Profound but not heavy, very rare campus youth film

Adrian 2022-03-21 09:01:14

I think the most prominent part of this movie is that it does not provide any solution to the problem, but it explores and understands the problem, and understanding is the prerequisite for the solution. The whole film only describes the story within 8 hours a day, but the characters in the whole film are the epitome of everyone in our middle school years, and almost everyone can find a little more or less of themselves in it. I think the most exciting part of the film is the five protagonists sitting around and discussing their own lives. They are 5 people who do not actively meet in daily life. The entire dialogue can be said to be a collision of 5 ideas and 5 identities. There are nerds, athletes, princesses, freaks, and criminals. But they have the same in their differences, at least they all came to Saturday's school confinement because of their "faults." This film is also a display of American campus culture. The film was shot in the 1980s in the United States. To be honest, I can’t really recognize the age without mentioning the age...

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Extended Reading
  • Doris 2022-04-23 07:01:15

    They are actually some sweetest people inside. When you grow up, your heart die. I care.

  • Jason 2022-04-23 07:01:15

    After reading it, I realized that what I envy is not the teenagers themselves, but that they still have a lot of time and infinite possibilities. As for the plot, it's the American model, the kids are cynical and want to fuck everything, but often, it's everything that fucks them

The Breakfast Club quotes

  • Andrew: Yo wastoid, you're not gonna blaze up in here.

  • [as Bender prepares to urinate under his desk]

    Andrew Clark: Hey, you're not urinating in here, man.

    John Bender: Don't talk. Don't talk. It makes it crawl back up.