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Heathers

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Heathers
File:Heathers 89poster.jpg
Directed byMichael Lehmann
Written byDaniel Waters
Produced byDenise Di Novi
StarringWinona Ryder,
Christian Slater,
Shannen Doherty
Distributed byAnchor Bay
Running time
102 min.
Budget$50,000

Heathers, made in 1989, is a movie in which three out of the four girls in a trend-setting clique at Westerberg High are called Heather. They play croquet with each other and enjoy playing tricks on their classmates. It was written by Daniel Waters, directed by Michael Lehmann, and starred Winona Ryder, Shannen Doherty, and Christian Slater.

Heathers is a black comedy exploring teenage coteries as a model for satirising high school life.

#heathers is an IRC channel on EFNet run by gryph0n. It is focused on the movie Heathers, and Heathers mythology. It was formed in 1993.

Plot description

Template:Spoiler Heathers centers around a high school student named Veronica (Winona Ryder). Veronica is part of a clique of popular, pretty and wealthy girls that are called The Heathers. The reasoning is simple: other than Veronica, they all share that first name. Heather Duke (Shannen Doherty), Heather McNamara (Lisanne Falk) and Heather Chandler (Kim Walker), Veronica's best friend, encapsulate what it means to be the vacant, shallow, self-centered teenage girl.

Veronica wasn't always so popular. Although it is never fully explained how she ascended to popularity, it is made clear that she used to be good friends with one of the school's biggest nerds, Betty Finn. She is also clearly smarter and more compassionate than any of her Heather cohorts. When a new, dark boy named Jason Dean (Christian Slater), or J.D. for short, pulls a gun on school bullies Kurt (Lance Fenton) and Ram (Patrick Labyorteaux), and fires blanks at them, Veronica is intrigued.

Soon Veronica and J.D. are dating, and he accompanies her on an early morning visit to Heather Chandler's home. Veronica is furious with Heather Chandler's behaviour at a frat party and the two of them jokingly prepare a cup full of drain cleaner to bring her as a morning wake-up drink. They later decide on milk and orange juice as a vomit-inducing prank, but Veronica accidentally mixes up the cups and to her horror Heather Chandler downs the drain cleaner and begins to heave and spasm, eventually collapsing face first into a glass table and dying.

Realizing that she is the unintentional perpetrator of her best friend's murder, J.D. urges Veronica to forge a suicide note in Heather Chandler's handwriting. Veronica does so only to protect herself from prosecution. The entire school and community looks on Heather Chandler's death as a hip, if dramatic, decision in the life of a popular but troubled teenager, and everyone accepts the suicide note as authentic. Soon Heather's death becomes yesterday's news.

Weeks later J.D. concocts a plan to punish bullies Ram and Kurt for spreading gossip about Veronica. He tells her that they will lure the two guys into the forest with the promise of a three-way with Veronica, only once the bullies have stripped naked, Veronica and J.D. will shoot them with "Ich Lüge" bullets; fake bullets that will stun them unconscious long enough for Veronica and J.D. to flee. They will leave behind homosexually-oriented materials including pornographic magazines and the somewhat questionable bottled-water as well as a fake suicide note that will make it look like the two killed each other in a gay suicide pact. When they awaken, they will be humiliated.

Veronica agrees, thinking the plan is hilarious, but when she misfires and one of them doesn't get shot, J.D. goes running after him desperately. Veronica instantly realizes that the bullets were real ("Ich lüge" means "I'm lying" in German) and J.D. had intended to kill the two boys all along. J.D. managed to chase the unshot boy in a circle so that he ends up back where they started, and Veronica, in a frightened daze, shoots him dead. The plan goes off without a hitch when the boys' bodies are discovered and the two school football stars are "revealed" to be gay lovers. (In one of the more memorable moments of the film, a redneck father is seen at a funeral with a football in his hand crying out "I love my dead gay son!")

Suddenly Veronica is sucked into a world that she never intended to be a part of. Although the people they are killing were not particularly good or nice, she feels guilt for their murders. Additionally, because they were popular, other students are mimicking their behavior and attempting suicides. Most notably, obese student Martha "Dumptruck" Dunnstock (Carrie Lynn) pins a suicide note to her chest and walks into traffic. (She is not killed; instead she is horribly wounded and wheelchair bound.)

Veronica realizes she has to stop participating in these crimes with J.D., but when she tells him, he goes nuts. He reveals his plan to kill Heather Duke next, and hints that he might try to kill Veronica. Veronica, expecting him to find her and kill her, rigs a harness in her room to make it look like she has hanged herself. J.D. discovers her "body" and leaves, heartbroken. (Veronica's mother (Jennifer Rhodes) also discovers her just before she unties herself, getting quite a scare.) Before J.D. leaves, however, he reveals that he intends to blow up the entire school during a pep rally. A petition he has been circulating to get the band "Big Fun" to play was actually a cleverly disguised suicide note that almost the entire school has signed.

Veronica heads to school the next day and confronts J.D. in the boiler rooms where he is rigging dynamite to go off. They get into a gunfight where Veronica shoots off J.D.'s middle finger, and finally she forces him to disable the bomb. However, she is unable to save J.D., who later meets her outside and detonates a bomb that is strapped around his chest. Thus Veronica has literally saved the entire school without anyone knowing it. The final shot of the film is of Veronica, ash laden and bleeding, walking through the halls of the school. She confronts Heather Duke and rips a red bow from her hair (the bow which Heather Chandler is known to wear, which J.D. had given Heather Duke) and then starts up a friendly discussion with Martha Dunnstock.

The Heathers: Heather Duke, Heather McNamara, Heather Chandler, and Veronica

Alternate ending

On the DVD of Heathers, the "special features" section contains the script for an alternate ending which was considered too dark for teen audiences and nixed by New World Cinema, the distributor.

In the alternate ending, J.D. dies in the boiler room, and Veronica is shown walking through the school, though only from the back. This is interrupted by shots of the bomb counting down, showing that Veronica had not shut it off. When she reaches the front of the school, Veronica turns around, allowing the viewer to see that the bomb was strapped to her chest. It hits zero, the screen turns black, and Veronica says, "Boom." Then black letters tell the viewer that this is the prom. A banner hangs, saying "WHAT A WASTE, OH THE HUMANITY".

The students begin to dance, at first sticking with those of the same or similar social cliques. Then, when it is time for prom pictures, people from diffirent cliques are couples. A geek and a stoner pose together, then Pauline Fleming (Penelope Milford) and Principal Gowan (John Ingle). Kurt, now alive has his picture taken with the cow he had tipped. Mismatched couples continue to appear, and dead characters make their own appearances. J.D. plays a "smoking hot" guitar solo, then rushes to the dance floor to dance with Heather Duke, Kurt, and finally Heather Chandler. The Heathers do a ring-around-the-rosy. The camera is moved up to reveal Martha Dunnstock, wailing beautifully. The viewpoint is then lifted even higher to show a smiling Veronica in a "striking pose."

Those who have not seen the movie or who did not pay attention will not understand the implications of this ending. In order for the scene to be understood, one must remember that J.D. tells Veronica, in defence of his actions, that "the only place different social types can genuinely get along is in Heaven." Remembering this quote, it becomes clear that the people of Westerburg High had all died. This explains the mingling of social groups, as well as the reappearance of those who died at prom.

Despite the change of the endings, the movie failed to be a big hit. Instead it has increased in popularity over time, developing into a cult movie.

Trivia

  • The fictional Westerberg High School is named for musician Paul Westerberg.
  • Daniel Waters wrote the film for Stanley Kubrick, but struggled greatly to get the script sent to him.