Breakfast Club Essay

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    nerd. Does that answer your question? Sincerely yours, the Breakfast Club.” That's not necessarily how John Hughes chose to end his 1985 blockbuster The Breakfast Club (Hughes), but a 2016-2017 rewrite might follow suit in the same way. In each and every high school, subcultures and stereotypes are perpetuated unto students that seem to fit according to their peers, but are they necessarily fair? Judd Nelson’s character in The Breakfast Club didn’t seem to have much of a choice in the title of…

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    Hughes’s films tend to sway more towards the comedy genre, but that does not mean that his movies could not take on a more serious aspect. He has written and directed many iconic movies, such as Ferris Bueller 's Day Off , Pretty in Pink, and The Breakfast Club. All together he has directed sixteen movies. His life may have ended early when he suffered from a heart attack and passed away at the age of fifty-nine, but his movies still have a driving impact today on many generations. Even though…

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    The Breakfast Club (1985) directed by John Hughes, illustrates the contrasting personalities of teenagers Allison, Andrew, Brian, Claire and John, as they spend their Saturday morning in detention. From early on, each character is portrayed to belong to a certain clique within their high school. Through this, the film highlights the different labels put on each individual, their more or less hostile interactions, and what factors influence the nature of these interactions. From the beginning,…

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    convergence. They however, convey their feelings of discontent and disarray in different ways, using different symbols to communicate their feelings. The symbols, no matter how unique to the individual, is familiar to the others in the group. In the Breakfast Club depicts a group of classmates that eventually unite and become one though their similar experiences. As expressed by gomenao, “Their fantasy is created as each and every member embraces the group dramatization message where “the…

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    There are many scenes throughout The Breakfast Club which depict concepts of social psychology. From the very first interaction between the members of the group there is an immediate aggression between Bender, Claire, and Andy. This initial aggression likely stems from the group encountering the “frustrating and aversive circumstances” of having to spend their weekend in detention and confinement to the library with each other. Each of the group members possess a unique social identity, and some…

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    Character Analysis Breakfast Club Ndayikeza Simon In the movie The breakfast club It’s about five students who are going to detention on a saturday and they all had different personality,and they tell each other what they go through in life,and why they are in detention for.Today i am going to tell you what character i relate to, and why I chose this character. The character I chose was John bender, I chose John bender because in the movie he didn’t really care about anything and was focus on…

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    Movies in My Life: The Breakfast Club What defines a person? Is it how smart they are? Their beauty and popularity? Or maybe even their athletic ability? After watching John Hughes’s The Breakfast Club, I have come to learn that defining a person is not as easy as many people believe. It is not as simple as examining their sense of style or who they choose to be friends with. This brilliant film leaves its audience to think twice about judging other people who might not be as different…

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    In the breakfast club stereotyping has prevented the characters from creating friendships, they have been held apart by the idea the differences should not be accepted. Bender, the criminal, and Clair, the princess, have been kept separate through these social classifications, this has prevented them from having any kind of relationship. In the film, Bender and Claire find that they are romantically compatible. Bender, Claire and the rest of the breakfast club come to realise how the…

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    In the John Hughes’ 1984 film, The Breakfast Club, there were a lot underlying social issues that are very relatable to teens in high school of that age range. The early 80’s film was centered around five teens who have in some way been stereotyped by not only their peers but also by their parents and other authority figures. The main theme for the film is to overcome stereotypes and develop a voice for one’s self. As we as self-confidence and self-acceptance. At the end of the film each…

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    The Breakfast Club shows the different phases of identity vs role confusion through the five main characters who are in Saturday school. These kids are all in Saturday school for different reasons but as the day progresses they all realize that they are more alike than they are apart. They are more than the stereotypes that they have been put in, such as the jock, the popular girl, the nerd, the loaner and the troublemaker. These kids perfectly fit the example of Erikson’s Identity versus Role…

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