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The black-and-white checkered Vans Sean Penn wore in "Fast Times at Ridgemont High" became a fashion trend.
James Van Doren, the man who designed the classic Vans shoes that Sean Penn's Jeff Spicoli wore in 1982's "Fast Times at Ridgemont High," died Oct. 12, and the news started us thinking about how movie fashions often seep off the screen and into our closets.
As the Hollywood Reporter notes in Van Doren's obit, Vans were already popular when "Fast Times" came out. Skateboarders loved them because they helped them get a good grip on the board. But the shoes, especially the black-and-white checked ones Penn wears in the movie, blew up after the rest of the world saw them. Recently we've even seen toddler versions.
Ray-Ban Wayfarers had their own publicity surge after Tom Cruise wore them in 1983's "Risky Business," and knockoffs are still sold as "Risky Business" shades today. 1977's "Annie Hall" inspired women to layer blazers over vests, skirts and boots. (The costumer on "Annie Hall" didn't agree, reportedly telling Woody Allen he had to make Diane Keaton dress differently.)
1999's "The Matrix" also was a fashion inspiration, from Neo's swirling black coat to Morpheus' sunglasses that lacked earpieces, though not every moviegoer could pull off Trinity's skintight catsuit.
Not all memorable movie fashions are those you want to imitate, of course. Even if you admired Molly Ringwald's Andie in "Pretty in Pink" for her sense of thrift-store DIY style, we've yet to meet anyone who wanted to wear the prom dress she whipped up.
Are you a fan of Vans? What about Ray-Ban Wayfarers? What other movie fashions do you remember leaping off the big screen and into America's closets?
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Dude, that was my skull!
Why was he coming out of the back? Because people on 'ludes should NOT drive.
....please.....movies have influenced viewers taste in design since the days of the flappers......so this writer is off only by about 50 years........
I think the Ray-ban Wayfarer fashion began with the Blues Brothers in the late 1970s - they were already everywhere by the time Tom Cruise donned them in Risky Business in 1983 and Don Henley immortalized them in 'Boys of Summer' in 1984.
Saw these trends on their 'first run'. Loved the Ray-Bans, hated the Vans, and I still do.