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  1. Aug 2, 1985 · Weird Science: Directed by John Hughes. With Anthony Michael Hall, Kelly LeBrock, Ilan Mitchell-Smith, Bill Paxton. Two high-school nerds use a computer program to literally create the perfect woman, who promptly turns their lives upside-down.

  2. Weird Science is a 1985 American teen science fantasy comedy film written and directed by John Hughes and starring Anthony Michael Hall, Ilan Mitchell-Smith, and Kelly LeBrock. It is based on the 1951 pre- Comics Code comic "Made of the Future" by Al Feldstein, which appeared in the magazine of the same name.

  3. Jan 18, 2022 · With Anthony Michael Hall, Kelly LeBrock, Ilan Mitchell-Smith, Bill Paxton.Watch Weird Science : https://amzn.to/48ZsCATWeird Scienc... Directed by John Hughes.

  4. Overview. Two unpopular teenagers, Gary and Wyatt, fail at all attempts to be accepted by their peers. Their desperation to be liked leads them to "create" a woman via their computer.

  5. Jan 9, 2012 · Their desperation to be liked leads them to "create" a woman via their computer. Their living and breathing creation is a gorgeous woman, Lisa, whose purpose is to boost their confidence level by...

  6. Teen misfits Gary (Anthony Michael Hall) and Wyatt (Ilan Mitchell-Smith) design their ideal woman on a computer, and a freak electrical accident brings her to life in the form of the...

    • (40)
    • Comedy, Fantasy
    • PG-13
  7. Weird Science (1985) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  8. Weird Science was a publication of EC Comics, the publishing house best remembered for their notorious horror titles including Tales from the Crypt and The Vault of Horror.

  9. Two teenage boys, Gary Wallace and Wyatt Donnelly, are struggling socially. Girls aren't attracted to them and boys bully and embarrass them. Their lack of girlfriends leads them to try to create their own woman, Dr. Frankenstein-style, but with a computer instead of body parts.

  10. "Weird Science" combines two great traditions in popular entertainment: Inflamed male teenage fantasies and Frankenstein's monster. Then it crosses them with a new myth, that of the teenage computer geniuses who lock themselves in their bedrooms, hunch over their computer keyboards and write programs that can change the universe.