of the humor totally escaped me and I walked out only mildly impressed.
Gurlyndrobb While it doesn't offer any answers, it both thrills and makes you think.
gloriafranklyn This is a good teen movie full of themes of rebellion, romance and good music. Christian Slater is a great choice- he was a heartthrob and along with the film Heathers he was in huge demand. He's also a likeable actor despite having what appears to be a cocky demeanor. Of course, I did not see this as a teenager or anywhere near that age and perhaps it would have a bigger impact on me what with its themes of free speech, finding oneself and liberty- all the issues of teenage hood. But regardless, I can see why this film continues to be popular. Give it a watch and you'll be surprised. Great soundtrack too.
sol- Christian Slater plays a shy yet disgruntled teenager who runs a pirate radio station which he uses to complain about his corruptly run high school in this captivating comedy from 'Empire Records' director Allan Moyle. Fresh from 'Heathers', Slater is perfectly cast in the lead role and manages to be believably milquetoast when socialising in public and yet cocky and arrogant when on air since nobody knows that it is him (some intriguing personal identity issues exist with this dynamic). The plot is not exactly airtight with the corrupt practices of the school feeling like an after-thought, only really introduced in the second half of the movie when the school tries to shut him down, but it is an entertaining ride nonetheless with things really spiraling out of control as the students take to supporting him more and more -- through graffiti and sabotaging the school's PA system -- as the administration react with increasing sternness to his actions. The film comes with a lot of positive messages too even if some of the teenagers overreact to his radio shadow (one microwaves all her jewelry); this is a film about freedom of expression and the need to be able to question those in higher authority and hold them to account. The film benefits from some terrific music too, and it still manages to be amusing even as it turns rather message-heavy towards the end.
libmartin651 This film is definitely more a period piece than anything else but I thought that was fantastic. Angst is heavily present but I felt that the soundtrack really defined it. What happened in the movie to me didn't really matter, I felt that it was more about just the lifestyle and the time period of the late 80s. I think its a wild ride into the mind of a teenager at the time.Well-made and just really interesting to look at.Worth a view, you definitely won't regret seeing this movie; very entertaining and enlightening. I was changed by the end of it, I've never been the same. Ima a completely different person. i don't even know who i am anymore thanks to this film
thesar-2 Some "kids" my age were defined by certain movies, namely John Hughes classics, though you probably can't get a lot of guys to admit that. The sadly underperforming Pump Up the Volume was mine.It was back in 1989 when I started taking movies more seriously, seeing them more and noticing that they'll eventually consume me. A year later, I saw my first Christian Slater movie (though, almost immediately following, I watched – and not for him – Young Guns II) as well as a "star" I would fall in love with for thereafter: Samantha Mathis, coincidentally, her first movie.I remember loving the movie, the idea, the setting – finally a teen movie that was set in my current location, Arizona, the mood, the dialogue, the music and definitely the message. What also impressed me was the nonchalant take they had on homosexuality and how the main hero, Hard Harry (Slater) was so accepting of it. (Side Note: I hadn't come out yet by this point, but this certainly helped verses all the negativity surrounding the "gay lifestyle" I heard around me.)And as independent as this was, it was certainly far before it's time. Christian Slater really plays Mark, but, in what also appealed to me, by night his "Clark Kent" image of Mark was transformed into the "Superman" Hard Harry on a radio program on an unused frequency. What he was doing would be considered a podcast nowadays, only he went the long, and probably only, way around it.Literally, he didn't think anyone was listening. So this lonely kid, Mark, who was moved by his parents to a small Arizona town, babbles on the air about how bad the high school he was attending as well as the small town. Although, it sounds like he's complaining, he's actually hitting on some direct topics the parents and school board are either ignoring or were ignorant of.Well, the kids are listening, one by one, growing by the night. Namely, Nora (Mathis), the obvious "Lois Lane" of the trio of characters (if you count Clark and Supe as two), who's trying to find the identity of the voice she hears and absolutely agrees with. Oh, and is it obvious she's also in love with Hard Harry?A tragedy, one you might not expect with the direction the movie was headed, occurs and now Hard Harry's a target for parents, police, the FCC and of course the school board for what he's saying might actually be true.They all want him shut down. Naturally, all the kids want him to continue – he's their voice, each and every one of them. Only, Clark, er, Mark's conflicted and the much more shy version of Hard Harry. Leave it to Lois, er, Nora, to save the day once again by giving the real hero a backbone.I rated this with the highest rating I give: 10/10 stars. I do this for nostalgia purposes, obviously, but re-watching this movie now, after not seeing it for probably 15+ years, it really holds up today. Sure, the one message (revealed in the end) of why the school board is wronging the students is somewhat weak, the dozens of others thoroughly outweigh that revolution. Also, as mentioned, I did love (literally, I fell hard for) Mathis; she did a fantastic first job and bold – see: well, her. Further, Slater equally did a excellent job. And the soundtrack remains as one of my all time favorites. I have probably listened to Everybody Knows by Concrete Blonde 660 times since this came out.This was the un-Hollywood independent film I will cherish for all time. It wasn't splashy, it was intentionally small, it was tight and it was right. All that I wrote above about my first impressions back in 1990 hold up and I stand by them. Watch this movie and know what it was TRULY like being a teen in the early nineties.