I watched this movie last night, and I'm not gonna lie, it was pretty garbage. Like the characters were annoying and the movie itself is just a way for "quirky" people to project themselves onto a character to make themselves seem more interesting. The only good character was the principle guy who was like "stop being a little bitch or I'll knock your shit in".
The nerdy kid was hella annoying, he couldn't even speak right.
The jock character was the only guy I didn't mind that much until he started smoking weed and crying cause he caught a nibba lacking.
The one weird girl was hella annoying like everything she said made me cringe. Like she just says shit at random and I'm just thinking "Did I -blam!-ing ask, bitch?"
The "bad boy" was hella annoying too cause he just kept acting like a cuck. "Hurr durr I'll kill u with my shitty pocket knife." Like pull up bitch I got the strap.
The preppy girl I didn't really care much about she was just annoying cause she cries a lot.
In all 3/10 garbage movie, the janitor should've thrown away any copies of it.
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Even being around when it was new, I've never seen it nor have I ever wanted to.
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Edited by tryingtodelete: 9/23/2018 5:07:43 PMDid we watch the same movie?
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I think you have totally missed the point of the movie. Each character is an archetype. A stereotype of the group they represent from the perspective of the other characters. As the movie progresses we see the misconceptions projected by one group onto another are stripped away leaving an individual who cannot solely be defined by the social group they belong to.
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You're the second person to say this, to my knowledge. The first was my cousin. He's currently in prison.
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Please leave and never come back thank you. You totally missed the entire plotline of the story
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I know, right? When teens talk, it can be pretty cringy. [spoiler]"Hella", "Like pull up bitch I got the strap" and "nibba lacking", what the hell does that even mean? [/spoiler]
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The movie is a coming-of-age experience for people who were Gen Xers, and in highschool at the time. The point of the movie is that each one of these characters represented types of people you knew----or were---in high school at that time. Representing various "cliques" or "tribes" that didnt' get along...and would have nothing to do with each other. The point of "The Breakfast Club" was that the detention forced them together....and made them realize that they were more alike than they were different...once you were able to get them past their tribal affiliations...and tribal loyalties/resentments. Which was ----and still is---a very important LIFE lesson: [i] "We are all more alike than we are different. Society and our "tribes" just condition us to focus on---and overdramatize----the differences. The result being lots of unnecessary unhappiness and conflict. Unhappiness and conflict that usually go away, when we instead focus on how similar we are." [/i]
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It was decent when it came out.
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