T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
558.1 | Indeed | 54291::PIJPSTRA_D | | Wed May 25 1994 08:17 | 4 |
| I must agree I have seen this film three times now on tv and
somehow it does something to me, eventhough I think the
characters are rather stereotype. Good acting of these young
actors though.
|
558.2 | | 5468::J_TOMAO | Sixteen down, sixteen to go! | Wed May 25 1994 10:54 | 17 |
| Just so your up to speed on ::MOVIES as a conference. This is the
second incarnation of a Movies conference - the first one was vast!
It had thousands of movies and replies, unfortunatly, for reasons only
those of us who were using it at the time can guess at :^}, we Lost
all the wonderful reviews and opinions of a 5-7 year conference.
Beth couldn't bear to see us without a space for discussion so she
started this new conference...now back to our regularly scheduled
program.....
The actors and soudtrack were great! I saw it the first time on video
- thanks goodness otherwise if I had seen it on tv first all those
"gosh darn hecks" would have looked stupid in place of the true
dialouge.
Jt
|
558.3 | | NETRIX::michaud | Bruce Willis | Wed May 25 1994 11:09 | 5 |
| > THis note is for another great movie that has somehow been overlooked,
> The Breakfast Club
If you're going to start a topic for it, you should at least
start off with a review!
|
558.4 | my review | 8269::CAMERON_S | | Wed May 25 1994 19:20 | 15 |
| I did not get a chance to review the movie, but felt it should be in
here so I added it.
I loved the movie. I felt that the whole purpose Was to stereotype
the chatacters. It had to have been because they are all extreme
stereotypes, A jock, a screw up, a nerd, a princess, and a trouble
maker. I think it does a great job of showing the social stucture of
our schools and how a kids parents, teachers, and friends decide what
that person will be instead of them deciding. Each of them felt
extreme presure from family and friends, and away from these presures
they found themselves to be all very much the same. It also showed
some of the problems with student teacher relations. And the music was
great.
Scott
|
558.5 | | NETRIX::michaud | Bobby Kennedy | Wed May 25 1994 19:33 | 6 |
| > I did not get a chance to review the movie, but felt it should be in
> here so I added it.
Imagine if everyone did the same .....
Your lucky the moderator is the laid back type :-)
|
558.6 | demented and sad, but social . . . | 36058::CARROLLJ | Even a clown knows when to strike | Thu May 26 1994 12:49 | 3 |
|
This movie had some of the best lines *ever* :-)
|
558.7 | | TECWT2::BOUDREAU | | Fri Jan 05 1996 08:53 | 30 |
|
TNT ran this again a couple of nights ago, the second time in a couple
of months that I've seen it, probably the fifth time overall.
It's listed in the Boston Globe Movie section as a 2-star (out of 4)
movie. I think it's at least a 3 1/2. No one reviewed it, so:
Five kids, all good examples of the crowds with which the hang out,
get all-day detention on a Saturday in March. Detention begins at
7:00AM. The five kids include: a standard weirdo (Ally Sheedy); a
perfect jock (Emilio Estevez); a princess (Molly Ringwold); a punk
(Judd Nelson); and a dweeb (cannot remember the actor's name), which
shows how good the casting was, as the easiest kids for me to ignore
when I was in in high school were dweebs. I didn't know any dweebs by name.
To cut it short, most people who see the movie can see a little of themselves
in at least three of the characters, for me it was the jock, the punk,
and the weirdo. I was not a rich kid like the princess - though I knew a
lot of them - and though I was pretty smart, it wasn't cool to be too
academic. In my high school days, I had a pony tail down to my ass
and I always wore flannels and jeans, I loved sports, and like the weirdo,
I had a leaning towards the artistic.
To me that's what the Breakfast Club was all about - identifying with others,
and realizing that people are just people, we all bleed when we get cut, and we
all have feelings. That's what I thought the first time I saw it, and now about
four viewings later, I come to the same conclusion. It is an extreme social
comment, and I think well done.
-Steve
|
558.8 | | WONDER::REILLY | Sean / Alpha Servers DTN:223-4375 | Fri Jan 05 1996 09:27 | 19 |
|
I thought this movie was bad as social commentary. I can't say
the "movie" was especially bad, really; the acting was a little
forced, but the directing and dialogue were okay. The setup was
contrived, though, almost as if the "idea" alone were enough, and
actually executing the idea was an afterthought.
John Hughes often takes too much liberty with the "all adults are
idiots" motif. Troubled teens are a great topic, but don't you
wish you actually liked any of them? The kids in this movie and
Ferris Beuller were not likeable, in my opinion (I was hoping the
principal would actually clock Ferris). And the adults were just
clowns.
I'm not a Hughes basher. In "Pretty in Pink," Hughes doesn't resort
to the all same cliches (there are some), and the result is a much
better film. "Some Kind Of Wonderful" was okay, too.
- Sean
|
558.9 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Never Say Never Again, Again | Fri Jan 05 1996 09:52 | 6 |
|
The dweeb was Anthony Michael Hall, who was in 1 of the "Vacation"
movies as well as "Weird Science". I believe he did a season or 2
on SNL as well [when I wasn't watching it, which could be any time
in the last 10-15 years].
|
558.10 | | TECWT2::BOUDREAU | | Fri Jan 05 1996 10:27 | 6 |
|
> but don't you
> wish you actually liked any of them?
That's why the whole idea worked for me, I hated them all in the beginning.
At the end, I liked them all.
|
558.11 | | KERNEL::PLANTC | To tell you the truth, Not so much! | Fri Jan 05 1996 11:44 | 9 |
|
I really liked this movie! I wanted to tape it but missed the first
half hour :(
It's a good look at social classes and high-school cliques.
Chris
:)
|
558.12 | | KERNEL::PLANTC | To tell you the truth, Not so much! | Fri Jan 05 1996 11:45 | 12 |
|
BTW Ferris Bueller is one of my all time fav movies!
Bueller?
Bueller?
Chris
:)
|
558.13 | | UHUH::MARISON | Scott Marison | Fri Jan 05 1996 13:39 | 14 |
| > The dweeb was Anthony Michael Hall, who was in 1 of the "Vacation"
> movies as well as "Weird Science". I believe he did a season or 2
> on SNL as well [when I wasn't watching it, which could be any time
> in the last 10-15 years].
He was in the first Vacation film, along with at least 1 other Huges
film (Weird Science was also a Huges film, too, I think...) called
"Sweet Sixteen" or something like that...
He played the dweed in that one too, and Molly Ringwald was in it too...
It was one of the better Huges films... IMHO.
/scott
|
558.14 | | TECWT2::BOUDREAU | | Fri Jan 05 1996 13:44 | 4 |
|
> This movie had some of the best lines *ever* :-)
"That man is a brownie hound."
|
558.15 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Hemorrhoid from Hell | Fri Jan 05 1996 14:01 | 9 |
|
RE: Scott
"Sixteen Candles"
Wasn't "Cry Baby" a John Hughes film? If so, that's his best
ever.
|
558.16 | | UHUH::MARISON | Scott Marison | Fri Jan 05 1996 14:08 | 9 |
| > Wasn't "Cry Baby" a John Hughes film? If so, that's his best
> ever.
No. It was a John, however. John Waters...
And for Waters flicks... nothing can compare to Pink Flamingos. ;-)
Seriel Mom and Hairspray are pretty good too...
/scott
|
558.17 | Breakfast CLub OK - not the best John Hughes | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | The truth - Syracuse s*cks! | Thu Jan 11 1996 11:15 | 6 |
| John Hughes kinda wore out his welcome for me by making the same basic
movie over and over and over. However, "Sixteen Candles" and "Ferris
Bueller" were very funny, and the end of "Some Kind of Wonderful",
where Lea Thompson smacks the town preppie/bully, was terrific.
NAZZ
|