GENERAL DISCUSSIONS

BASKETCASES UNITE!!!!!!!!

POSTED BY: JAMERON4EVA
UPDATED: Sunday, October 4, 2009 08:28
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Tuesday, September 22, 2009 7:02 AM

JAMERON4EVA


Okay, i know i wasn't borne yet when this movie came out, but i love it, of course i'm talking about, "The Breakfast Club". Yes a brain, an athelete, a princess, a basketcase, and a criminal, common theme in 80's teen movies, and it worked! If you don't know the director, it was the great John Huges, yes the director of the brat pack movies, and i love them.

To me this movies shows what teens think, talk, and do at school, and in there own lives, but most of all it shows withy what teens deal with on an almost daily basis. The qliks, the drama, the jokes, the love, and yes there is love in this movie.

If you feel the need to talk about this movie, or share your stories on how it influinced you, it's here. Oh and Kwico, TSCC WILL RULE THE WORLD!!!! Season 2 comes out TODAY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


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Tuesday, September 22, 2009 7:28 AM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Well, TSCC will *not* rule the world, since it's been cancelled...

... but other than that, I'm with ya.

I was in my mid-20s when I saw The Breakfast Club, and I can't really say that it changed my world or anything, but for probably the first time in my life I felt like someone actually GOT where kids were coming from. Thing is, I and everyone I knew in high school was every one of those people in some way, to some degree. We had our own little cliques ("Jets" and "Freaks" at my school) that we stuck with most of the time, but as one of the Freaks, I was also on the tennis team, my best friend was on the swim team, and we smoked pot with football players and cheerleaders, went to keggers with baseball players and that hot girl from the French Club, and ate mushrooms before pep rallies with basketball players and a couple of the girls from Government class.

What's weird is, I watched it again a couple years ago, and there was a part of me that was thinking that the Assistant Principal was right, and these really were a bunch of smart-ass kids. A little part of my younger self died that day...

:(

Mike

Old friend charity
Cruel twisted smile
And the smile signals emptiness
For me
Starless and Bible black

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Tuesday, September 22, 2009 7:33 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


I loved it, too, despite all the negative comments about the careers it launched. I was sad to see Judd Nelson, fatter and older, show up on TV--everyone has to make a living, but in truth I thought ALL of them shows potential which has been unfulfilled. Molly Ringwald virtually disappeared, as did Sheedy and Gleason; Estevez became a joke; and Michael Hall got his own show yeeears later, in "Dead Zone"--but was virtually unrecognizable. I'll say one thing for him; he certainly turned out damned good looking, for someone who looked like such a geek!

The movie meant a lot to me, too--I was still young enough to remember what it was like, and I thought it captured high-school angst perfectly. Was also a well put-together film and entertaining; that's a lot to accomplish. But then Hughes DID accomplish that and more in some of his movies. He dealt with young people's issues...although I HATED Ferris Bueller. Actually, I didn't like quite a few of them, Planes, Trains and Automobiles and Uncle Buck, for example.

I thought "Sixteen Candles" was also an excellent "capture" of teenage angst, and "Pretty in Pink" (which he produced). Mostly, I thought a couple of the ones he wrote were great (Nate & Hayes, a particular favorite of mine that I'll bet nobody saw) especially Miracle on 34th Street. But I never forgave him for the Home Alone series...

________________________
Together we are greater than the sum of our parts

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Tuesday, September 22, 2009 9:57 AM

JAMERON4EVA


Quote:

Originally posted by Kwicko:
Well, TSCC will *not* rule the world, since it's been cancelled...

... but other than that, I'm with ya.

I was in my mid-20s when I saw The Breakfast Club, and I can't really say that it changed my world or anything, but for probably the first time in my life I felt like someone actually GOT where kids were coming from. Thing is, I and everyone I knew in high school was every one of those people in some way, to some degree. We had our own little cliques ("Jets" and "Freaks" at my school) that we stuck with most of the time, but as one of the Freaks, I was also on the tennis team, my best friend was on the swim team, and we smoked pot with football players and cheerleaders, went to keggers with baseball players and that hot girl from the French Club, and ate mushrooms before pep rallies with basketball players and a couple of the girls from Government class.

What's weird is, I watched it again a couple years ago, and there was a part of me that was thinking that the Assistant Principal was right, and these really were a bunch of smart-ass kids. A little part of my younger self died that day...

:(

Mike

Old friend charity
Cruel twisted smile
And the smile signals emptiness
For me
Starless and Bible black



August 2012 baby, J-Day!!!!!!! TSCC WILL RULE THE WORLD, WE WILL GET IT BACK, AND WE WILL FIND OUT HOW THE SERIES ENDS. FOREVER A JAMERON FAN, TSCC IS DA BEST THIS SIDE OF BLUE SUN.

"I'm a lumberjack, and i'm okay, i slepp all nite and i work all day."- Monty Python

Oh and Kwico, read my prop to you, and thanx for the number 1 threads for TSCC.

Oh and the quote below, (hint hint to it's origins), i think applies perfectly to the Firefly campaign. And by the way, would you see another Firefly movie, show?

"The future is not set, there is no fate but what we make for ojurselves."

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Tuesday, September 22, 2009 4:41 PM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Quote:

And by the way, would you see another Firefly movie, show?



Would I? WOULD I?

(Ducks and covers. And Waits. Surely someone knows this hoary old chestnut...)



While TSCC was never in my list of favorite shows, I'm glad you like it and are that committed to it. Reminds me of... well, US, really. And who knows? Maybe you'll do the impossible. It's happened before, so it's not unheard of.



As for Hughes' movies, I *liked* Ferris Bueller, but didn't love it. I loved "Weird Science", because it was silly, but still a bit poignant nonetheless. So what WOULD happen if all your fantasies came true? And how would you deal with it?

I really love Miracle on 34th Street, even more than the original. I didn't even realize he wrote the screenplay for that one - and I watch it every year at Christmastime!

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Tuesday, September 22, 2009 5:55 PM

BORIS


I was smack in the middle of my teens when I saw the breakfast club...I didn't like it coz I did not relate to it. I was the dorky weird girl at school and I knew for a fact that the dorky weird girl never gets the guy (any guy including the ones that actually like her, because they don't want their non reputations ruined) or a makeover from the popular girls. however the dorky weird girl does get tough and develops endearing lifeskills and compassion for underdogs, as a result of her highschool experience. She never feels the need for or succumbs to any makeover attempts, and ends up having a fuller more satisfying life overall than the popular girls. not to be cynical or anything. I related more to The Outsiders.

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Thursday, September 24, 2009 7:00 AM

JAMERON4EVA


Quote:

Originally posted by boris:
I was smack in the middle of my teens when I saw the breakfast club...I didn't like it coz I did not relate to it. I was the dorky weird girl at school and I knew for a fact that the dorky weird girl never gets the guy (any guy including the ones that actually like her, because they don't want their non reputations ruined) or a makeover from the popular girls. however the dorky weird girl does get tough and develops endearing lifeskills and compassion for underdogs, as a result of her highschool experience. She never feels the need for or succumbs to any makeover attempts, and ends up having a fuller more satisfying life overall than the popular girls. not to be cynical or anything. I related more to The Outsiders.



So if your a dork, either girl or boy, you will never get the guy, OR GIRL?
(Gasp) I WILL NEVER BELIEVE THAT!!!!

( Runs to the Blue Sun)

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Thursday, September 24, 2009 2:00 PM

BORIS


Okay let me rephrase....this particular dork didn't get the guy at high school so I personally didn't relate to the movie and was cynical about it....however all other dorks may have had more pleasant experiences. most dorks i know have lovely romances. I was speaking from my own experience: in my tortured teenage soul at the time I watched the Breakfast club, the girls like me never got the guys. Later after high school this female proud to be geek/dork was told that many of the guys actually liked her but thought their reputations (such as they were) would be wounded if they asked her out etc.I must highlight the fact that I went to an all girl Catholic high school and the boys we knew were from the boy's catholic high school. I did relate to the song" I learned the truth at Seventeen" I no longer have the impression the dorks don't get the guy or the girl. Geekiness is a gift.

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Sunday, October 4, 2009 8:28 AM

JAMERON4EVA


Quote:

Originally posted by boris:
Okay let me rephrase....this particular dork didn't get the guy at high school so I personally didn't relate to the movie and was cynical about it....however all other dorks may have had more pleasant experiences. most dorks i know have lovely romances. I was speaking from my own experience: in my tortured teenage soul at the time I watched the Breakfast club, the girls like me never got the guys. Later after high school this female proud to be geek/dork was told that many of the guys actually liked her but thought their reputations (such as they were) would be wounded if they asked her out etc.I must highlight the fact that I went to an all girl Catholic high school and the boys we knew were from the boy's catholic high school. I did relate to the song" I learned the truth at Seventeen" I no longer have the impression the dorks don't get the guy or the girl. Geekiness is a gift.




Geekness is a gift, as well as the ablility to score a 90% at a shotting match for ROTC.

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