01-18-2018, 11:18 AM
(This post was last modified: 01-18-2018, 01:22 PM by ZpaceJ0ck0.
Edit Reason: Grammar
)
Alright guys, the following review must be read with the right theme in the background.
So I just finished watching John Hughes' "The Breakfast Club". I liked how each character told their stories with credibility and persistence, which leads to the character development. They all change, in one way or another, by the end of the film. Each menber of the main cast did a great job when it comes to the acting department, specially Judd Nelson (John Bender) and Emilio Estevez (Andrew Clark) who simply rise above the rest.
"The Breakfast Club" does not exist not for highschool kids, as some suggest. Why would they need it? They live there. It exists for all of us who have already been through there, who feel that they are above it now. It exists so that we can remember what it was like and better understand ourselves, and the next generation. Because you can't dismiss something you understand.
And last but not least, the humor. Personally, I didn't find it as funny as some people made out to be, but it was still up there.
So I just finished watching John Hughes' "The Breakfast Club". I liked how each character told their stories with credibility and persistence, which leads to the character development. They all change, in one way or another, by the end of the film. Each menber of the main cast did a great job when it comes to the acting department, specially Judd Nelson (John Bender) and Emilio Estevez (Andrew Clark) who simply rise above the rest.
"The Breakfast Club" does not exist not for highschool kids, as some suggest. Why would they need it? They live there. It exists for all of us who have already been through there, who feel that they are above it now. It exists so that we can remember what it was like and better understand ourselves, and the next generation. Because you can't dismiss something you understand.
And last but not least, the humor. Personally, I didn't find it as funny as some people made out to be, but it was still up there.