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UNIVERSAL

MOVIE INFO

Director:
John Hughes
Cast:
Emilio Estevez, Anthony Michael Hall, Judd Nelson, Molly Ringwald, Ally Sheedy, Paul Gleason
Writing Credits:
John Hughes

Tagline:
They only met once, but it changed their lives forever.

Synopsis:
When Saturday detention started, they were simply the Jock, the Princess, the Brain, the Criminal and the Basket Case, but by that afternoon they had become closer than any of them could have imagined.

Box Office:
Domestic Gross
$45.875 million.

MPAA:
Rated R

DISC DETAILS
Presentation:
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Audio:
English DTS-HD MA 5.1
French DTS 2.0
Latin American Spanish
German DTS 2.0
Castillian DTS 2.0
Italian DTS 2.0
Japanese DTS 2.0
Subtitles:
English
Latin American Spanish
French
French Canadian
German
Castillian
Italian
Japanese
Portuguese
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Dutch
Norwegian
Arabic
Hindu
Icelandic
Closed-captioned
Supplements Subtitles:
English
Latin American Spanish
French
French Canadian
German
Castillian
Italian
Japanese
Portuguese
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Dutch
Norwegian
Arabic

Runtime: 97 min.
Price: $19.98
Release Date: 3/10/2015

Bonus:
• Audio Commentary with Actors Anthony Michael Hall and Judd Nelson
• “Accepting the Facts” Trivia Track
• “Sincerely Yours” 12-Part Documentary
• “The Most Convenient Definitions: The Origins of the Brat Pack” Featurette
• Trailer


PURCHASE @ AMAZON.COM

EQUIPMENT
Panasonic TC-P60VT60 60-Inch 1080p 600Hz 3D Smart Plasma HDTV; Sony STR-DG1200 7.1 Channel Receiver; Panasonic DMP-BD60K Blu-Ray Player using HDMI outputs; Michael Green Revolution Cinema 6i Speakers (all five); Kenwood 1050SW 150-watt Subwoofer.

RELATED REVIEWS


The Breakfast Club: 30th Anniversary Edition [Blu-Ray] (1985)

Reviewed by Colin Jacobson (March 11, 2015)

For me, 1985’s The Breakfast Club remains a little special due to one reason: it was the last of John Hughes’ teen movies that came out while I still attended high school. It hit theaters a few months before I graduated in June 1985, so it provided the final flick to which I could theoretically relate. Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, Pretty in Pink and the like all hit when I was a college man, so it wasn’t quite the same for me.

Club offers one other less personal difference from its brethren: it gives us the only Hughes high school movie with an “R” rating. Before I saw its DVD, I remembered the flick as being more serious than its siblings, but I’d not seen it… cripes, I don’t think I’d watched the flick since it came out in 1985.

Set during Saturday detention at Shermer High in suburban Chicago, Club introduces us to the five students under punishment. All of them come with stereotypes attached. We meet Andrew “The Jock” Clark (Emilio Estevez), Brian “The Brain” Johnson (Anthony Michael Hall), John “The Criminal” Bender (Judd Nelson), Claire “The Princess” Standish (Molly Ringwald) and Allison “The Basket Case” Reynolds (Ally Sheedy). Stuck in school with hard-edged teacher Richard Vernon (Paul Gleason), the students get to know each other through the course of the day.

Not much of a plot, is it? During college, I once went to a party and had a very drunken bonding session with a burly wrestler. He bemoaned that everyone viewed him as a dumb jock, and I complained that people just saw me as a tubby dork. (Not the case anymore - I’m no longer tubby. Dork? Jury’s still out.)

Take that self-pitying bout of bonding, remove the booze but add some pot and make it five high school students instead of two college guys and you have Breakfast Club. Don’t take that as an attack on the flick, for I don’t mean to connote that it’s a drag. While I can’t call Club a classic – at least not for anyone over the age of 18 – I think it entertains well enough.

As a 47-year-old, I obviously bring a rather different perspective to the flick than I did when I was 18. Some art stays with us as we age; heck, I’ll defend the hit parade of 1985 until the day I die. Movies like Club don’t stay relevant to us as we get older, however. We might maintain some nostalgic affection for them, but we can’t really identify with the teen-centric ruminations.

This does mean, however, that Club will stay timeless for kids of a certain age. I don’t know how current teens will deal with the movie's dated music and fashions, but I’m sure they’ll still relate to its themes and characters. As 2008’s documentary American Teen shows, the archetypes viewed in Club never change, so the film will always have a punch for its intended audience.

Will Club actually work for anyone above the age of 18? Yeah, to a moderate degree. The movie combines moments of melodramatic character revelations with light comedy. It’s not the cleanest combination of tones, as Hughes shifts among them without much clarity. The funny bits work the best, as they don’t require us to put up with teen self-pity. Hall gets some of the movie’s most amusing bits, though all the actors manage to deliver a few laughs.

Although I know the dramatic moments give Club its relevance for teens, those are the parts that become the most difficult to endure for adults. Seriously – don’t any of these kids have decent home lives? The bonding and revelations get tedious.

Despite those moments, Club keeps our attention most of the time. A good cast helps. Nelson’s Bender is nothing more than an Eighties iteration of the Angry Young Man, another rebel without a clue, but I think he does well with the part. Bender is a smug prick, and Nelson delivers that personality in a convincing manner.

Ringwald surprises just because she looks pretty good. When the movie first came out, I assumed that Sheedy – so cute in WarGames – would play The Princess, while gawky Ringwald would be The Basket Case. The role-reversal took me off-guard, but it works. Ringwald seems more attractive than ever, and Sheedy delivers a quirky, offbeat turn as Allison. Maybe a little too quirky, I must admit, but she still does effective work.

While predictable, dated and melodramatic, The Breakfast Club still musters decent entertainment value. Maybe I like it just because of nostalgia, but I don’t think so. Though the flick doesn’t excel, it usually works.


The Blu-ray Grades: Picture B/ Audio C+/ Bonus B

The Breakfast Club appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 1.85:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. Though it showed its age, the image usually looked pretty good.

Sharpness mostly seemed fine. A few shots looked a smidgen soft, and I suspect some light digital sharpening occurred, but I felt the majority of the movie offered solid clarity and delineation. Jagged edges and shimmering caused no concerns, and only a smidgen of noise reduction appeared, if any. The movie lacked print flaws and came across as clean.

Colors seemed good. The film offered a fairly natural palette and appeared reasonably full – at least within the parameters of the 80s film stocks. Black levels appeared fine while shadow detail was positive. Neither of those elements excelled, but they were more than acceptable. Overall, I thought the transfer depicted the movie pretty well.

Nothing special emerged from the DTS-HD MA 5.1 audio of The Breakfast Club either. A chatty movie, the soundscape didn’t open up too much. Music disappointed, as the pop/rock songs and score remained essentially monaural. They boasted a little reverb in the side and rear speakers, but that was all; there was no real stereo imaging in terms of music.

Effects broadened matters in a minor way. A few scenes made slightly more active use of the various channels, and I even heard one or two split-surround elements. Nonetheless, the flick really concentrated on dialogue, so effects didn’t have much to do. This was a track with a narrow focus.

At least audio quality seemed good. While the absence of stereo music disappointed me, I did think the songs and score sounded fine. Those elements showed positive range and depth, so the tracks reproduced them well.

Effects remained a minor part of the mix, so they didn’t stand out in any way. Those elements seemed accurate enough, but they weren’t memorable. Speech was natural and concise, without edginess or other issues. Not enough happened here to elevate my grade above “C+”, but other than the absence of stereo music, the audio was perfectly fine.

How did this “30th Anniversary” Blu-ray compare to the original Blu-ray from 2010? Audio appeared to be identical, but visuals differed. The 30th Anniversary set showed better definition, more natural colors and fewer print flaws. The new Blu-ray became the more satisfying transfer.

The 30th Anniversary set repeats the old Blu-ray’s extras and adds one new one: Accepting the Facts: The Breakfast Club Trivia Track. It gives us a mix of notes about cast/crew as well as production notes and trivia. We also see occasional stills from the shoot. “Facts” didn’t boast a ton of information, but it added some good details.

Everything else showed up on the old Blu-ray, and we get an audio commentary with actors Anthony Michael Hall and Judd Nelson. Along with moderator/DVD producer Jason Hillhouse, the pair sit together for this running, screen-specific chat. They discuss cast, rehearsals and performances, working with director John Hughes and the other filmmakers, sets and locations, and a few production stories.

Though the track starts out well, it loses steam after too long. During its early moments, the actors offer good reflections on their experiences. Unfortunately, as the commentary progresses, we hear more praise, less information, and too many dead spots. Fans will still find some nice observations here, but this ends up as an inconsistent discussion.

Next comes a 12-part documentary called Sincerely Yours. In this 51-minute, 25-second piece, we get the usual mix of archival elements, movie clips and interviews. We hear from Hall, Nelson, Heathers director Michael Lehmann, Juno screenwriter Diablo Cody, Washington Post writer Hank Stuever, costume designer Marilyn Vance, Pretty Persuasion director Marco Siega, Fast Times at Ridgemont High director Amy Heckerling, and actors Ally Sheedy and John Kapelos. “Yours” looks at director John Hughes and his take on teen life, musical choices, aspects of the script and story, rehearsal, characters and performances, costumes, and the film’s reception/legacy.

“Yours” mixes good facts with lots of fluff. Much of the program simply discusses the greatness of John Hughes, as well as the wonderfulness of Club itself. We do find a reasonable amount of interesting information along the way, but the package gets a bit tough to take. I think there’s enough useful material here to make it worth a look, but it’s an inconsistent program.

In addition to the film’s trailer, we find a featurette entitled The Most Convenient Definitions: The Origins of the Brat Pack. This five-minute, 30-second short includes notes from Lehmann, Stuever, Sheedy, Hall, Nelson, Kapelos, New York Press editor-in-chief David Blum, and Tiger Beat and Bop magazines associate editor Marc Cuenco. We learn about how the “Brat Pack” moniker came into being and aspects of that term’s usage. It’s a short but interesting piece, largely because term inventor Blum appears.

While The Breakfast Club lacks the relevance it boasted for me when it hit in 1985, it still has its moments. I could live without all the melodrama, but there’s enough good material here to make it interesting. The Blu-ray provides positive picture and some useful supplements along with average audio. This “30th Anniversary” release stands as the best home video version of the film to date.

To rate this film visit the Flashback Edition of THE BREAKFAST CLUB

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