“Grease” v. “The Breakfast Club”: Finding Yourself The films “Grease” and “The Breakfast Club” feature the same strong theme: finding your identity. This theme is universal through many books‚ movies and even real life. The fact that these two films were filmed so far apart‚ “Grease” being filmed in 1959 and directed by Randal Kleiser and “The Breakfast Club” in 1985 directed by John Hughes‚ shows that this is a strong theme that sticks throughout the industry. These films have many characters
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Neima Prabhakar English 8 CP Period 2 5/19/05 A Misleading Exterior In the film‚ The Breakfast Club (1985)‚ John Bender‚ the slovenly rebel at Shermer High School in Chicago‚ is serving a Saturday detention with four very different students. Right from the beginning‚ Bender exhibits the qualities of a destructive and thoughtless criminal‚ i.e.‚ he taunts everyone else in order to hide his personal inadequacies. Whenever Bender is questioned by his peers about a personal issue‚ or whenever
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Yanni Thomas 4 December 2013 Professor Stanley COMM 1375-60 Mis-en-scene and Cinematography in The Breakfast Club This film written and directed by John Hughes follows five students at Shermer High School in Shermer‚ Illinois as they report for Saturday detention in 1984. While not complete strangers‚ the five are all from different cliques‚ there’s John Bender "The Criminal‚" Claire "The Princess‚" Brian "The Brain‚" Andy "The Athlete‚" and Allison "The Basket Case." The school’s disciplinary
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Social Penetration Theory in The Breakfast Club The Social Penetration Theory‚ adapted by Irwin Altman and Dalmas Taylor‚ is based on the idea that people are layered like onions‚ (Griffin 133). These layers are made up by different things that hide an individual’s true self. One’s true self can include his or her hopes‚ fears‚ likes‚ dislikes‚ aspirations and other things that one thinks about. For individuals to become close‚ they must get past all of the facades and disclose their true
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Dear Mr Hughes‚ I am writing to you tell you about my opinions of your movie‚ The Breakfast Club. It is a movie classic which most people will see at least once in their lives. What makes The Breakfast Club so special is that the film was very different from almost every movie released at the time. It’s a movie made to target teenagers and the problems they go though. It directly talks about communication gaps‚ teen isolation‚ and the angst that teens experience during the years that function as
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The Breakfast Club (1985) Directed by John Hughes From Wikipedia‚ the free encyclopedia The Breakfast Club is a 1985 American teen drama written and directed by John Hughes. The storyline follows five teenagers (each a member of a different high school clique) as they spend a Saturday in detention together and come to realize that they are all deeper than their respective stereotypes. The film has become a cult classic‚ a defining film of the 1980’s‚ and has had a tremendous influence
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The Breakfast Club Analysis The movie The Breakfast Club is about a group of high school students who are forced to attend detention on a Saturday morning. All five of them have different backgrounds and from the outside‚ seem to have nothing in common with each other. Because they are forced to sit with each other for most of the day in the school library‚ they end up talking and getting to know each other pretty well. In The Breakfast Club‚ director John Hughes brings these five completely
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children. The popular teenage coming-of-age film‚ “The Breakfast Club” effectively demonstrates and supports this. Our grown up selves are a product of our environment during youth. As children‚ we see our parents as role models and they are usually the first to influence how we behave. The rules our parents enforce upon us as children ultimately dictate what we believe is right or wrong and affects all of our decisions. In “The Breakfast Club”‚ Brian’s parents put a lot of pressure on Brian in regards
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The Breakfast Club Film Review The Breakfast Club is a movie made in the 80’s about 5 very different teenagers who are forced to spend the day in detention. At first‚ they appear to be judgmental of the others but by the end they learn to respect one another because they aren’t so different after all. This movie is still very applicable and popular. The movie is so well received because of the characters‚ the message and cinematography. The film is an exaggeration of real life. In real life‚ high
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“The Breakfast Club” shows the typical stereotypes of before‚ specially the 80s. The snob girl that thinks she shouldn’t be there‚ the popular sports boy‚ the rebel that is not understood‚ the nerd that doesn’t want to be in trouble‚ the outcast that is ignored‚ and the teacher that thinks to highly of themselves and thinks that teenager equals problem. In the 80s “The Breakfast Club” became really popular. This could be because the teenagers that saw it found themselves identified with the characters
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