The Breakfast Club
1985
⏱️ 98 minutes
📅 Released
🌐 EN
ComedyDrama
Five high school students from different walks of life endure a Saturday detention under a power-hungry principal. The disparate group includes rebel John, princess Claire, outcast Allison, brainy Brian and Andrew, the jock. Each has a chance to tell his or her story, making the others see them a little differently -- and when the day ends, they question whether school will ever be the same.
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User Reviews
I absolutely love this film. When I saw that Ster-Kinekor was having a throwback screening, I immediately went to book my tickets to see it on the big screen.
I still think The Breakfast Club is an incredible film, and the core message it presents remains deeply important and relevant even today.
I love the premise: a group of seemingly random students in detention: the jock, the emo kid, the popular girl, the nerd, the rule-breaker, all thrown together. As the day unfolds, the labels fall away, and they begin to form a bond. They come to realise that everyone is dealing with their own struggles, that everyone has a voice, a goal, and a place in the world.
That sense of unity and empathy, of coming together despite differences, is what I adore most. The film sends such a powerful message: no matter who you are, you are enough. You belong. And I love that.
June 8, 2025
I'd struggle to recall any other of Judd Nelson's films, but in this he really does shine. He's the obvious recalcitrant amongst five teenage youths who have been dragged into school on a Saturday for some seemingly rather pointless detention. This is manna from heaven for their headmaster "Vernon" (Paul Gleason), who takes pleasure in exercising his gradually dwindling authority over his charges. Whilst he leaves them to work, they set about assembling and disassembling each other's character. Nelson ("Bender") is the outlaw: loud, brash and a pain in the neck. "Andrew" (Emilio Estevez) is the high-school athlete; "Claire" (Molly Ringwald) the slightly aloof of the group; "Brian" (Anthony Michael Hall) is the swat and "Allison" (Ally Sheedy) - well she's the enigma of the group, rarely deigning to contribute as "Bender" begins an hour and a half that allows each of them to expose - sometimes more willingly than not, some of the more private and contentious aspects of their personalities. Whilst their supervisor becomes distracted in the basement with caretaker "Carl" (John Kapelos) this erstwhile disparate group of reprobates start to realise they have way more in common than they'd initially thought and thanks to a really quite potent script and some very natural performances, we begin to see something far less predicable emerging from these folks. Sure, there are some traditional stories of failed families or outrageous parental aspirations or rebellion, but they are presented here with plenty of humour and more of a degree of plausibility than in many films that just trot out the same old story arcs as if they were college lectures. There's little off limits, but nothing at all graphic as they try to find a new focus for their lives. John Hughes mixes the comedy with the more earnest engagingly here and these actors deliver something just a bit different.
January 20, 2025
An absolute classic, and no mistake. If you disagree, sorry, you're wrong. John Hughes was an utter genius.
June 18, 2023
Crew
Director
John Hughes
Writer
John Hughes
Producer
Andrew Meyer, John Hughes, Gil Friesen
Production
Universal Pictures, A&M Films, Channel Productions
Keywords
high schoolcoming of ageteen angstdetentionteenage rebellionstereotype1980steenagerwry