In a better movie world, filmmakers like Amy Heckerling would constitute the backbone of the industry. Heckerling doesn't have a colossal artistic reputation or rack up Academy Award nominations. She's a mainstream, commercial director, and some of her hits, such as Look Who's Talking and its sequel and National Lampoon's European Vacation, are pure, unapologetic hackwork. But she's intelligent and talented, with a special, sensitive feeling for the comedy of adolescent romantic confusion, and at least twice, in Fast Times at Ridgemont High and Clueless, she's plowed those qualities into modest-seeming projects that have taken on the status of modern classics. But Clueless came out more than a dozen years ago, and since then, Heckerling has only managed to get one new movie into theaters, the sweet but underbaked Loser (2000).
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