Cheerleaders' Wild Weekend

Last updated
Cheerleaders Wild Weekend
Starring Kristine DeBell
Jason Williams
Distributed by Dimension Pictures
Release date
  • 1979 (1979)
CountryUSA
LanguageEnglish

Cheerleaders' Wild Weekend is a 1979 cheerleader comedy film. It was also known as The Great American Girl Robbery. [1]

Contents

Roger Ebert derided the film as a "Dog of the Week" in an episode of Sneak Previews in 1979. [2]

Plot

The movie begins with fifteen cheerleaders from three rival high schools — Pierce High (the "good girls"), Polk High (the "soul sisters"), and Darwell (the snobby rich girls) — boarding a bus for the state competition in Sacramento. Also on board are their driver and a chaperone/nurse named Frankie.

On the way, the girls entertain themselves by teasing other drivers, including a famous scene where they distract a farmer so much that he nearly drives off the road. However, the mood shifts when the bus is stopped at a remote roadblock by what appears to be a police officer.

The "officer" is actually part of a group of disgruntled, washed-up former football players led by Wayne Mathews. Wayne was a star quarterback whose career ended due to a "bum arm," and he has recruited his former teammates and his younger brother, Billy, to help him execute a $2 million ransom plot.

The kidnappers hijack the bus and take the girls to a secluded cabin in the woods. Wayne’s goal is strictly financial, and he tries to keep his more aggressive teammates from harming the girls. However, tensions rise as some of the men show predatory behavior, and it is revealed that Frankie (the chaperone) was actually in on the plot from the beginning.

While held captive, the film takes several bizarre tonal shifts:

Realizing no one is coming to save them, the cheerleaders finally put aside their rivalries. In one of the film's most famous "ingenious" scenes, the girls strip down to their underwear and tie their panties together to create a long rope for an escape attempt.

The ending features a chaotic series of events:

The film concludes with a mix of the girls being rescued and the kidnappers (specifically the Mathews brothers) managing a sort of "redemption" through their successful, albeit criminal, "last play".

Cast

Production

Development

The film was produced during the peak of the 1970s drive-in exploitation era by Chuck Russell, marking his debut as a film producer. Russell would later find mainstream success directing films such as The Mask (1994) and Eraser (1996). [4] The project was financed by executive producer Bill Osco, a veteran of the "sexploitation" genre known for Flesh Gordon and the 1976 musical version of Alice in Wonderland . [5]

The film was originally shot under the title The Great American Girl Robbery. During post-production, the title was changed to Cheerleaders' Wild Weekend to capitalize on the commercial popularity of the "cheerleader exploitation" subgenre established by films like The Swinging Cheerleaders (1974). [6] In various international markets and television syndication, the film was released under the titles Bus 17 Is Missing and The Day the Cheerleaders Were Kidnapped. [5]

Casting

The cast featured several mainstays of the 1970s cult film circuit. Kristine DeBell was cast as the lead cheerleader, Debbie, following her rise to fame in Osco's Alice in Wonderland. Jason Williams, who also received a co-writing credit on the screenplay, portrayed the lead antagonist, Wayne Mathews. [7] Marilyn Joi, known for her work in the blaxploitation and women in prison genres, was cast as the leader of the rival squad from Polk High. [6]

Filming and post-production

Principal photography took place in California on a limited budget. The production utilized cinematographer Paul Ryan, who later earned acclaim for his work on A River Runs Through It (1992). [4]

Critics have noted that the film suffers from an inconsistent tone, fluctuating between high-stakes kidnapping drama, slapstick comedy, and "cheesecake" eroticism. [2] According to production history documented in later home media releases, several scenes were edited or re-dubbed to mitigate the intensity of the violence and racial tension to ensure an R-rating for the domestic market. [7]

Critical reception

Upon its release, Cheerleaders' Wild Weekend received generally negative reviews from contemporary critics, many of whom found its mixture of kidnapping drama and lighthearted comedy jarring. Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel featured the film as their "Dog of the Week" on the television program Sneak Previews, with Ebert criticizing its "schizoid" tone and low production values. [2]

Retrospective reviews have been somewhat more balanced, often viewing the film as a curiosity of the late-1970s drive-in era. Brian Albright, in his book Wild Beyond Belief!, noted that while the film lacks the polished execution of later films produced by Chuck Russell, it serves as a notable example of the "cheerleader exploitation" subgenre's transition into more thriller-oriented territory. [4] On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a limited audience score, with critical consensus highlighting the performance of Kristine DeBell and the film's "bizarre" plot twists. [8]

Home media

For several decades, the film was primarily available via low-quality VHS releases under its alternate titles, such as Bus 17 Is Missing. These versions were often heavily edited for television broadcast, removing much of the film's R-rated content. [5]

In October 2024, the film underwent a significant restoration and was released on Blu-ray by the MVD Rewind Collection. This "Special Edition" release included a high-definition transfer from the original 35mm camera negative and featured a variety of bonus materials, including interviews with cast members and a retrospective look at the production's place in exploitation cinema history. [6]

References

  1. Review at DVD Talk
  2. 1 2 3 Ebert, Roger (November 1979). "Dogs of the Week". Sneak Previews. PBS. WTTW.
  3. "Anne Marie Wharton". CaliforniaBirthIndex.org. born on January 11, 1955 in Los Angeles County, California.
  4. 1 2 3 Albright, Brian (2008). Wild Beyond Belief!: 20 Years of Nixon, Movies, and the American Blaxploitation Era. McFarland & Company. p. 214. ISBN   978-0786431762.
  5. 1 2 3 Stull, Kevin (2012). The Drive-In Film Guide: 1970-1979. Independent Press. p. 88.
  6. 1 2 3 Cheerleaders' Wild Weekend: Special Edition Blu-ray Liner Notes (Media notes). MVD Rewind Collection. October 2024.
  7. 1 2 Russell, Chuck (1995). "From Exploitation to Blockbusters: An Interview". Genre Magazine. 14 (2).
  8. "Cheerleaders' Wild Weekend". Rotten Tomatoes . Retrieved May 22, 2025.