Higher Learning

"Question the knowledge."

The third film by Oscar-nominated director John Singleton, following Boyz N the Hood and Poetic Justice. It's often considered Singleton's first "white" film, although the main protagonist is still black.

Malik Williams (Omar Epps), Kristen Connor (Kristy Swanson), and the mysterious "Remy" (Michael Rapaport) are freshmen at the fictional Columbus University somewhere in Southern California. While at first glance the school appears to be a highly idealistic, utopian sort of place, there are seething undercurrents just below the surface that will become more prominent over time. Surveying the campus's colorful mosaic of student life is Dr. Maurice Phipps (Laurence Fishburne), a West Indian immigrant turned political science professor who mentors both Malik and Kristen.

As the story progresses, three lives gradually come to be changed forever. Malik becomes more and more disillusioned with the supposed promise offered by higher education, while Kristen and Remy are both radically transformed by their sometimes traumatic and always bewildering experiences.

Also features rapper Ice Cube as the charismatic Fudge, and Jennifer Connelly as the feminist Taryn.

This film contains examples of:
[* [[Screw This, I'm Outta Here:
 * All There Is to Know About "The Crying Game": About the only two scenes that people tend to remember about this movie (assuming they remember anything about it) are  and   kissing on top of   bed (because, well....) and   crouched on the roof of a campus building clutching a sniper rifle (because the scene was parodied in Don't Be a Menace To South Central While Drinking Your Juice In The Hood).
 * Anger Montage: Remy trashing his dorm room after Malik calls him names.
 * Anvilicious: During the "Take Back the Night" rally, a woman in the crowd holds a sign that reads "Rape is A Crime". That said it's more nuanced than most films of its day when it comes to addressing racism and sexism.
 * Bald of Evil: The neo-Nazi skinheads, of course.
 * Bi the Way: it's never really made clear if Kristen is actually Bi sexual or just curious. Aside from the merest teasing of a sexual relationship with Taryn (although it's implied that they did), some hand holding, and a kiss (which may or may not have really happened), we only actually see her have sex with men. Of course when she was having sex with her boyfriend she was thinking of Taryn.
 * Black Comedy Rape: Granted, it's at the expense of the rapist rather than the victim herself - but it's still quite jarring.
 * Bow Chicka Wow Wow: Rare non-ironic post-1970s example. (It's used to underscore tense or turbulent scenes.)
 * Bully Hunter:  is a deconstruction. Although a victim of bullying, the targets of his wrath progress from the bullies themselves (Fudge and his friends) to black people in general to non-white people in general to all of the above people and fellow whites who do not subscribe to his neo-Nazi views. No wonder that he finally decides to Kill'Em All.
 * But Not Too Gay:  and   are barely even allowed to kiss onscreen.
 * Cluster F-Bomb: When Remy finally snaps and pulls a gun on both Malik and a Jewish student.
 * Cry for The Devil: "I wanted to build things! I wanted to be an engineer!"
 * Downer Ending:
 * Everything Is Racist: Both Malik and Remy come to view the world through this lens.
 * Genius Bruiser: For such a ne'er-do-well, Fudge sure is enamored with black literature.
 * Hey, It's That Guy! / Retroactive Recognition:
 * Stanley Mellish is Remy's roommate.
 * Leatherface plays one of the Nazis.
 * Veronica Vaughn is the Alpha Bitch who befriends Kristen.
 * Innocent Bigot: Kristen. Having grown up in a community with scarcely any black people, she at first thinks of Malik as a Scary Black Man (which he eventually becomes later in the film, but that's another matter) and becomes visibly afraid when he gets on an elevator with her. (Malik just contemptuously rolls his eyes.) And even after embracing student activism, Kristen still comes off as prejudiced when she tells a sympathetic male character that he can't join a non-sexist student group because....well, because he's a man (i.e., men are naturally sexist). (He calls her out on her hypocrisy, though, and she realizes her mistake.)
 * Jerk Jock: Deconstructed. Much of Malik's swaggering attitude stems from feelings of inadequacy, which in turn can be traced both to his being awarded only a partial scholarship to Columbus and to the other athletes on the track team, who resent him for the supposed pampering he received from his coaches in high school.
 * Kick the Son of A Bitch: Billy (the fratboy rapist) gets beaten up for the wrong reason, but he still arguably had it coming.
 * Narm
 * The montage alternating between Kristen and Remy decorating their dorm rooms (to two radically different styles of music) is slightly wacky.
 * That bizarre, pseudo-British accent the leader of the neo-Nazis uses.
 * Not So Different: See Everything Is Racist above.
 * N-Word Privileges: Fudge seems to think he has them.
 * Patriotic Fervor: Deliberately evoked in the very first post-credits image of the film, but then subverted and/or deconstructed.
 * Positive Discrimination: Yes and no. While it's true that the movie has a black protagonist given top billing and thus by default is going to be sympathetic to the black perspective, Singleton at first (with a few exceptions) avoids turning any character into a clear hero or villain, establishing that they're all capable of Jerkass behavior at times (and, ironically, when we first meet him,  comes off as the most sympathetic character!) Singleton eventually makes the neo-Nazis the stereotyped villains, of course, but what's remarkable is not that this trope is present in the movie at all, but that it's applied so sparingly for a 1990s Hollywood film.
 * Salt and Pepper
 * Kristen and her roommate, Monet.
 * Also literally invoked by an interracial couple at a Halloween costume party.
 * See also Professor Phipps's repeated line: "Peppermint?"
 * Screaming Warrior: Omar Epps, dramatically. Busta Rhymes, hilariously.
 * Something Completely Different: In this film, we are presented with something not seen in a mainstream American film since The Birth of a Nation 80 years earlier: white-supremacist characters who are actually relatable and semi-sympathetic (though without the blatant hero-worship of D. W. Griffith's film, of course). We get a definite sense of what prompted  Face Heel Turn and why he would think himself justified in his attitudes and actions. (It could even be argued that this film helped to set the stage for American History X three years later, in which the skinhead is actually redeemed.)
 * Soundtrack Dissonance: When Remy is introduced he is seen hanging up posters of heavy metal bands like Danzig, while political, multi-racial Rage Against the Machine plays in the background. Later after his
 * Split-Screen Phone Call: Billy's conversation with Monet.
 * Straw Feminist: Averted with Taryn, and with Kristen as well (except in the Innocent Bigot example above). Some of their followers, however, do fit the mold - including one who apparently wants to see rapists lynched.
 * Strawman U: Columbus actually doesn't start out as this (being a fairly typical California college campus, even with some Animal House-type mischief), but becomes increasingly so as tensions escalate.
 * Suddenly Sexuality: It's actually Kristen who asks Taryn to sleep with her, but Taryn refuses believing that Kristen is merely "curious" and discouraged by men at the moment. It's implied that they do, or at least Kristen really wanted to.
 * Third Line, Some Waiting: Played straight and then subverted. Remy barely appears during the first third of the movie, but then his story gradually starts to take over and becomes paramount.
 * This Is Reality: Dr. Phipps lays this out for Malik during one of his private lectures to him. (Then again, in a later scene, he paradoxically hints that "All this is a game!")
 * Title Drop: The poet at the festival.
 * Wacky Fratboy Hijinx: During rush week.
 * What Might Have Been:
 * Leonardo Di Caprio was originally cast as Remy, but had to leave due to his commitment to The Quick and The Dead.
 * Drew Barrymore was almost cast as Kristen, but appeared in Boys On The Side, Mad Love, and Batman Forever instead.
 * White-Haired Pretty Girl: Desperate to fit in with the Dumb Blonde girls who befriend her, Kristen dyes her hair as blonde as possible on the night of the rush party. This causes the hair to appear such a pale cream color that it is almost white. After  and breaks off her friendship with the older girls, Kristen's hair reverts to its natural brown color.
 * White Mask of Doom: The skinheads hide behind grotesque theatrical masks that resemble skulls while assaulting an interracial couple (justified, since it's Halloween).
 * Women Are Wiser: The female characters definitely seem to have their wits together more often than their male counterparts, especially the character of Deja (Tyra Banks).
 * You Have to Have Jews: Remy's roommate is a very stereotyped Jew.