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It appears your browser does not have it turned on. Please see your browser settings for this feature. EMBED for wordpress. Want more? Advanced embedding details, examples, and help! Publication date Topics breakfast , breakfast club , highschool , john hughes Language English. Five high school students, all with different mindsets, face detainment in their school library on a Saturday morning.

As time passes by, their egos fade and they become close buddies. Addeddate Identifier the. But one other thing they do have in common is a nine hour detention in the school library together on Saturday, March 24, , under the direction of Mr.

Vernon, supervising from his office across the hall. Each is required to write a minimum one thousand word essay during that time about who they think they are.

At the beginning of those nine hours, each, if they were indeed planning on writing that essay, would probably write something close to what the world sees of them, and what they have been brainwashed into believing of themselves. But based on their adventures during that nine hours, they may come to a different opinion of themselves and the other four. Parental Guide. Back in the s when "The Breakfast Club" debuted, I was in my early 20s and never got around to watching it.

I know it is considered a classic so I finally saw it tonight And, after having watched it, I really wish I hadn't.

I think most of the reason is because I am The story is about five teens who are forced to go to Saturday detention at their high school. The teacher supervising them mostly leaves them alone As for the five, they all seem to be caricatures--archetypes of sorts. And, through the course of the film you slowly begin to learn more about them.

As I said, I am hardly the age for this one. However, even aside from that, I can think of quite a few 80s teen films that are simply more fun to watch I just felt bored as I watched "The Breakfast Club" By the way, one scene would probably be seen today by many as a sexual assault.

When the punk kid Judd Nelson is hiding under the table, he buries his head in a girl's crotch and she clearly did NOT want him to do this. Perhaps it was funny in the 80s Sensitivities have definitely changed. It still has its freshness, and while I never had a detention when I was in school even from what I've heard from people who have this actually makes detentions cool. And it is still relevant not only to the teenagers back then but now too, it does ring true a vast majority of the time what with its justified grievances, self-pitying whinges and hard-hitting home truths.

The cinematography is nice and fluid, typical Hughes really, and the soundtrack adds to the film's coolness. Hughes directs wonderfully, and the script and story are well written and I think memorable. In conclusion, I love this film, while not perfect I like it more every time I see it.

The 80s was the decade of the Brat Pack and the decade of John Hughes who did films that spoke to teens and 20 somethings of the era. His enduring classic was The Breakfast Club a character study of a cross section of teen America of the Reagan years. In my childhood and adolescent years the culture had a great divide on what made the young tick.

All the kids were wholesome and clean cut. The polar opposite was found on the big screen in Rebel Without A Cause and dozens of pale imitations of hot rodding kids. And the girls for the most part were just orbiting satellites around the males. The teen princess Molly Ringwald and the weird girl Ally Sheedy are most definitely not satellites around the males.

Although Ringwald could have shown up on The Donna Reed Show she like the others is a complex character with her own issues regarding school and life. Sheedy was something unique, an oddball who not only doesn't fit in but regards that as a virtue.

Not that people weren't like her in real life, but just not shown on the big screen or small. Superficially both of those could be Donna Reed or Brady Bunch characters.



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