The breakfast club, an amazing movie to watch that breaks down stereotypes through the amazing representation of film. Film isn’t just a movie it’s a movie with many hidden meanings. This essay will explore how the director, John Hughes, illustrates code throughout the film.
The Breakfast club is based at a school location, on a Saturday with 5 students faced with detention. Each individual student has a reason as to why they are in detention so throughout the movie we as the audience uncover why they are there. Each of these students are labelled: Brain, Athlete, a basket case, Criminal and a Princess but to each other they were more than just labels
The job of the director is to produce a film that captures the audience’s attention by
Students in High School are being pressured every day for publicity. High school is usually a place where someone can find themself, a friend group they feel comfortable in. High school students encounter many different situations that may lead them into a series of downfalls through high school. Being in this facility, students are often categorized in groups based on their personalities, what they wear, and their social connections. In The Breakfast Club there are five students categorized into stereotypical groups in high school.Those groups are the popular students, the nerds, and the emo students. Sooner than later, these five students figure they all have something in common with each other; high school, and the pressure of their parents has molded them into the people they never wanted to become. Despite the differences between the students in The Breakfast Club, they share similarities that divides them into different groups throughout high school.
I do believe prejudice still goes on today. The Breakfast Club is a great example of how teenagers put each other in certain social categories. All of the characters were put into one of these social categories. Claire was called the princess because she came from a rich family and had everything she’s ever wanted and was popular in her school. Judd was known as the criminal because he got into trouble all the time and was just rude and loud. He wore certain clothes that made him look poor and his use of profanity showed that he didn’t come from a very good family. Allison was called the basket case because she wore all black and people thought she was crazy and creepy. Andrew was known as the jock because he was into sports and was popular
The Breakfast Club is a 1985 American movie written and directed by John Hughes. The movie focuses on five different teenagers, each of which fits a typical stereotype. Each teen is introduced individually, displaying the traits of their respective stereotypes. The audience is first introduced to Claire, the preppy, popular girl, referred to as “The Prom Queen” in the script. Next, the audience is introduced to Brian, the nerd, or geek, of the group. Following Brian, the audience is introduced to Andrew, the popular athlete, referred to as “The Jock” in the script. In the shortest introductions, the audience is given a small glimpse of John Bender, although at this time the stereotype he fits is not known, a short observation of the physical attributes and clothing style will reveal to the audience that John Bender fills the role of the rebel or delinquent. The final member of the group is introduced in a short fashion as well. Allison, steps out of a car, dressed in dark clothing, with dark hair and makeup, is the outcast, or introvert of the group. Each stereotype represented by the teens is predicated on the general idea of high school cliques and the categories they generally fall into.
The Breakfast Club is a movie about five students from Shermer High School who gather on a Saturday to sit through eight hours of detention. These five students; Andrew Clark, Claire Standish, John Bender, Allison Reynolds and Brian Johnson, have nothing in common. The Breakfast Club zooms in on the high school social groups and cliques that are often seen in the development of peer groups during adolescents. The peer groups that are portrayed in The Breakfast Club include, John “the criminal”, Claire “the Princess”, Allison “the Basket case”, Brian “the Brain”, and Andrew “the athlete”. The movie centers around an essay that Principle Vernon wants each student to write regarding who they think they are. In the beginning of the film, the
Brendan McCauley ENG3U May 6, 2015 The Joy Luck Club Cultural stereotypes are very common these days; masses are often labeled before they are even given a chance. More specifically, Chinese people fall victim to these stereotypes quite often and are judged unreasonably because of this. Chinese kids are often used by their parents to show off to their friends and family, every Chinese person is skilled in some kind of musical extracurricular, and they all speak broken English is just some of the many stereotypes in The Joy Luck Club. Amy Tan exploits these familiar cultural stereotypes in her representations of conflict in order to reveal the intricacies of Chinese-American family relationships and their contrast with Eastern societies.
Five teens, five different cliques, one eight-hour Saturday detention. These is the basics of The Breakfast Club. Through spending the day with one another Allison, Andrew, Brian, Claire and John realize there isn’t much difference between them, and the differences that are between them aren’t too important. Watching The Breakfast Club is a great way to learn about adolescents. You have five, very different -yet very similar- adolescents to observe along with what they do together. In observing them you can understand how they’re beginning to cognitively develop from children to adults
Stereotype; a widely held but fixed and oversimplified image or idea of a particular type of person or thing. In the realistic fiction novel, The Outsiders, by S.E. Hinton, and in the short story, “Geeks Bearing Gifts”, written by Ron Koertge, stereotypes are defied by ordinary people. In The Outsiders, Johnny Cade and Darry Curtis face many struggles throughout their lives. Their town in separated into two: the rich and dangerous Socs, and the quiet, tough Greasers. For them, living dangerously is a reality. As a result of their lifestyle, Johnny has become fearful and Darry is considered the toughest man in the gang. In “Geeks Bearing Gifts” aspiring journalist, Renee, interviews her fellow classmates who are classified as “outcasts.” After meeting several students, she realizes her assumptions were incorrect about them. After reading both of these stories, the reader learns that our thoughts about others often revolve around stereotypes and assumptions, but most of these ideas that we have about other people are proven wrong.
According to Erik Erikson, he identifies the task of an adolescent as identity versus role confusion. This is where adolescent tries to form their personal and social identity. Some adolescents may adopt the values and beliefs of their parents; however, others may develop their identities from peers and oppose the values and beliefs of their parents. Adolescence who are emerging into adulthood struggles to confine with their psychological, cognitive, social, and emotional development. During this time period, there are five distinctive characters of emerging adulthood: age of identity explorations, age of instability, self-focused, age of feeling in-between, and age of possibilities. In The Breakfast Club, five high school students spend their Saturday together in detention, and they have to set aside their differences in order to make it through those long hours. The jock, the princess, the basket case, and the criminal reveal their internalizing problems involving their peers, parents or self. Their behaviors and personalities indicate the underlying issues of their cognitive and social development. The interaction between the students helps them find common ground with each other and learn the details of their life beneath the stereotypes. Throughout the movie, John Bender has an impulsive and aggressive personality that can be characterized by the environment that he was raised in, his
Each character in the Breakfast Club portrays a different high school stereotype. Now a days they might fall under a different name but they mean the same thing. Allison was a nut case, John is a criminal, Claire is a princess, Brain is the brain and Andrew is an athlete. Today, we still have these stereotypes.
Released in 1985, The Breakfast Club depicts five high school students from Illinois as they spend a Saturday together in detention. Prior to their arrival, John Bender, Claire Standish, Andy Clark, Brian Johnson, and Allison Reynolds had not met, nor would they have associated with one another on a typical day in high school. After spending nine hours together, however, the group of vastly different adolescents break down emotional barriers, manage to build a sense of intimacy, and some establish dating relationships by the day’s end (Hughes et al., 1985). The film illustrated a rather realistic portrait of adolescence in several topical domains.
In every high school film, there are always the teenage stereotypes that are seen. In The Breakfast Club, the five students each represented the major stereotypes that people join with high school. Claire was considered the preppy popular girl, John was considered the bad boy, Allison was considered the weird emo girl, Andrew was considered the school’s best athlete and jock, and lastly Brian was the nerd. The crazy thing about this was that those stereotypes didn't even match the students, those stereotypes are what they used to hide their real identities. John wasn’t the real bad boy, he was insecure and scared. Claire didn't like being popular because she hated to agree with everyone, she wanted to be herself but she couldn't around certain people. Brian didn’t want to be the nerd, but his parents made him become one. Brian was just as cool and chill as the other students but he could never show
The movie The Breakfast Club takes viewers on a comedic tour of the ups and downs of adolescence. The Breakfast Club, directed by John Hughes, focuses on the events that unfold between five very different high school students during a Saturday detention. Even though the movie was shot in the 1980 's the characters portrayal is still relatable in a way to a lot of people today. Director John Hughes takes us on a comedic ride with what seems like another typical "teen movie" while still portraying a few life lessons along the way and exposing some truths behind stereotyping.
The Breakfast Club was a film created in 1985 and throughout the years proved to be a classic. The movie, centered around 5 students, all in detention due to their deviant behaviors. The principal, Mr. Vernon is the antagonist, tries to torment the kids, giving them a harsh Saturday detention and keeping them ahold in the school's library. From the beginning of the movie, their differences are shown as they all dislike each other, causing major conflict. Progressively as they begin to learn from their differences and communicate, they becomes friends, and some, romantically interested in each other. Being in the setting of the 1980’s it does show it’s time, having some slight slang from the 80’s and having a stigmatized view of the drug, marijuana. As a classic throughout generations, this movie has beneficial storytelling that correlates with society and the societal structure of the 1980’s and even to today’s times.
Have you ever stereotyped somebody? In this story, you will find out why it’s wrong to stereotype. The Dinner Party is a story in which people are discussing gender customs at a gathering in India. There happens to be a cobra under the table, and one person finds a way to get rid of it. In this short story by Mona Gardner, the author expresses that you shouldn’t stereotype others, because it may lead you to false assumptions.
My outlook on filmmaking and the role of a director have changed. I used think there wasn’t much that went into making a film or being a director. However, the skill level to execute a film as well as direct it is very complicated. So, throughout this paper I will be discussing the different aspects of filmmaking which the director personally oversees. Also, the history of motion pictures, the early filmmaking experience, the history behind the first female director, music & film, actors/actresses, scene selection, pre-production, creative vision, production, scheduling and post –production.