Marketplace | Breakfast Club, The The Breakfast Club Movie Review One film of the 80s decade, The Breakfast Club remains an entertaining film which evokes nostalgia among many viewers. Inevitably, a foray into the cinema blockbusters of the 1980s, discussing a number of titles, like Back To The Future, Beverly Hills Cop and The Goonies. The Breakfast Club is certainly one of those films, and it is almost universally cited as one of the films par excellence of the era. If you like movies relationship, it is easy to see why, because The Breakfast Club is a movie built solely on the strength of its characters and the conflict that surrounds them.
Shermer High School Principal Richard Vernon (Paul Gleason) oversees the Saturday morning detention of five high school students from different backgrounds. confining them to the library, it fails to refer to them as individuals with a future or a goal. Making up the cast of misfit characters are Andy Clark (Emilio Estevez), Brian Ralph Johnson (Anthony Michael Hall), John Bender (Judd Nelson), Claire Standish (Molly Ringwold), and Allison Reynolds (Ally Sheedy). Forced to spend their Saturday together, the five students in conversation (with the exception of cut Allison). For most, their conversation consists of attacking them and make jokes to each other's expense.
Continued fighting with the main Vernon, adolescence to pass the time by uniting against Vernon and engaging in conversation with the infinitely wise janitor, Carl (John Kapelos). Finally, each student (including Allison, who finally opens up) comes to understand the plight of others. The pretty princess Claire does not have a perfect life. Neither does the popular champion of the fight Andy. Brian and Allison have their own problems like everyone else, and John puts up a front to look tougher and more experienced than he really is. Ultimately, the five develop a lifelong bond - with Claire and John turn a budding relationship.
Sporting a hit soundtrack featuring Simple Minds "Do not You (Forget About Me)," The Breakfast Club attained instant cult classic status. The Brat Pack "came to define a generation and has made his mark in Hollywood. A light comedy, mixed with a series of relationships between different people, the true strength the Breakfast Club is the capacity of his audience to relate to issues at hand. The characters tell stories of their life in one way or another are easily relatable to almost all Americans who have attended high school.
It is this familiarity with the universal themes depicted by the Breakfast Club that make it a classic adored by millions. Despite the aspirations of adolescents over time to forge a unique identity and put themselves aside as revolutionary, in the end, the sport's most high schools in the same cast of characters, and various roles have remained unchanged for most recent decades. As one of the most memorable films of the decade 80's, The Breakfast Club is a clear must-see film. Posted on April 11, 2010.
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