The Breakfast Club (1985)

Thirty-eight years ago today, the film The Breakfast Club premiered in movie theaters around the United States. Widely accepted as the “quintessential 80s film”, it is definitely one of the 80s films I have quite nearly committed the entire script to memory. There was a time after school that we would watch it repeatedly and later came to find out that most everyone in my friend group was doing the same. We all knew this film forwards and backwards. It was a time in my life that I felt like a misfit and I took some comfort in knowing that most everyone else also did. As with all of John Hughes’ films, the soundtrack is something I also have very fond memories of. You have to see this film.

breakfast club 001

Title: The Breakfast Club
Directed by: John Hughes
Produced by: Ned Tanen, John Hughes
Written by: John Hughes
Starring: Emilio Estevez, Paul Gleason, Anthony Michael Hall, Judd Nelson, Molly Ringwald, Ally Sheedy
Music by: Keith Forsey, Gary Chang
Cinematography: Thomas Del Ruth
Edited by: Dede Allen
Production company: A&M Films
Distributed by: Universal Pictures
Release date: February 7, 1985 (Los Angeles), February 15, 1985 (United States)
Running time: 97 minutes
Budget: $1 million
Box office: $51.5 million

On a Saturday, March 24, 1984, five students at the fictional Shermer High School report at 7:00 am for all-day detention. Each comes from a different clique: stuck-up Claire Standish, geek Brian Johnson, wrestler Andrew Clark, rebellious John Bender, and outcast Allison Reynolds. They gather in the school library, where assistant principal Richard Vernon instructs them not to talk, move from the seats, or sleep until they are released at 4:00 p.m. He assigns them a thousand-word essay, in which each must describe “who you think you are”. He leaves, returning only occasionally to check on them.

John, who has an antagonistic relationship with Vernon, ignores the rules and riles up the other students, teasing and harassing Brian, Andrew, and Claire. Vernon gives John eight weekends’ worth of additional detention and eventually locks him in a storage closet, but he escapes and returns to the library.

The students pass the hours by talking, arguing, and, at one point, smoking marijuana, (except Allison who doesn’t smoke with the others). Gradually, they open up and reveal their secrets: Claire has lots of experiences of peer pressure, John comes from an abusive household, Allison is a compulsive liar, Andrew can’t think for himself, and Brian contemplated suicide over a bad grade. They discover they all have poor relationships with their parents: Claire’s parents use her to get back at each other during arguments, John’s parents physically and verbally abuse him, Allison’s parents ignore her, Andrew’s father pushes him to the limit, especially in wrestling, and Brian’s parents pressure him to earn high grades. The students realize that, despite their differences, they face similar problems.

Claire gives Allison a makeover, which sparks romantic interest from Andrew. Claire decides to break her “pristine” innocent appearance by kissing John and giving him a hickey. Although they suspect their new relationships will end along with their detention, they believe their mutual experiences will change the way they look at their peers.

As the detention nears its end, the group requests that Brian complete the essay for everyone, and John returns to the storage closet to fool Vernon into thinking he never left. Brian leaves the essay in the library for Vernon to read after they leave. As the students part ways, Allison and Andrew kiss, as do Claire and John. Allison rips Andrew’s state champion patch from his jacket to keep, and Claire gives John one of her diamond earrings, which he puts on. Vernon reads the essay, in which Brian states that Vernon has already judged who they are using stereotypes, and that they think that he (Vernon) is crazy if he thinks that they are going to tell him who they are; so Brian correspondingly states in the letter that “each one of us is a brain, an athlete, a basket case, a princess, and a criminal. Does that answer your question?” He signs off the letter with “Sincerely yours, the Breakfast Club.”

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