Nick-Davis.com: 100 Favorite Films
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XX: The Breakfast Club and Pretty in Pink
Breakfast (USA, 1985; dir. John Hughes; cin. Thomas Del Ruth)
IMDb // My Page
Pink (USA, 1986; dir. Howard Deutch; cin. Tak Fujimoto)
IMDb // My Page
Restoring a little balance of power to the universe, and knocking me right off of The Piano
Teacher's high-art pedestal, here are the two films from the John Hughes factory that double-double my refreshment
every time I pull them off the shelf. I find it impossible to choose between The Breakfast Club, which Hughes directed
from his own script, and Pretty in Pink, helmed by the otherwise dubious Howard Deutch. I saw The Breakfast Club
when you're really supposed to, i.e., when you are roughly the same age or, better, just barely younger than the characters
in the moviefrom which vantage Hughes' empathetic grasp of high-school anhedonia is all the more rewarding and exciting,
and also nicely tempered by a fair grasp of each character's naïveté and inadequacy. Gorgeously, and infectiously,
the movie finds all of its adolescent leads in a gently embellished free-zone between the mess that real people are in high
school and the stabler, frankly nicer people that Andy and Claire and Bender and the rest will palpably become later in
their lives, given just a little bit of breathing-room to grow up and get over themselves. That said, I sure hope that
Ally Sheedy's Allison, by far my favorite character, will forever continue to make her dandruff-derived objets and
her all-carbs all-the-time sandwiches. Also priceless: Anthony Michael Hall's shambling diffidence, so hard-fought but so
hilariously ill-concealed, and Judd Nelson's marvleous line reading of the single word "Claire," turning the name into some
sort of insolent question.
The Breakfast Club is snappily written, crisply defined, and cleverly art-directed, and in terms of pacing, it
couldn't work better. Even the precipitous couplings at the end, some of them real head-scratchers, actually help the
movie: we don't leave with any false sense that anything has been fixed or made permanent, and the excitement of making
right and wrong choices at the same time is preserved. Pretty in Pink, a much more sober film however poppy it
also is, gets a similar boost from what seem like errors. Andie's romantic trajectory just isn't what we expect, and the
widely circulated reports of last-minute script changes augment the climactic sense of compromise. But Andie's compromises
were always what was most interesting about her, right alongside her winning and utterly believable rapport with her kindly
burned-out dad and the limpid, hugely gratifying accessibility of Molly Ringwald across her whole performance. Pretty
in Pink starts and ends in imperfectionnicely if unintentionally underlined by the fact that Andie's "do it
yourself" prom dress, which occasions her happy ending, is actually, let's be real, quite unflattering. The movie is
poignant even when it's funny, funny even when it's angry ("WHAT about PROM, BLANE??!"), and enormously embraceable.
It lacks, mercifully, any Long Duck Dong instance of mean and boring stereotype, and in the hands of D.P. Tak
Fujimotolater a godsend to The Silence of the Lambs and The Sixth Sensethe movie doesn't look bad,
either. The Psychedelic Furs sound almost as techno-thrilling on the Pink soundtrack as the Simple Minds do on
The Breakfast Club's. So riddle me this: why can't these movies get any respect?
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