The Breakfast Club | First Time Watching | Movie Reaction | Movie Review | Movie Commentary

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  • Опубликовано: 9 окт 2022
  • First time watching and reacting to The Breakfast Club
    Join me on Patreon! | Girl First Time Watching |
    Hello my name is Dasha! Thank you for checking out my reaction video, and if you have any suggestions for future videos, please comment down below!
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    #moviereaction #movies #breakfastclub
    Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. No copyright infringement intended. ALL RIGHTS BELONG TO THEIR RESPECTIVE OWNERS

Комментарии • 370

  • @gojiberry7201
    @gojiberry7201 Год назад +107

    It's such a great commentary on how your family can screw you up, too ... parents trying to live vicariously through their children, parents who don't care, parents who use their children, abusive families. It's even more amazing when you learn how much of this was improvised, how talented these actors were.

    • @ChurchNietzsche
      @ChurchNietzsche Год назад

      Claire = Abusive Parents
      Andrew = Abusive Parents
      BENDER = Abusive Parents
      Brian = Abusive Parents
      .. .. .. Ally Sheedy's parents don't even care enough to be Abusive!!

    • @michaelriddick7116
      @michaelriddick7116 Год назад +9

      No one can hurt you like family 🤕😭

    • @ChurchNietzsche
      @ChurchNietzsche Год назад +5

      @@michaelriddick7116 It's the Cruelest trick of the Gods.
      An Enemy can Kill, Maim, Torture ... but those you love can do far worse.

    • @donnieboughton1730
      @donnieboughton1730 Год назад +1

      Filming the same scene over and over again isn't improv...

    • @TheRetroManRandySavage
      @TheRetroManRandySavage Год назад +1

      And now us 80s kids have to worry about school teachers screwing our kids up.
      funny old world, isn't it.🤔

  • @chefsanders9151
    @chefsanders9151 Год назад +177

    Dasha, you have no idea how big of an influence this movie had on us when we were teens

    • @shanehebert396
      @shanehebert396 Год назад +5

      I was a junior in high school when this came out so for us, it was a reflection of some of what we experienced. But yeah, I agree with you... this movie was very influential.

    • @mpireone
      @mpireone Год назад +10

      I was a Junior in High School when this movie came out. And I remember thinking, how in the heck is this movie going to be any good, with the whole movie being inside a school library?
      Walked out of the theater completely blown away! Great times!!

    • @batbrick3949
      @batbrick3949 Год назад +5

      Same here, this movie spoke for, and spoke to, an entire generation.

    • @mrtveye6682
      @mrtveye6682 Год назад +2

      True. This was THE most relatable movie for my friends and me growing up as teens in the 80s

    • @NeilBlanco
      @NeilBlanco Год назад

      Absolutely...

  • @kennethjenkins3972
    @kennethjenkins3972 Год назад +19

    The world’s an imperfect place, screws fall out all the time…so many quotes in this movie, that’s one of my favorites

    • @piercehaugh1583
      @piercehaugh1583 Год назад +1

      does Barry Manalow know you raid his wardrobe?

  • @JoeD0403
    @JoeD0403 Год назад +32

    The opening scene of the movie shows things about the characters.. the locker burned up by the flare gun, Bender’s locker warning people to stay out, wrestling headlines.. even the janitor had an award on the wall from his student days shown in the opening.

  • @MrStyn-ud3bj
    @MrStyn-ud3bj Год назад +22

    To me, this is one of the greatest teen movies, if not the greatest, of all-time. I was a teen when it came out and it makes me happy to see that it is still enjoyed by younger generations. Thanks for sharing your take on the movie with us miss Dasha! Much love!🤗

  • @CO84trucker
    @CO84trucker Год назад +5

    In 2001, "Not another Teen Movie" came out, which was a parody & tribute to all the teen movies. Several breakfast club actors appeared in this movie and even featured a breakfast club themed Saturday detention. Apparently that library door was never fixed, and Mr Vernon still had the toilet seat liner stuck on his pants!

  • @zmarko
    @zmarko Год назад +10

    This is one of the pivotal movies of my teen years. It is written SO well (in my opinion). Damn I miss John Hughes. RIP.

  • @MrRoboto81
    @MrRoboto81 Год назад +9

    In the US today, Saturday detentions are usually only 2-4 hours, but back in the 80s, they were the length of a normal school day.

    • @jeremyfrost2636
      @jeremyfrost2636 Год назад +5

      It was a different time. Spanking students was still legal in multiple states, too.

    • @TheRetroManRandySavage
      @TheRetroManRandySavage Год назад +3

      I grew up in northern England. The middle and high school I went to in the 80s n 90s had slightly different detentions. In middle we would have to stay behind after school for a few hours. In high school we would spend a whole day in detention, but it would be during the school week. There was a room next to the snooker/pool room that was full of what looked like voting booths. We'd have to sit at them all day in isolation, lol.
      I still have a detention slip from high school. 😂

    • @richerDiLefto
      @richerDiLefto Год назад

      In middle school (I live in Illinois, U.S.), we had what was called “in-school suspension.” It was just keeping you in a room a whole 8-hour school day with other kids who were also in trouble. It didn’t do much good, it was like a huge party to the kids who got in trouble all the time and didn’t care. Heaven help you if you ended up in there and weren’t a popular kid, the teacher who sat in there with everyone just allowed everyone to bully you.

    • @johnmguzman7491
      @johnmguzman7491 Год назад

      @@TheRetroManRandySavage gave you a 👍 thumbs up.

  • @OneEyedJack1970
    @OneEyedJack1970 Год назад +8

    The great thing about this movie is that it's so easy to relate to. All of us were like one of these kids in high school.

  • @scorpiouk5914
    @scorpiouk5914 Год назад +10

    Dasha, great reaction! I graduated high school in 1985. This movie was so popular and important for my generation. Most of the younger movie reactors in America just don't seem to understand this movie. Very great that you do!

  • @greenpeasuit
    @greenpeasuit Год назад +6

    Emilio Estevez is the brother of Charlie Sheen (real name Carlos Estevez). Their father is Martin Sheen. Each has had an incredible career in movies.
    I highly recommend "Young Guns", a western based loosely on the actual events surrounding outlaw Billy the Kid, played by Emilio.

  • @prime-rib
    @prime-rib Год назад +4

    Back in the late 40s and early 50s a group of actors who performed several movies together, were called the "rat pack." The Breakfast Club spawned what was called the "Brat Pack" as these actors performed many movies together as well.

  • @gibbletronic5139
    @gibbletronic5139 Год назад +20

    John Hughes had a unique take on teenaged angst. One that everyone could relate to. "Weird Science" and "Sixteen Candles" immediately come to mind.

    • @seanmcmurphy4744
      @seanmcmurphy4744 Год назад +4

      I call his movies “bonding movies” because they are all about alienated people (mostly teens) becoming friends

    • @michaelriddick7116
      @michaelriddick7116 Год назад +3

      He definitely perfected the formula for a "coming of age" movie :)

  • @BigTroyT
    @BigTroyT Год назад +3

    No movie maker has ever had such a complete grasp of the struggles of a teenager than John Hughes, and that's why his movies all speak so loudly, even decades after his much-to-early death. His impact on 80s kids cannot be overstated, but so many in the following generations have discovered his movies, and they're just as relatable now as they were then. And we can't talk about John Hughes without talking about the MUSIC. JH was very into Modern Rock, and his movies are filled with such incredible, iconic songs that many of us still listen to today. Everyone can find a piece of themselves in his movies.

  • @Harv72b
    @Harv72b Год назад +3

    12:54 They're called Pixy Stix. It's a straw-like tube containing powdered candy (mostly sugar with artificial coloring & flavor), the idea being that kids tear open the tube, pour the contents into their mouths, and then run around like little demons until the sugar high wears off. They are still sold today.

  • @richieb7692
    @richieb7692 Год назад +56

    Thanks for reacting to this iconic film from the 80's.
    This had a Massive impact when it was released, and it's still a classic today.
    The only flaw was that Ally Sheedy's character never needed a makeover.
    She was amazing just as she was.
    Even Ally has said this several times

    • @mrtveye6682
      @mrtveye6682 Год назад +12

      Correct. I had a total crush on her "pre-makeover" back in the days

    • @JW666
      @JW666 Год назад +4

      I agree.

    • @martinkirton9608
      @martinkirton9608 Год назад +11

      I don't think of it like a traditional makeover, the usual "making someone pretty" . I saw this more like, she's been stood in darkness, no-one noticed her, as she wasn't allowing herself to be seen. This was more a "step out of the darkness, into the light, so people can see who you are". I think that was more the message. Maybe I'm wrong.

    • @sherigrow6480
      @sherigrow6480 Год назад +7

      Yes, it wasn't about the make-up, it was about being willing to be seen, to be visible to other people in the world.

    • @derred723
      @derred723 Год назад +7

      Funny, I never interpreted that scene as changing her permanently. I more took it as two girls just bonding because they had nothing else to do. Like, i've never seen that as "this is a make over to take you from bad to good or old you to new you." I just thought of it as innocent bonding and Ally's character letting her guard down and being willing to receive love she wasn't getting elsewhere.

  • @richardlong3745
    @richardlong3745 Год назад +12

    Dasha, you really got the full essence of this film and you were able to explain it wonderfully. Even though this film is approaching 40 years it still relevant to todays teens no matter their birthplace.

  • @de68a
    @de68a Год назад +12

    One of my favourite movies. Ally Sheedy, Emilio Estevez and Judd Nelson are also all in "St. Elmos Fire" which is another of my faves.

    • @kd5you1
      @kd5you1 Год назад +5

      I remember seeing St Elmo's Fire at the movie theater, and it was a very memorable movie. I still have it on VHS.

    • @de68a
      @de68a Год назад +2

      @@kd5you1 John Parr, who sang the theme song to St Elmos Fire , lived round the corner from me. Used to see and chat with him quite often.

    • @kd5you1
      @kd5you1 Год назад +1

      @@de68a Oh wow that sounds pretty cool!

  • @BillTheScribe
    @BillTheScribe Год назад +3

    "I don't like Mondays" is a reference to an incident that happened at a school where a woman living across the street did "long range damage" to pre-adults getting off a bus. When she was asked why, she said "I don't like Mondays." Around the time this movie came out, there was a song about it.

    • @stang5755
      @stang5755 Год назад +2

      The Cleveland Elementary shooting. One of the earliest school shootings.
      The 'woman' - Brenda Spencer - was actually a 16-year old who was suffering from depression and thoughts of suicide, as well as supposedly other issues - Probably not much unlike what we see in some of the characters in the film.
      The full quote was "I don't like Mondays. This livens up the day", said by her to a reporter that managed to contact her during the standoff with police while she was barricaded in her house. She ended up surrendering and was tried as an adult and convicted. She's been repeatedly denied parole and remains incarcerated to this day.
      The song inspired by her statement actually came out right after the shooting and had been around a few years by the time of the movie, but indeed was still popular, as was the (condensed) saying itself.

  • @centuryrox
    @centuryrox Год назад +7

    As I've gotten older, and have seen this movie dozens of times over the years, I really feel bad for these kids. Parents can be absolute monsters and can really negatively affect their kids' lives at their most vulnerable times.

  • @Robotrik1
    @Robotrik1 Год назад +9

    This movie is one of those movies where the whole is stronger than the sum of it's parts. It also had one of the more iconic pop songs of the 1980's ("Don't you forget about me") -- that blended into the movie in more than one level -- as if to tell or beg the audience not to forget about the people they were at this special age, before they grow up and become jaded and fatalistic . Before they become their own parents .
    They don't make movies like this today ... -- and it's interesting how almost two generations after it was made, how the issues of teenagers remain the same .
    This could have been a movie that Dasha's parents would have watched when they were teens (if this movie was shown in the USSR back in the mid 1980's) .

  • @joemasters2270
    @joemasters2270 Год назад +11

    I’m so glad to see you react to this! I grew up loving this movie. Breakfast Club has become an all-time classic.

  • @chicken2jail545
    @chicken2jail545 Год назад +7

    Love this movie. I saw this not too long after high school. It really show how people are completely different but at the same time, still the same.

  • @craigsavarese4554
    @craigsavarese4554 Год назад +1

    As a member of the class of ‘84, I can attest to the stereotypes and class/status cliques that existed. The jocks, stoners/freaks, ropers, nerds/brainiacs, rich/poor, etc…, etc…
    John Hughes really owned the teen movies in the 80’s.

  • @fgoogle5576
    @fgoogle5576 Год назад +8

    SIXTEEN CANDLES is my favorite John Hughes film. Also an 80's film about teenagers... this one is funnier. It also stars two of these same actors.

  • @wheelmanstan
    @wheelmanstan Год назад +1

    There's some films that teachers should make high school kids watch and this is one of them. John Hughes was the man..a huge part of why people love the 80's is because of that ONE guy. He knew how to write and direct teenagers. What a legend.
    Dazed and Confused, Fast Times, The Breakfast Club, Risky Business, Better off Dead, Say Anything, Grosse Point Blank, Beautiful Girls, Stand By Me, High Fidelity, American Graffiti, Napoleon Dynamite, Mall Rats, The Goonies, Reality Bites, Clerks, The Big Chill..some good ones. John Hughes, John Goodman, Cusack, Linklater, Spielberg..how so many great films.
    Dasha also needs to get into some Wes Anderson.

  • @cltmck
    @cltmck Год назад +3

    The irony of this film is that nothing changes. It's a brilliant film, but nothing changes. The nerd does everyone's work and he's at school on monday wondering why these people don't acknowledge his existence. The jock, the criminal, the posh girl, and the oddly attractive homeless girl all get what they want. Nothing changed except the nerd had a half an afternoon of feeling like he existed.

    • @marcuscato9083
      @marcuscato9083 Год назад

      I probably thought something changed when I first saw it, but now I realize that you are certainly right.

  • @raylynne5280
    @raylynne5280 Год назад +30

    I love John Hughes movies, they're amazing, but this is one of my favorites, I felt so seen during high school because of these characters and where the story goes, it's truly a beautiful story

    • @seanmcmurphy4744
      @seanmcmurphy4744 Год назад +1

      This movie was revolutionary compared to other teen movies of the time. A group of high school students sitting around talking, intelligently, about their lives. No sex, aliens, serial killers or car chases! The best teen movie I had ever seen when I saw it in the 80s

  • @WeirdTangent
    @WeirdTangent Год назад +6

    Not sure if it is the same for you Dasha, but each of these characters who are "very different" are _easily_ recognizable, at least to American once-were-high-schoolers. The "jock", the "brain", the "basket case" - we remember kids that we could easily lump into those same categories - and we had pre-conceived ideas about them, their lives, their benefits/burdens, made jokes about them with others in our same "group" . We didn't mingle much outside of our own group. This movie hits home so hard which is why it is such a favorite. John Hughes did a fantastic job of "remembering" what it was like to be a teenager into hit adult life and made a wonderful movie that feels so familiar to so many people.
    Oh, to add, I graduated high school in 1988 - so this is so much from my time as well!!

    • @o.b.7217
      @o.b.7217 Год назад +4

      Which group did you belong to?

    • @WeirdTangent
      @WeirdTangent Год назад +1

      @@o.b.7217 Lol, probably the least smart one in the brain group? Also in the upper-middle-class group - my dad was high up in local government and I ended up friends with kids of local business owners (dunno how that happened, but sure sounds very similar to the movie)

  • @user-pe9gz8si8k
    @user-pe9gz8si8k Год назад +2

    In the 80’s we had a candy called pixie stix. Basically flavoured sugar in a straw. They were great.

    • @scp_redacted989
      @scp_redacted989 Год назад +1

      I remember seeing those in the 90s. I wonder if they still make them.

  • @-.._.-_...-_.._-..__..._.-.-.-
    @-.._.-_...-_.._-..__..._.-.-.- Год назад +3

    The final thoughts at the end of this video were incredibly insightful.

  • @rozzie101
    @rozzie101 Год назад +3

    As a kid of the 80's, I did watch this movie. It was a look at how different people, have more in common then you think.

  • @hellreza
    @hellreza Год назад +1

    smoking was allowed almost anywhere back then, it's crazy because I remember ashtrays literally everywhere, school, malls, outside elevators.

  • @petergoss821
    @petergoss821 Год назад +2

    This movie was filmed in my high school township. The main school library was part of a school that has since been torn down, but the football field at the end was my high school. #GoHawks

    • @88wildcat
      @88wildcat Год назад +2

      Actually that was not the school library. That was the school gymnasium that the set designers turned into a library.

  • @gerstelb
    @gerstelb Год назад +1

    1:33 “I don’t like Mondays” is a reference to both a 1979 song by The Boomtown Rats and the real-life school shooting that inspired it. (Don’t worry if you never heard of the Boomtown Rats; they weren’t very well known. But their front man was Bob Geldof, who was the organizer of Band Aid and Live Aid, and has raised hundreds of millions of dollars for African aid.)
    7:56 She may have been the weird one here, but between this movie and St. Elmo’s Fire (which also has Emilio Estevez and Judd Nelson) I spent the 80s with a huge crush on Ally Sheedy.
    10:13 Carl the janitor is played by John Kapelos, a character actor with a ridiculously long list of credits. He was in “Roxanne” (Steve Martin’s tribute to “Cyrano de Bergerac), “The Shape of Water,” the 1990 Alex Baldwin movie “The Shadow” (based on a long-running pulp fiction and radio character), and the Canadian vampire cop TV series, “Forever Knight.”
    10:35 In case you missed it, the whistling (the song is called “The Colonel Bogey March”) is a pop culture reference to a World War II movie, “The Bridge On the River Kwai.”
    12:49 For what it’s worth, I ran long distance track in high school, and I was burning so many calories that I ate four meals a day.

    • @jeremyfrost2636
      @jeremyfrost2636 Год назад

      Short Circuit was the first thing I saw Ally Sheedy in, I didn't see this movie till I was in high school in 1996 or so. I also had a crush on her, though.

  • @Boone1981
    @Boone1981 Год назад +1

    I didn't get this kind of freedom in my Saturday morning detentions.
    We sat in those one piece desk and chair combos, in an auditorium style room.
    A teacher was in the room the whole time.
    No talking, drinks, food or headphones.
    At least it was only a few hours and not 8hrs!!

  • @mikebrown7799
    @mikebrown7799 Год назад +5

    Great reactions and outro to the very well made Breakfast Club, Dasha!!!🎬👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

  • @Linerunner99
    @Linerunner99 Год назад +5

    Ahhhh the eighties. It was a different time. My high school allowed smoking... just not in classrooms.

    • @mikepowell8611
      @mikepowell8611 Год назад +4

      Back when we were still a free country.

    • @shanehebert396
      @shanehebert396 Год назад +3

      @@mikepowell8611 depends on who you ask. Some of us felt it was free, others maybe not so much. One can infer a lot about the person from their answer.

    • @andrewjones575
      @andrewjones575 Год назад +1

      Smoking was allowed in corridors?

    • @shanehebert396
      @shanehebert396 Год назад +1

      @@andrewjones575 not at our school. We had "open hallways" (as in, not inside a building) but we had a designated smoking area. You could get a form from the office at the beginning of the school year that your parents had to sign and then you could smoke there. I think a lot of folks didn't bother and just smoked there anyway.

    • @Linerunner99
      @Linerunner99 Год назад +1

      @@andrewjones575 Anywhere there were ash trays you could smoke. The halls had them on top of trash receptacles so yeah... puff away.

  • @Etereys
    @Etereys Год назад +6

    I HIGHLY RECOMMEND the 80s movie Weird Science. It's a definite fun classic to see!

  • @dr.burtgummerfan439
    @dr.burtgummerfan439 Год назад +1

    In the John Hughes movies, adults, especially school authority figures, are the common enemy of teens. You'll notice it Breakfast Club, how they don't rat out Bender even though they were all at his throat earlier, and in Ferris Bueller, how his sister covers for him when the Principal "catches" him at the end, despite how sbe spent the whole day trying to bust him herself.

  • @popejaimie
    @popejaimie Год назад +2

    12:30 yeah sushi wasn't so big in the 80s, even people who'd heard of it thought it was weird. I learned that the reason it became a huge thing was because of the Moonies starting up sushi restaurants everywhere lol crazy stuff

  • @JemJam2976
    @JemJam2976 Год назад +3

    These actors, along with a few more. Were what was known as The Brat Pack. They appeared in multiple films together. Mostly John Hughes movies. This one is a great choice.

  • @derred723
    @derred723 Год назад

    This was a massively influential film in the U.S. I was a teen in the 80s. This was one of the first films of it's my generation to present these problems of growing up like child abuse, suicide, gun violence, parents who give their kids no love, bullying, the destructive things kids do to be popular, the destructive things kids do for parental approval in sports or getting good grades. Physical violence. Emotional violence. And it was a commentary on the bad parenting you see off screen as well. This showed teen characters with some depth and problems. It wasn't all a Disney fantasy. Now we talk about these things, bullying, guns, peer pressure etc. And much of it is amplified with social media. But then people often pretended the problems didn't even exist or that it was the right thing to do (beat kids, bullying, etc).

  • @waynejones5635
    @waynejones5635 Год назад

    Back in the 80's this cast of students was very big and stared in many movies and earned the nickname the 'Brat Pack'.
    Also note ... there were no cell phones in the 80's.
    You skipped my favorite part ... "A blonde walks into a bar ...." 🤣

  • @ericwatson54
    @ericwatson54 Год назад +2

    I've never heard of Detention on a Saturday for 8 hours.
    Detention was having to stay an extra hour after school.
    Which guaranteed you'd be in trouble with your mother, because she'd have to pick you up.

    • @shanehebert396
      @shanehebert396 Год назад

      Our school was the hour after class as well. I remember not having heard about Saturday detention until I saw this movie. I guess some parts of the country did that /shrug

    • @subliminallime4321
      @subliminallime4321 Год назад +1

      I got Saturday detention once, but it was only 4 hours.

    • @StephenLWilson
      @StephenLWilson 3 месяца назад

      I lived in Texas when they had "Saturday School" which was a day of detention on Saturday. ISS (In School Suspension) was coming up, but I dropped out before experiencing it. Did they still have paddling in school? That is a GenX indicator, as far as I am concerned.

  • @piercehaugh1583
    @piercehaugh1583 Год назад

    This movie perfectly depicted my life growing up. I was Andy on the outside and my soul on the inside was John Bender. I had my first suicide attempt at 12 because my dad beat me so much for not living up to his expectations. I was bullied alot in school so i never felt apart of anything and at home all i could do was be scared at which part of the house my dad was going to use to punish me with, and that was all before i was a teenager. In highschool i was known as the silent assassin because i didn't talk and i was always looking angry all the time. Looking back now i know that what my dad was trying to do was show me that actions have consequences and the bullying was just to let me know that i shouldn't always trust everyone at their word and that the ones who truly care will always be there for me. I can relate to each and every character in this movie to some degree. This is my second all time favorite movie! I love the sound track to it as well! Also i finally got to see your puppy! SO FREAKIN CUTE! Great video as always. Don't ever lose your humanity Dasha, your thoughts on how growing up is, is something i wish someone would have told me growing up and i would have turned out to be a better person than i am now. You are truly amazing and i just love your genuine heart!

  • @Scott-hq3jq
    @Scott-hq3jq Год назад +1

    High School 🏫 was EXACTLY like this for me in the 80s.

  • @lazyperfectionist1
    @lazyperfectionist1 Год назад +1

    16:13 "I would never be able to be a teacher."
    Well, Dasha, note that this movie is based at the fictional Shermer High School in Shermer, Illinois. This is in the US. This is where movies like this _tend_ to be based to keep them believable. Movies like this tend _not_ to be based in _Canada,_ because in Canada, the conditions are different.

  • @jeremyfrost2636
    @jeremyfrost2636 Год назад +1

    The cast of this film and another '80s classic, St. Elmo's Fire, are collectively known as The Brat Pack (a play on words referring to the "Rat Pack" led by Frank Sinatra 2 decades earlier). Several other '80s movies contain enough members of the group to be considered Brat Pack films... these actors worked together A LOT, especially when they were young.
    10:40 I didn't learn how to whistle until I was around 25 years old. So maybe you'll be able to do it in a few years?

  • @devox3291
    @devox3291 Год назад +1

    The iconic song at the end help boost the ( already great) movie and the movie iconic movie boosted the ( already great) song.

  • @Deeplycloseted435
    @Deeplycloseted435 Год назад +1

    In America we have before school detention, lunch detention, after school detention, weekend detention, suspension, and in-school suspension (the worst).
    We LOVE punishment, even though every psychology study in history says the same thing, that punishment isn’t an effective way to change a human’s behavior.

    • @scp_redacted989
      @scp_redacted989 Год назад

      In school suspension is awful. I lost count of how many days I had that crap.

  • @Billinois78
    @Billinois78 Год назад +4

    For November, I hope you will watch my favorite John Hughes movie, "Planes, Trains and Automobiles". The story takes place around Thanksgiving in the U.S.
    1:15 This is a quote from the song "Changes" by David Bowie.

    • @TheBigJD100
      @TheBigJD100 Год назад +2

      Planes Trains and Automobiles is one of my all time favorite movies. Watch it every Thanksgiving.

  • @tomyoung9049
    @tomyoung9049 Год назад +3

    Great job reacting to this. This may be my top movie of all time. I graduated the year this is based on. But I think it is pretty much timeless as nearly every teen feels like them at times. So can identify with at least one of the characters. You really seem to understand what this movie is about. ✊😃

  • @lazyperfectionist1
    @lazyperfectionist1 Год назад +2

    12:54 _Pixy Stix!_ 😆 Ah, what _nostalgic_ monuments to what the '80's considered unhealthy.

  • @IggyStardust1967
    @IggyStardust1967 Год назад +1

    Dasha, I will have lots of commentary on your commentary. But the first thing I want to say, is that I was a teenager when this movie came out. So, I will be giving you a perspective "of the time" (1980s). I turned 13 in 1980, and turned 20 in 1987. This was my "coming of age" era. I remember it VERY well. I know things are very different today, but that's progress. I just hope I can help you to understand how accurate this movie actually is.
    3:20 - The funny thing is, I was part "Brian", part "Bender", and part "Allison". While I wasn't an actual "criminal", I did do things that were... shall we say.... "frowned upon" by adults. I wasn't quite as "nerdy" as Brian, nor as "anti-social" as Allison.... but definitely had traits of those three all rolled into one.
    6:00 - Notice here: NONE of the others rat Bender out to Vernon. While I know this trait has been passed down through generations, Generation X (the "kids" generation in this movie (despite some of the actors being Baby Boomers)) did not trust authority figures, thus, when it came down to "us" against "authority", we stuck together, even if we didn't like each other.
    7:05 - Again.... defiance against authority figures.
    7:34 - This might shock you, but we were actually allowed to smoke back then. Usually outside of the building.... but if you're not allowed outside.... what can you do. Blaze up inside.
    (Also, look up "Smoking in the Boy's Room", the song.)
    16:35 - This particular line was used quite a bit back then. Teachers were, for the most part, above reproach.
    23:33 - No, it's not inevitable. My parents were addicts who died younger than I am now. Next April, I will have lived twice the length of time my father lived his entire life. He died at 28 years 1 month (I was barely a year old). Next April, I'll be 56 years and 2 months. My mother died back in the 90s, she barely made it to 50 (she looked like she was in her 70s). Sure, I have health issues, partly due to what they did prior to my birth, but I'm not an addict, nor will I even try the stuff they were addicted to.
    24:22 - Brian had a "gun" in his locker, but notice, he never said he was going to hurt anyone else. Sure, turns out it was a flare gun, but the only person he was intending to hurt was himself. As bullied as I was back in school, the thought of using a gun to take revenge on my bullies never once occurred to me. Yes, there were guns in my home, but I was brought up to respect the weapon, and never to use one in anger. Not to start a debate, here, but being taught gun safety and respect for life at a young age is something that is quite lacking in the US these days.
    25:35 - Generation X kids did tend to be "ignored" or "passed off" to someone else, by our parents. Part of this was due to the skyrocketing divorce rate in the US at the time. Very few of my childhood friends lived with both parents. After my father died, my mother handed me off to his mother to raise. She handed my brother and sister off to her adoptive parents to be raised. I've been told that she had no "mothering/nurturing" instincts. The last time I saw her in person, I was 4 years old and had no clue who she was. I also have no memory of that visit. Growing up without a father figure was bad enough, but not knowing either parent only made it worse.

    • @jeremyfrost2636
      @jeremyfrost2636 Год назад

      I was bullied in the '90s. Though I never acted on it, I definitely fantasized about bringing a gun to school and taking revenge. Maybe it's because we're 13 years apart, or maybe you're just really, really forgiving.

  • @tamarleigh
    @tamarleigh Год назад +1

    It’s five kids who are all being abused by their parents in different ways. And they were starting to mimic their parents’ abusive behavior patterns, until they bonded with one another.

  • @lazyperfectionist1
    @lazyperfectionist1 Год назад

    1:45 "I can't believe you can't get me out of this. It's so absurd I have to be here on a Saturday."
    I agree. I mean, when _I_ was in high school, I had a pretty advanced vocabulary, and I dealt with pretty advanced concepts, but would you believe it was not advanced enough to have the word "absurd?" I never encountered the notion of going into detention on a _Saturday,_ though.
    You can be _sure,_ though, if I'd _had_ the word "absurd," I'd've used the _hell_ out of it. _So much_ of my life was _absurd._ I'd've used it so much I would've started looking for _nuances_ within the concept.

  • @myTERAexperience
    @myTERAexperience Год назад +1

    If there was 1 thing I could tell my younger self about school it's that none of it matters.

  • @stansmith3509
    @stansmith3509 Год назад

    I had Saturday school once in highschool but it was nothing like this, we would check in and walk the halls for a couple hours. In middle school I had it a ton, I had to copy the dictionary letter for symbol for 4hrs straight. It was fun. And, a side note back in the 80's and 90's kids didn't tell on each other as much even if they weren't friends.

  • @danielaponte8594
    @danielaponte8594 Год назад

    I think this movie was necessary for the public. Different kind of teenagers together, talking about their lives, problems, ideas, debilities... I could feel inside that school!

  • @randomvideoconnoisseur563
    @randomvideoconnoisseur563 Год назад

    12:35 "Can I eat?
    "I dunno, give it a try"
    Is my favourite line in the whole movie, I always bust a gut

  • @RangePisteMies
    @RangePisteMies Год назад +4

    Great movie and great reaction! "When you grow up your heart dies" that line.. Cheers!🍺

  • @jeremystevens6640
    @jeremystevens6640 Год назад +1

    I am writing this to help out Dasha and this video and this channel with the algorithm ✌️❤️😚☺️

  • @Scott-hq3jq
    @Scott-hq3jq Год назад +1

    13:37 my life was like Judd Nelson's character but this moment, Anthony Michael Hall does some great acting just with his facial expression. While being teased... It can't be easy for his kind of childhood either... And that's one of the points of the movie..

  • @campagnollo
    @campagnollo Год назад +9

    In the lunch scene, Allison is using pixie sticks for her sandwich. They are straws filled with fruit flavored sugar. Along with the kids cereal, I feel like I need a massive insulin shot after seeing that!

    • @LordVolkov
      @LordVolkov Год назад +2

      She pours one in her Coke too! Good thing she dances all that sugar out 😅

    • @88wildcat
      @88wildcat Год назад +3

      Also the "dandruff" she uses as snow in her drawing was actually parmesson cheese.

  • @christopherconard2831
    @christopherconard2831 Год назад

    When this movie takes place, March 1984, I was a senior in highschool. I had been caught skipping and was given a choice of 5 days inside school suspension. Basically locked in a room with the other miscreants. Or three days regular suspension. I took the three because they would be the day before and two days after Spring break.
    Yep, skip school and my punishment was an extended Spring break. I think this was probably when I first started giving up my faith in the system.

  • @jimhsfbay
    @jimhsfbay Год назад +2

    Say Anything, Fast Times at Ridgemont High, and Dazed & Confused are my teen movie holy Trinity. This one is a close 4th!

    • @88wildcat
      @88wildcat Год назад

      IMO the holy trinity of 80s high school movies are this film, Fast Times at Ridgemont High, and Heathers.

    • @christopherconard2831
      @christopherconard2831 Год назад

      @@88wildcat Heathers is underrated.

  • @fergalstackstreams
    @fergalstackstreams Год назад

    I always thought it was a nice twist that Anthony Michael Hall's character, the most unassuming of the five, has the darkest secret.

  • @bearcatXF
    @bearcatXF 11 месяцев назад

    "Furious Brewer's Day Off" Aww.

  • @dragonhawkeclouse2264
    @dragonhawkeclouse2264 Год назад

    it is true.....the older a person gets, the more jaded they get to life.......and THAT is the heart dying

  • @nathanholmes5481
    @nathanholmes5481 Год назад +1

    This is such a great story of how different kids just bond

  • @andrewjones575
    @andrewjones575 Год назад +8

    We never find out if the characters change, stay in contact etc. - or go back to how they were before.

    • @TheRetroManRandySavage
      @TheRetroManRandySavage Год назад

      I don't think we will ever find out either.
      Molly said in an interview that they couldn't make another film because it's too white.🤦‍♂️

  • @Dr.Gonzoo
    @Dr.Gonzoo Год назад +1

    Only thing I always think is weird about this movie is the Saturday detention, anytime i ever got detention it was after school same day.
    I also went to highschool 2014-2018 so detention and everything was probably different than the 80’s.

    • @StephenLWilson
      @StephenLWilson 3 месяца назад

      They probably also don't have paddling anymore. They had "saturday school" in the town in Texas where I lived. ISS (In School Suspension) came out around the same time, but I had already dropped out by then.

  • @watsonsd1
    @watsonsd1 Год назад

    It wasn't kindness that caused them not to report John's actions. It's an unwritten rule that you can't snitch.

  • @ARKHAMxMaverick
    @ARKHAMxMaverick Год назад

    People seem to overlook the fact that the nicest guy "the nerd" walked out of the school by himself at the end of the movie.

  • @richarddean5064
    @richarddean5064 Год назад

    This was my favorite move back in high school it came out my junior year it help me get through the rest of them

  • @snap2snip
    @snap2snip Год назад +1

    The caption read “Furious beer day off”

  • @gregall2178
    @gregall2178 Год назад +3

    I think you'd really enjoy just about all of John Hughes' movies.
    Particularly Uncle Buck, Some Kind Of Wonderful, and Pretty In Pink.

    • @jeremyfrost2636
      @jeremyfrost2636 Год назад +1

      Didn't Hughes do Planes, Trains And Automobiles? Maybe Dasha could do that for Thanksgiving next month.

    • @gregall2178
      @gregall2178 Год назад +1

      @@jeremyfrost2636 Yes, he did.

  • @mpireone
    @mpireone Год назад +1

    The first thing that caught me right away with this movie was the opening drums from the theme song!

  • @abraynor84
    @abraynor84 Год назад

    Dasha, this is a reminder that human nature is the same. This movie came up in the 1980's, but being a teenager hasn't really changed. I remember how my parents were the enemy, but you grow up, and realize it's not so easy being a parent either. We were all teens at one point of our lives. For me I have 2 teenage girls. Well I don't know what it's like being a girl. I can only go off the male side. My parents weren't that bad. It's the time when you're growing into a self. When I was out on my own, I realized how much of an asshole I really was. It seemed like my dad was always on my case, but he did it to midigate the damage I could do. When I heard his story from my uncles and aunts, they told me he was a little dare devil. He would take a lot of risks. This was different from the white shirt and black slacks man I knew. Like him, I was a risk taker. At 18, I went to boot camp in the Marines. I can tell you I have done more dumb stuff in my early 20's than I ever did as a teenager. Now I am in my late 30's my oldest is 18, and the youngest is 15. My dad passed away when I was 33 when he was 65 almost 66 years of age. Life goes so fast. I hear the same complaints of you never trust me, why can't I?..., It's so unfair, and my response is yeah I don't trust you. No you can't... Life isn't fair. Trusting a teenager is like trusting a poisonous snake. Judge Judy once said, "Do you know when a teenager is lying? When their lips are moving. Teenagers want to believe that when they leave their house everything they want will be there with a snap of a finger. The reality is the world is a very cold place. You can work yourself hard, and be broke in a cycle. You can't trust the world. You have to keep moving forward even if life knocks you down. Being an adult isn't fun. The world is full of liars and deceivers. You have to question everything. I can go on and on, but this is where I will end it.

  • @Flastew
    @Flastew Год назад +12

    Great Job Dasha, you really got into it and understood it. Loved your thoughts on it and comments during, very cool.

    • @ckobo84
      @ckobo84 Год назад +1

      I can't believe Dasha can remember all the way back to when she was a teenager. 😂

  • @grumpyboomer61
    @grumpyboomer61 Год назад

    The thing that always cracked me up about this movie is Mr. Vernon. Why is he wasting his time fussing with Bender. Great! Bender gets Saturday detention for the next 8 weeks, but Vernon has to be there too. So, I guess he doesn't have anything better to do either.

  • @brunomessiasss
    @brunomessiasss Год назад

    I grew up in the 80's. Molly Ringwald was a star in romantic comedy movies then!
    I love this movie. I was a nerd. ("Was" 😂)

  • @Roguefem76
    @Roguefem76 Год назад +1

    10:22 I'm a little disappointed that you left out the moment when Bender smirks after the janitor gives him the verbal smackdown. It's subtle, but says a lot about his character that he respects people who aren't afraid to snark him back. There's a callback at the end when they share a friendly "See you next Saturday."
    12:54 Those are Pixie Stix, a type of candy that's basically fruit-flavored sugar. It's affectionately called "kiddie crack" by many people. 😆
    14:12 Believe it or not, back then it was considered shocking for this to not only be mentioned in a "teen" movie but actually be pointed out as a _bad_ thing that messes up your kids. In the 80s "corporal punishment" was so accepted that kids could even be spanked or paddled by teachers and school officials. As a group, Boomers were not exactly enlightened parents toward their Gen X kids. (Most Gen X were teenagers when this came out, which no doubt contributed to the popularity of this movie.)
    15:00 At the time we didn't have the high-quality weed out of Mexico that's freely available now. What Bender had is probably "ditch weed" that's a lot weaker so you need more to get high.
    17:40 Adults being dicks to young people was common, so kids/teens closing ranks to protect each other even while fighting amongst themselves was pretty normal.
    It's a pity you cut out Alison's line that "If you say you haven't, you're a prude. If you say you have, you're a slut. It's a trap."

  • @randomvideoconnoisseur563
    @randomvideoconnoisseur563 Год назад

    24:03 Pause it on John Bender's facial reaction after Andrew tells Claire "f u"
    I believe this is a turning point, his face tells us that, "wow, these other kids actually might be as screwed up as I am" (albeit in different ways)

    • @randomvideoconnoisseur563
      @randomvideoconnoisseur563 Год назад

      sorry, not screwed up, that is the wrong way of saying it, I just mean, having problems of their own, and not living great at home like he thought they were

  • @chipsthedog1
    @chipsthedog1 Год назад

    John Hughes made some great teen movies in the 80s, I loved them all

  • @Metzwerg74
    @Metzwerg74 Год назад +1

    one of the best movies of all times.... gets me every time... in school i´ve been in every role... apart from the princess....

  • @stephenlackey5852
    @stephenlackey5852 Год назад

    When Allison whispers “They ignore me,” it kiss me every time.
    That was me😞💔

  • @krisfrederick5001
    @krisfrederick5001 Год назад

    I was so John Bender in High School (minus the sexual harassment and bullying...)The troublemaker, class clown, punk rocker that ended up with the blonde haired blue eyed cheerleader. But my teachers loved me and I had friends in every tribe. These stereotypes still exist to this day, which one were you?. Saturday School SUCKED.

  • @apatternedhorizon
    @apatternedhorizon Год назад +2

    Love this movie. Now you should do Dazed and Confused followed by Empire Records.

  • @roadblock187
    @roadblock187 Год назад +2

    if you liked the breakfast club you should watch "Pretty in Pink", "16 candles" & "Weird Science".

  • @totomomo18
    @totomomo18 Год назад +2

    Great movie. You should also watch Pump Up The Volume 1990.

  • @bufordteejustice1119
    @bufordteejustice1119 Год назад +1

    A true classic.

  • @Gr8Buccaneer
    @Gr8Buccaneer Год назад +1

    an everlasting classic,great choice

  • @JLOFlix
    @JLOFlix Год назад

    What a great movie! I don't see many reactions to this film, but, it is totally worth it, and your reaction was great! благодарю вас, Dasha!

  • @Fat_Kids_Jiggle
    @Fat_Kids_Jiggle Год назад +1

    I can't whistle either, I gave up trying years and years ago lol

  • @user-pe9gz8si8k
    @user-pe9gz8si8k Год назад +1

    I would love your comments on 2010: The Year We Make Contact. I am interested in how authentic the Russian crew is.

  • @SomethingNowhereMan
    @SomethingNowhereMan Год назад

    I’m goad you enjoyed this movie, Dasha! This is probably one of my favorite teen movies that I had ever seen!

  • @josua1146
    @josua1146 Год назад +1

    Great reaction Dasha, I knew this movie fits to you and you would enjoy it.