Reacting to THE BREAKFAST CLUB (1985) | Movie Reaction
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- Опубліковано 13 чер 2024
- Thank you for joining me as I react to The Breakfast Club for the first time. I hope you enjoy the video and my reaction!
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Video Contents
0:00 Intro
2:03 Reaction
30:38 Review/Outro
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#thebreakfastclub #firsttimewatching #reaction
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Reacting to THE BREAKFAST CLUB (1985) | Movie Reaction - Розваги
13:55 Mister Roger's hosted a children's show for many many years, almost every American alive today grew up watching him. He was the most kind and gentle person you could imagine on camera and in real life.
agreed -- definitely worth looking up. there's a biopic of him from a few years back, but it's better to watch some actual footage of him both on set and in the talk-show circuit.
@@xylok_dnb2444 I still haven't worked up the emotional fortitude to watch the biopic yet.
@@Cerridwen7777 it's not really about him, but about a reporter hired to do a piece on him. Tom Hanks does an okay job, but there's nothing like the real thing.
If that Mister Rogers movie came out now, he'd be played by Cardi B.
After Fred Roger's died in the early 2000's, a new show , based on his principles of kindness, empathy, and friendship, was created. The main character is Daniel Tiger, a tiger cub living with his parents and baby sister. Daniel is the animated version of a puppet Mister Roger's used in his show. The characters from the original program were recreated for the animated show. The theme songs are the same. Both shows are amazing to watch.
I'll always consider myself lucky that I was a teenager when John Hughes was making films like this and wonder what the kids of subsequent generations see as their own Breakfast Clubs. Whatever that happens to be, it's difficult to believe that it holds a candle to what we were given in the 80s.
John Hughes was a genius!
What was great about Hughes as a writer was the characters said and did things appropriate for their age.
Nowadays, the dialogue and plots of far too many "teenager" shows are indistinguishable from adult shows, other than the age of the actors.
@@pwmel1 Honestly I would hesitate to call him a genius because there was a time were his writing suffered but I would definitely say that he had a gift of reading the room and keeping tabs of what was current and classic or in other words he had a gift of catching lightning in a bottle.
I agree, the 80's had some pretty damn good stuff! My fav, "St-Elmo's Fire", was also released in 1985, and starred some of this cast, this time playing their age, as young adults. Talented bunch!
In the previous decade, our biggest coming-of-age movie was, "American Graffiti" (1973), which, ironically, was a look back at the '50s! lol
(If you are not familiar, it's the film G. Lucas did just before Star Wars, it's brilliant.)
As a 90s baby, this movie was that for me. I remember seeing it as a preteen and how impactful it was. It didn’t exactly represent what high school was like for me but it did represent this universal teenage experience. It’s a timeless movie!
It's been 40 years since I was in high school (the Dutch equivalent, that is), but that scene where they're all opening up still brings tears to my eyes. This is a powerful movie.
THE classic movie of my teenage years. It's fun and entertaining, but than also deep, serious, and has a message that still applies. So much more than the typical 80s teen-comedy.
Likewise, this is the movie that resonated with me more than any other in my teenage years. Don't You (Forget About Me) remains one of my favorite songs of all time. Poor Dawn - some of the American vernacular and/or 80s references seemed to throw her a little in places.
FWIW, though it's mentioned at the end, there is never an actual explanation of the movie title. I've always chosen to interpret it to mean that these kids decided to continue getting together after this day, and realizing it wouldn't be feasible to associate in school, they opted to meet for breakfast before school once a week. I wonder how other people interpret it.
The actors playing Claire and Brian were 17 years old, Allison and Andrew were 23 and Bender was 26.
The movies you mentionned, all were filmed in the same school, actually.
If you like John Hugues movies, you may be interested to watch :
Uncle Buck (1989)
Dutch (1991)
The Great Outdoors (1988)
Planes, Trains & Automobiles (1987)
Weird Science (1985)
Career Opportunities (1991)
Class Reunion (1982) (same kind of silly humour than Airplane)
Yeah, the othe day I saw a recent interview with Anthony Michael Hall, the guy who plays Brian the Geek, and the interviewer asked him if the cast got along while filming this movie and he joked that they did get along but they didn't really spend that much time together off screen because he and Molly Ringwald (Claire, the rich girl) had to do their homework and the rest of the cast were off going to bars and spending times with their spouses and kids.
Uncle Buck is a must see. John Candy was a treasure!
*Some Kind Of Wonderful (writer)
@@gregall2178 She’s Having A Baby
I watched career opportunities last night just due to the Mr.kitty after dark fan made video.
Should have trusted my instincts. The only reason to watch that is Jennifer Connelly.
Mr. Rogers is a 'beloved American children's television character whose show ran from the 1960s till the 1990's. It was a educational show for small children.staring Fred Regers. There is a movie about the show starring Tom Banks.
Fred rogers was a national treasure, to many Americans who grew up in the 60's, 70's and 80's he was like a surrogate grandfather
He was INE of the rare celbrities that wss genuine and did not have any dark stuff in their personal life, he really cared about people and had a huge cultural impact on America by tackling hard subjects on his while in a way children could understand (topics like HUV/Aids, death, drugs, etc)
*Tom Hanks
I was in High School when this came out. I don't think that there was anybody NOT talking about it at the time. A hit me right in the feels classic.
Same here!
I graduated that same year, but didn't actually see it until it showed up on HBO a couple years later. However it does capture the culture of high school kids of that era pretty well.
Class of 85
In one of the frames at the start of the movie, you see that the cleaner won a student of the year award, they put that message in the movie to show being good in school doesn’t just guarantee a high paid job in the future
Or that he was a big man on campus then, but he's a janitor now.
It's a neat reference though too, that he and the principal have kind of the same experience. Their lives not turning out like they expected. The janitor being even lower paid than the principal, so in some ways more so in his case. Yet the janitor is friendly, not bitter, and rather a well together all around human being making the best of it. Besides some light smack talk about reading the kids notes, and hearing their conversations, he clearly likes the kids vs. the principal.
@@Logan_Baron Actually, I'll bet the janitor was paid better than the principal.
@@Logan_Baron, plus, Verner is an assistant principal. I didn't even really notice that until a couple of years ago after watching this movie regularly for many years. It explains why he was stuck doing Saturday detention and other things he didn't like.
@@Logan_Baron Ya know, it's true about Carl. He's there smiling, saying goodbye to the kids and also spent time talking with the bitter assistant principal, who I bet is rethinking a Lot of things because of him
The hot beef injection now has a whole new meaning for Dawn from now on 🤣
Did it have another meaning? 😂
@@3DJapan Well, maybe not the "injection" part. It sounds pretty obvious what it means haha
@@hissatsu4937 Sounds like a bad idea for an Arby's slogan.
In Pennsylvania we used Pork Injection!
Jesus Christ, grow up
This is my generation's angst movie, and it still hits hard as I watch it decades since I was a dumb confused teen. Hughes had a way of capturing the feeling of being a kid during some really terrifying and changing times all while making one forget all that was out there to be scared of. Brilliant movies and I am loving how you and others are rediscovering these and connecting to them.
OMFG she said "Who is Mr. Rogers." Mr Rogers was the purest soul in American kids television history, the patron saint of Gen Xers.
No one has heard if it.
Look up (Google) Fred Rogers/Mr. Roger's Neighborhood (USA)
And she would know that how?
Young people today got no culture
@@dr.burtgummerfan439
And zero respect. No wonder everyone hates them.
John Hughes was the first director who treated teenagers like they were actual human brings; people with real feelings, real problems, and real social pressure. Also, he was an absolute MASTER at using music as a way to go along with the plot.
You have an extremely limited grasp of coming of age stories if you honestly believe that. While this tells what it was like to be a teen in a very upper and middle class mid-western environment in the 80's. Hughes scrip is far from the first to get teens and young people right. You should expand your entertainment experiences Louisa May Alcott, Samuel Clemons, Betty Smith, Charles Dickens, James Baldwin, Harper Lee, Salinger, Bronte christ man the list goes on and way further back into era's most American schools fail to teach kids to read for an understanding of the actual past of this nation.
Simply put, people have been accurately telling coming of age stories since writing was invented.
@@noneya3635 yeah, ok.
@@noneya3635 That’s a great list of DIRECTORS you gave, numbnuts. Way to completely not understand the assignment🤦♂️
@@noneya3635 He said Hughes was the first director. Not the first person ever.
@@bossfan49 Yeah I can read, but Hughes was also the writer of the movie in case you missed that bit. Hence my reply about his being the first to accurately depict teens as human beings.
The best movie ever made about high school teenage peer pressure, this is why this movie is timeless
It’s about teenage peer pressure and bad parents!! They all had bad parents.
I was in high school in 1984 and this movie is very accurate to the times. At least in America. There were different cliques that only associated with others like them and shunned others. There were the jocks, burnouts, brains, cheerleaders, nerdy girls, and etc. This movie made a good point that if the different cliques spent enough time together, they would realize that they arent much different and could get along.
Yeah... except for the really weird kids that they all get together and decide to keep as outcasts. Y'know, just to cement that new feeling of solidarity.
And only Ferris Bueller could navigate them all.
I read somewhere that the Breakfast Club had an influence in schools during the 80s. People from different groups would try to come together in their own breakfast clubs. Very interesting and culturally profound movie. I showed it to my class.
Valley Girl was another early ‘80s “teen” movie worth watching with an excellent sound track.
Yep, and Fast Times and Risky Business. It's like people in the business knew what they were doing back then.
Have you been getting laid, Suzie ?
I'll stop the world and melt with you!
@@light9999especially fast times lmao.
Since you asked, in the U.S., "fag" is a slur for a gay male. It used to be frequently thrown around as an insult, but is much less sociay acceptable today than it was in the 80s.
EDIT: in answer to your subsequent question, yes, it's short for "faggot," which in the U.S. is the same slur. Nobody uses "fag" to mean a cigarette, or "faggot" to mean a bundle of sticks.
Glad someone had the stones to say it, so I don't gotta. 😌
Or meatballs.
As a born and bread Yank, first time I was driving in Britain -- some 35 years ago -- I swerved off the road because I was laughing too hard at a billboard that read "Your faggots deserve Maggie's Sauce"
It's hard enough driving on the wrong side of the road, without seeing a sign that said that as I had no clue it was talking about meatballs. I kind of thought an entirely different type of balls were involved.
Great word and it should come back.
@@BishopWalters12 What?
Where I grew up the words just means an overly sensitive guy or a dude who tries to act too straight.
I’m sick of people being offended at everything. If you’re that weak minded that you’re brainwashed to give others power then lock yourself in a room, turn off your computer and put on noise cancelling headphones.
Carl, the janitor, appears as man of the year 1969 on the high-school plaques.
He is also in 16 Candles
A great 80's soundtrack, fantastic cast of young faces, and a solid exploration of the trauma of youth. The quote from David Bowie's Changes sets the tone, and Brian's essay forms the bookends with Simple Minds' Don't You Forget About Me.
This movie became a ritual amongst my friends and I. Every Saturday night after the bar closed, we would head over to a buddy's house, continue to drink and watch this movie. We watched so often we all knew all the lines and would recite them while watching. To change things up, we decided to have each of us draw a character name from a hat and we would act out that character. Yes we were idiots, but we had fun.
St Elmo's Fire is a spiritual successor to this with kids that have just left university. From this movie Emilio Estevez, Judd Nelson (wildly different character) and Ally Sheedy alongside Andrew McCarthy (Mannequin), Rob Lowe (West Wing) and Demi Moore. These are prime Brat Pack Movies (as is Young Guns).
Then that might make Sixteen Candles the spiritual sister. Molly and Michael basically play the same characters.
A lot of the lines when they were sitting around in a circle were ad-libbed by the cast. The director John hughes wanted an authentic teenage viewpoint
“Are we gonna grow up to be our parents?”
“When you grow up, your heart dies”
The Breakfast Club is relatable to me because that's the way it was back then, I graduated in 1982. Every decade though has its Breakfast Club, there were always the trouble makers and the one-timers that end up in detention at one time or another. But everyone who has been to high school understands the struggles of teen angst, which is what the message was about, no matter what clique or category you belong to, no one can escape the pressures of being a teenager. Anyway, loved the review, love you, take care and stay safe ❤️
Great reaction, Dawn Marie. John Hughes was great at writing these coming of age movies in the 80's. I'm a GenXer, so these were definitely the conversations we were having. As far as weed goes, you get stoned pretty quickly.
"Don't You Forget About Me" is my absolve favorite '80s song. I stop whatever I'm doing and listen to it.
Mine is probably And We Danced (or 100 Years if that was 80s) but Don't You is still WAY up there.
If you want to watch another 80's film that's a bit darker but with some of the same themes, look up the criminally underrated _Pump Up The Volume,_ with Christian Slater.
Really great film👍
I love how its all connected
The neard tried to off himself with a flare gun.
Bender pulled the fire alarm it was not a false alarm.
In the beginning you see a locker that has been burnt.
Brilliant writing
It’s called The Breakfast club because in the U.S Saturday detentions used to be common (some schools and states still do them) but it was more common for them to be half day from around 7:30am to around midday with all day ones being much later. This resulted in it gaining the nickname Breakfast club.
On the location of the movie being Chicago, all John Hughes movies are either set in or involved people from Chicago, specifically a made up suburb of Shermer
So many of us related to the kids back then, and it never occurred to me that I might someday relate to the adults too.
13:25 - it's pimento loaf, a cheap lunchmeat made of chopped meat, peppers, and pickles, and often baked in a distinctive loaf shape and sliced as a cold deli meat. My mom always bought it, and that was usually my reaction to it too, I never cared much for it.
Another vote for looking up Mr. Rogers - He was the kindest man ever & a pioneer of children's television!!!
All of these from the 80's are great to watch. The Breakfast Club, Ferris Bueller. Fast Times At Ridgemont High should be on there as well. Great reaction Dawn.
What did the naked lady say 🤣 that's the universal question 🤣
I grew up during the height of the John Hughes/Brat Pack movie era of the 80s and early 90s. This has always been one of my favorites of the genre.
"We can ALL do that." *looks down, considers* "We can ALL do that!"
the actor who plays Brian is the same actor who plays rusty in National Lampoons vacation.
Loved your reactions, Dawn Marie.
This film had such an impact, when it was first released.
Incredible actors, all of whom have incredible acting careers.
Same not since the 1989 classic the wizard movie since I have seen such a good movie 😊
This flick makes me think of back in school days. I can't recall the specifics of it, but there was a group of 6 or 7 of us who would have a free session in the library. Because we didn't have as full a course load for semester, it left an open frame for like 48 minutes on some days, so the school scheduled all of our free sessions tossed into the same lot together. It wasn't any sort of detention or punishment, but we were supposed to report to library instead of roaming the halls. We didn't have the same classes, so sometimes some of us had work, and sometimes we all just casualized and talked random stuff to fill the time til next class started and we went our ways for what was left of the day. I can't remember who they all were, no idea where any are now. But part of me wouldn't mind being tossed back into the situation, if even for an hour
That is part of the appeal of this movie, whether we met other kids in detention or a playground when we might not have met them otherwise.
I think it's so popular because everyone can identify with something in the movie. I identified heavily with Brian since I was in the chess club and honor society. I remember the popular kids, and the jocks, and the stoners. We were all figuring out who we were even if most of us didn't know it at the time.
I dunno, man... I relate most to the space cadet and even she was cooler than I was. And that makeover nonsense is nothing more than "cool girl" charity. Come Monday you're just as messy and hated as ever. It's hard to watch people who had a place, even if it was low on the totem. The 80s was the worst, man.
I guess I am closest to the jock, since I played QB in football, captain of Tennis team. But I also got pretty near all As in multiple Honors classes, Physics, Calculus etc so I was near the top of my class, NHS, Student Council etc. And I drank beer and partied!! And we constantly quoted Monty Python skits. 😊
Never did any detention, which I heard was just a study hall anyway.
When I heard Dawn asked for a pencil in detention, I knew she would be our prison gang leader.
I'm in!
John attacks everyone in the library except Allison. The reason being; Claire, Andrew and Brian are conformists while Allison is not. When Andrew tells John to stay away from Claire, John responds with "I'm trying to help her". His goal is to break everyone out of their conformity. The victorious fist pump at the end is his celebration of successfully achieving his goal.
They call themselves The Breakfast Club because they gathered at breakfast time.
Bender(the cool guy) was 25 in real life when making this movie. The jock and weirdo girl was 23, and the nerd and the popular girl were both 17 years old when filming the movie.
I've always wondered why this NEVER became a stage presentation. One set, character strong, deep dialog, great music.... And a very Universal message.?.?.
This really IS a fantastic flick. They nailed so much about high school, families, even the principal's interaction with the janitor, it's all so relatable.
_"I bet she tried to kill someone."_ Yeah, she got detention for attempted murder 😄 That's how we do it in The States.
normally it's just a slap on the wrist!
I'm married to a Brit. Their jail sentences are way more lenient and life in jail NEVER means that there.
Detention for doing a half assed job :)
I know, right? She really played right into stereotyping someone based on physical appearance then laughed at some of the most poignant comments. "When you grow up your heart dies." Allison doesn't mean it in the literal sense. But in the emotional sense. Also, Allison is the only one who chooses not to get high.
My mom dropped me off at the mall to see this flick when it came out lol. Loved growing up in the late 70s and 80s. Such great memories.
1985's "Don't You (Forget About Me)" was performed by the Scottish band called Simple Minds.
One of the most underrated bands of the 80s. New Gold Dream and Once Upon a Time are remarkable albums.
As for the ages when the film was made, Judd Nelson (Bender) was the oldest and about 24. Two were about 21 while Hall and Ringwald were the only actual teenagers.
The school in this movie is the same one in Ferris Bueller's day off
The meat she tossed on the statue out of her sandwich is olive and pimento loaf. Basically olives in bologna. I had it a lot as a kid and remember loving the stuff. Also every John Hughes movie is in a ficticus neighborhood in the Chicago suburbs called Shermer, Illinois. Essentially it's the North surburbs that they're always shot in, I used to play an annual american football game right in those neghborhoods for a couple years.
One of my favorite John Hughes movies that no one reacts to is Some Kind of Wonderful.
Awesome movie. I had such a crazy crush on Watts (Mary Stuart Masterson) in that movie. I mean, WOW. That short hair, the attitude, those clothes...and her hiding her crush on Keith the whole time.
Yeah, that one was fun. It had the ending Pretty in Pink should have had.
Hi!. Answering one of your questions, "the breakfast club" was a slang term that teenagers in the 80's used to referred to those that got detention, because it was in the morning.
The original title of the film was "The Lunch Bunch". Good thing someone talked John Hughes into changing it!! 😄
So "Breakfast Club" doesn't mean anything? It just sounded better than "Lunch Bunch"? Hm... fair.
@@BeeWhistler"Breakfast Club" was a term some schools had for detention because the students would arrive early in the morning (around breakfast time) for detention.
Emilio Estevez (Athlete) was 23 making Breakfast Club, Judd Nelson (Criminal) was 25, Molly Ringwald (princess) was 17, Ally Sheedy (basketcase) was 23, Anthony Michael Hall (brain) was 17
ALLIISON LOOKED BETTER BEFORE THE MAKEOVER!!!
Truth.
I watched to hear Dawn Marie sing 🎶and great bonus was the wonderful 80s classic movie reaction too!
This is my favorite movie of all time, as an outcast in high school myself, Bender is one of the best characters of all time. Yeah, he's harsh, but because of him they all end up friends at the end of the day. Marijuana is the drug that brings people together... LOL It is true though...
The good ol peace pipe
@SMC GmailNope? Speak for yerself. U obviously have never toked with friends b4.
@@dannyjoe3343 Alright, it makes you smell like a dumpster fire. Life is challenging enough without smoking yourself stupider.
@SMC Gmail Lol, I’ve never heard of ‘weed parties,’ just parties🤦♂️
Loved your reaction. No matter how many years pass, teenagers and peer pressure will always be there.
The quintessential 80s teen movie, all due respect to Amy Heckerling's Fast Times At Ridgemont High, Cameron Crowe's Say Anything and all the other great John Hughes movies. It captured pretty much every white teenage stereotype at that time. Some people criticize John Hughes films for lack of diversity, and while we can criticize his depiction of Asian people in an otherwise instant classic like Sixteen Candles, he was a white guy from a small town near Chicago. He wrote scripts and made movies about things he was familiar with. It would have come off like Dave Chappelle in Robin Hood: Men In Tights at best, anyway. I find the character of Allison and how Ally Sheedy plays her, fascinating because even though I'm a guy, I was a lot like her in high school. Sure, I had the glasses that fit the nerd stereotype, and instead of ignoring me, my dad abused me, but the way she behaves brings back memories. One minute you're trying to convince people you don't care if they like you, the next you're volunteering information nobody asked for and making up stories just to fit in. As a writer, that "compulsive liar" thing got me. I had to lie about everything to preserve my sanity growing up, until I didn't know what the truth was anymore.
FERRIS BUELLER was 10 times funnier. That's the ultimate 80s teen movie. Close 2nd, Mischief.
Molly Ringwald is much different. Wont let her daughter see this movie because of the (what she calls) sexual assault scene with Bender under the desk. She says John Hughes was sus for putting those things in his movies. She and her parents had no problems with it back then.
I'm with her.
An added note, Americans, especially around the mid-80's, intimacy was culturally very different than Europe; much more personal and serious for teens especially. A good percentage of teens had no sex until well after high-school, and almost always the pair was deeply in-love regardless. The weight of it is much more serious in USA, or at least it was then.
"The Breakfast Club" is what some schools in the U.S. call Saturday detention because they arrive early in the morning for it, it's a nickname.
The Breakfast Club, 1985
Judd Nelson, who played the rebellious John, was 25. Ally Sheedy (Allison) and Emilio Estevez (Andrew) were both 23. At just 17, Molly Ringwald (Claire), and Anthony Michael Hall (Brian) were the youngest members of the central cast.
"Fast Times at Ridgemont High"..... is another great 80s teen movie centered around high school.
I recommend the speech that Mr. Rogers gave to Congress to convince them to fund public television. It's the most moving speech you'll ever hear. (And it was a week after I was born.)
Epilogue : In five years Bender grew up and became an award winning sociologist, married Clair, hired Brian as his accountant/broker, the jock and basketcase moved to Oslo together and lived in peace with mutual adoration and respect. Principal realized 37k a year wasn’t worth it even in the 80’s and did a thing and isn’t around anymore. Carl is still the eyes and ears of this institution.
Good reaction. This is a classic coming-of-age teen film of the 80s (for the US at least), assisted by a great hit from one of Scotland's finest rock bands of the decade, Simple Minds!
The way it leaves it open for the viewer to decide how the relationships between the cast will progress (or not) means you can interpret the future for these four as you want, and that's a key part of its success.
I was a theater manager when this movie came out and I was one of those strict managers. Children are not allowed into Rated R movies without a parent or legal guardian. We previewed this the night before it opened. I then had a meeting with my staff and made up a sign for the boxoffice window. I decided that any age should see this regardless of MPAA restrictions. I still believe that. 🍿
Gee, thanks. You're the reason the kids in my middle school class wouldn't stfu about it.
"... and these children that you spit on as they try to change their worlds are immune to your consultations. They're quite aware of what they're going through" Is what that title said from David Bowie, I don't know if he said that precisely from the movie itself or if he said it more generally and they used it for the movie.
He also did an introduction for The Snowman a highly drawn cartoon that used to always be shown usually on Christmas day itself, he did this introduction at the very beginning, I never used to realise it was him to be honest lol. Bowie died from Liver cancer in 2016 very, very sadly (was never a fan of his music but he was just amazing as a person).
The characters (known more generally as the Brat Pack, a play on the term Rat Pack from the 50s and 60s):
Claire's popularity subjects her to intense peer pressure, while her bickering parents use her against each other; she received detention for skipping school to go shopping.
John reveals the physical abuse he and his mother suffer at the hands of his father, including cigarette burns, as well as other injuries he has sustained from his father physically abusing him. He is serving detention for pulling a false fire alarm.
Andrew became influenced by jock culture and is intimidated by his father to succeed in wrestling. He was given detention for taping a student's buttocks together in an attempt to win both his teammates' and his father's approval.
Brian is under so much academic pressure from his parents to get good grades that he contemplated suicide after getting an F in shop class. He was sent to detention for bringing a flare gun to school to kill himself.
Allison is compulsively dishonest with neglectful parents, constantly stealing things to use should she ever run away from home. She admits that she showed up to detention for lack of anything better to do.
When I was a teenager I was a rare type of person. I got on with everyone. I mostly hung out with the nerdy types because I found them to be the most interesting, but I was never intimidated by popular kids or pretty girls and they accepted me because of that. I was never bullied or excluded from any of the cliques. I was a long-haired weirdo who dressed in black all of the time, but I dated a gorgeous ballerina from a rich family for all four years and she was every bit as confused, scared and insecure as anyone I knew despite how respected she was. Because of that I've participated in so many conversations like the one that these guys had toward the end of this movie. I was an ambassador. It's crazy just how accurate this is. The constant switches between petty squabbling and absolute empathy that occur over the span of that scene are exactly what kids this age are like when they talk honestly with one another.
That’s not rare at all
The flare gun went off in Brian's locker. We saw his locker at the beginning of the film. All burnt.
Most teen films feature actors that are not teenagers, but in their twenties that could pass as 17-19. Judd Nelson was 25 when this move came out (his birthday is in November, he'd turn 26 at that time), Emilio Estevez was 23, Ally Sheedy was 22-23, Molly Ringwald & Anthony Michael Hall were both 17, a true rarely to be actual teenagers, but both were experienced actors; Molly was on the TV series The Facts of Life when she was 11-12 years old, and of course Anthony Michael Hall was in National Lampoon's Vacation when he was 15.
They were talking about the different types of clubs the school offered and since they had to be in detention at 7 am (breakfast time) this is most likely the reason Brian chose to make it a club that meets at breakfast time.
John Hughes made his single cameo in this movie and no others. When Brian comes out and goes to the red car (Reliant) his Mom and Sister dropped him off in his Dad (John Hughes) is in the driver's seat, no lines just sits and waits for Brian to get in.
Judd Nelson (Bender) was the oldest actor of the ones playing the students, at the time of filming he was 25. Anthony Michael Hall (Brian) was the youngest at 17.
The Breakfast Club just meaning they had to report to detention at 7am, breakfast, and the 5 of them a club.
Things I never noticed about this movie until you pointed them out. Brian having to deal with his little general standing at attention and Alison’s two different types of bread on her sandwich.
This movie came out when I was a sophomore in highschool in the 80s, funny how timeless it is almost 40 years later... don't forget about the movie "Sixteen Candles" which featured Michael Anthony Hall and Molly Ringwald a couple of years before this...
Funny you noticed the similarity between this movie and Ferris Bueller. It was created by the same director, John Hughes. He was a master at making 1980's films based on teenage or young adult life. As an homage to his hometown of Chicago his movies were almost always set there and most of them contained a school named Shermer. He also used many of the same young cast members that are in this movie in a lot of his others. Among his other films are Pretty in Pink, Weird Science, Home Alone and National Lampoon's Vacation.
I find that movie amazing in that it basically takes place in one room, yet it's great from beginning to end. The writing was spot on.
"Is it quick, is it instant?"
Inhaling is quick, though it can feel like it's instant if you hold your breath (you're mostly just feeling the effects of mild hypoxia for the first five to ten seconds).
Approximate ages of the cast - The Breakfast Club was filmed in 1984 (per Wikipedia)..
22yrs - Ally Sheedy born 1962
22yrs - Emilio Estevez born 1962
16yrs - Molly Ringwald born 1968
16yrs - Anthony Michael Hall born 1968
25yrs - Judd Nelson born 1959
*Hall (dork) and Ringwald (ginger) were 17 when this came out. But Estevez (jock) and Sheedy (goth) were 23 and Nelson (cool guy) was 30.* For most of it's history, Hollywood rarely cast actual teenagers to play teenagers.
If you look closely at the trophy case during the introduction, you can see a picture of the 'Student of the Year'. It's the janitor when he was a student there.
As a perpetual outsider in school this movie hits hard. I could relate to a bit of everybody.
I could relate to almost no one. I really have a love/hate thing with 80s movies. There's some fond memories but also stirred up anger. It was an ugly decade.
Your reactions are precious. You always make me smile. Thanks kiddo.
The mom that drops off Brian is Anthony Michal Hall's real mom. The dad that picks up Brian at the end is John Hughes.
My favorite movie as a teen. Weird Science and Better Off Dead are the others. Thanks for the reaction!
Almost all John Hughes movies (The Breakfast Club, Planes, Trains & Automobiles, Weird Science, Ferris Bueller's Day Off, Sixteen Candles, Pretty in Pink, Uncle Buck, Home Alone , and National Lampoon's Vacation) films take place in Shermer, Illinois, a fictional suburb of Chicago
Remeber earlier in the film Claire talks about joining clubs? Thats the meaning of The Breakfast club.
Best reaction to this movie I’ve seen! Also, after watching this movie for over 30 years, it’s the first time I realized that Allie’s character had two different types of bread.
When I was in college, I had a professor that would say, "Good morning, breakfast-clubbers!" when he walked into class in the morning. I always thought it was because we were there early.
When my friend went to Florida State University back in the day (80 something, early 90 something), this movie was required watching for psychology class.
You must watch A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood now to get the Mr. Rogers reference.
This brought back so many memories from high school, good and bad, thank you Dawn 🍻
Mr. Rogers Is a American TV host of a children show who teaches children with values and life lessons with puppets kinda like a way to teach them the right things to do!
What a wimpy high school! In my high school, if the guys weren't fighting, the chicks would. One girl was proud of the black eye she got, from another girl in a fight, was proud it became part of her high school yearbook photo.
Ever since I was in high school (in the 90s) and from what my son said (just graduated this year) pretty much no one uses lockers. My son says they are given 4 minutes to go from one class, to their locker, and to the next class so they just carry 40lb backpacks.
She says it so often I think she truly believes she is a genius. makes me laugh my ass off every time she says it.
When Bender says your wearing it, he is referring to Clair's Diamonds, she can afford diamonds and he cant afford food.
"Shop class" usually meant working with power tools and making things out of wood. "Auto shop" was focused on fixing cars. Most of these classes were phased out over 30 years ago due to school budget cuts, and as a result, most kids today can't fix a flat tire or change the oil in their car.
Same with Civics, Home Economics, and Drivers Education.
For a very not John Hughes take on high school, you might want to take a look at Rock 'n Roll High School (1979) a musical comedy featuring the punk rock band The Ramones. And for a very very very not John Hughes take on high school there's Heathers (1989), a dark comedy staring Wynonna Rider and Christian Slater.
John Bender (the "bad boy") actor was 25 at the time of the movie shooting. So not exactly 17 but still passable. We had kids who looked like that in my high school that's for sure, as well as 17 year olds that look like 13...