The alternate ending that was never shown, and is still not shown! What a click bait title!
@talkingstraightwithnate4 ай бұрын
Yes thank you, these clickbait things need to be taken down.
@bassfan414 ай бұрын
I guess the inaccurate facts about the movie make it the alternative version
@MicMc-vn4qt4 ай бұрын
Nice one Shane Am gettin sick of all these click bait shit artists The only way they get any views
@loridameron38384 ай бұрын
@@shanesmith2599 you must have missed it, said there were 2 other options. They didn’t play them just discussed.
@libertyresearch-iu4fy4 ай бұрын
I missed the part where the video says the alternate ending will be shown. Its not clickbait.
@lockedonlaw4 ай бұрын
Claire didn't say, "When you grow up, your heart dies." Alison did.
@projectjaguar56384 ай бұрын
They showed Alison and said Claire🤷♂️
@Texaslonestargal4 ай бұрын
Exactly right! That’s what I was going to say.
@clintonnagy16624 ай бұрын
Exactly. I'm glad to see this comment as being the first one to point that out. Do your homework on an iconic movie Mr. NARRATOR guy...sheesh.😮
@osofine234 ай бұрын
@@clintonnagy1662 You do know that the narrator is an AI voice reading a ChatGPT type script. I’m not sure how the visuals are done, but they certainly reuse the same photos over and over. Anytime you hear that voice, remember it’s not real!
@JeffPelletier094 ай бұрын
You got it my friend !
@greghoadley18154 ай бұрын
Total click bait. You don't put "alternate ending" in the title, and never talk about.
@nickbrutanna99734 ай бұрын
They mention, in very vague terms, some variations which were shot, but that is it.
4 ай бұрын
@@nickbrutanna9973 timestamps , please. i missed them.
@testfire30004 ай бұрын
12:01 The whole thing is only a couple sentences long. Total click bait regardless.
4 ай бұрын
@@testfire3000 that was NOT an 'alternate' ending. he is TOTALLY WRONG. it was NOT 2 seperate endings, like he says. both couples kissed at the end.
@testfire30004 ай бұрын
I agree with you. Total click bait.
@dwylbtzledwylbtzle55354 ай бұрын
Whenever I get burned, once, with a blatant click-bait title, I never watch anything from that channel again. If we all adopt this policy maybe someday they'll get the message.
@eurekayess4 ай бұрын
And report them!
@LilacDaisy24 ай бұрын
Yep, I look for a video of theirs in the sidebar and click "do not recommend this channel," so they can't get me again with more lies.
@mgtowmonger27293 ай бұрын
if only you'd take the same attitude with civics and deal with the two party system in the usa the same way.... but no... no you won't.
@LilacDaisy23 ай бұрын
@@mgtowmonger2729 Do you think everyone lives in the USA
@mgtowmonger27293 ай бұрын
@@LilacDaisy2 same applies for any western country at the moment.... you live in the uk? if so hope you're enjoying the current 'situation'. the progression will be to 'californicate' the nations then 'uk' the nations and then ultimately end up like south africa. international enough for you?
@justbob90064 ай бұрын
I stand behind this as i did as a kid. The fist bump/raise to the sky was a perfect ending. The relationships that might have blossomed in that time frame did not need a resolve. Kept us kids feeling like we watched "life in real time." Another day of high school.
@tatertots-n-soup3 ай бұрын
What a crook. It made us realise how screwed up everything was getting and it was only up to the future of the youth to make socialism right again
@krisb6753 ай бұрын
Totally!
@Xis-ql5pj4 ай бұрын
In the end, we got trolled.
@Xis-ql5pj4 ай бұрын
@nukkinfigure we all just wanted to see pics of Molly ringwald in compromising poses...well played , troll who put this up
@Xis-ql5pj3 ай бұрын
@nukkinfigure indeed
@ronwise374 ай бұрын
A U.S. vs them mentality? Enough with letting AI read the script.
@deanmccaskill54954 ай бұрын
It’s a sin really. It seems every video like this has a dead giveaway like this lately
@craigorlikowski25074 ай бұрын
Exactly!! How lazy can you be where you can't even narrate videos anymore?! Oh and how it says Emilio's name too! Ridiculous!
@alancortazzo91614 ай бұрын
What are you talking about? That wasn't an AI voice. There's no way. It sounds to realistic.
@alancortazzo91614 ай бұрын
Wait a minute. The voice sounds so realistic because its an AI version of an actual person's voice? Not a robotic generic synthesized voice? And it's too realistic. Not to.
@stevealkire76264 ай бұрын
@ronwise37 *Yep they had me fooled up to that goof which shows they not only can't narrate but won't even review the video for such errors.* 15:29
@yinyangphoenix4 ай бұрын
The story of this film is complete the way it is. It doesn’t need a sequel.
@alancortazzo91614 ай бұрын
What about a black or otherwise not white people version? I loved The Wiz. Why didn't that movie start this trend? But yeah, just leave it alone. If a remake was done today, it would have alternative gender students in it. That isn't necessarily a bad idea as lomg as its done the right way for the right reasons. But Hollywood doesn't do things the right way for the right reasons anymore. They're all about woke. So yeah, just leave it alone, at least until Hollywood regains its sanity and artistic instinct.
@toypoms86234 ай бұрын
It would ruin it for sure You cant improve on perfection
@mgtowmonger27293 ай бұрын
@@alancortazzo9161 blacks don't get detention. that would be racist. even back then.
@kevind71504 ай бұрын
Some films are best left alone. A sequel to this would be disastrous.
@OneRedKansan554 ай бұрын
I agree
@theraptorus4 ай бұрын
A remake would be just as disastrous.
@mikehenrys4 ай бұрын
I agree, a sequel or remake, would be a very bad idea. However I would like Hughes (if he is still alive) to write a paragraph or two briefly describing about each character, where are they now. Not filmed, only in writing, and in brief. I think that would be cool.
@michaelmalone33464 ай бұрын
🐖I’m all for a good squeal!
@andrewbelanger23854 ай бұрын
@@mikehenrysJohn Hughes passed away in 2010
@mikaelcrews72324 ай бұрын
It's one of the few movies that can't do a remake or a sequel, and defines every generation!
@janetduncan874 ай бұрын
There's been talk of a sequel or remake, but no, why take perfection and ruin it. Nobody today could play these roles.
@mikaelcrews72324 ай бұрын
@@janetduncan87 they'll never do a sequel because the movie is to perfect and the original cast doesn't want a sequel because that was there finest movie they ever made!
@janetduncan874 ай бұрын
@mikaelcrews7232 Never say never. 20 years from now, they could do a remake. I know it would stink, though .
@mikaelcrews72324 ай бұрын
@@janetduncan87 oh yeah!
@mgtowmonger27293 ай бұрын
oh, don't worry, d.e.i. will come to the rescue and make a remake... lol...
@lynnsenger99504 ай бұрын
In my opinion, "The Breakfast Club" is the best "coming of age" movie ever made. It defined a generation.
@dabneyoffermein5954 ай бұрын
it defined boring movies, but it grows on you a bit
@musingmina32574 ай бұрын
From what I've heard, the alternate ending was a scene of them on Monday morning with their respective friends/groups; they see each other across the hall(?) and nod, leaving it up to the audience to conclude whether or not they were actually going to talk to each other, or if that was going to be as far as they went. Apparently, only Hughes had a copy of that. The supposed alternate endings mentioned in this clip were all used; Claire and Bender did share a kiss out in the parking lot (as well as a deleted one in the closet), as did Andrew and Allison, before Bender's fist pump. P.S. When did the group take the fall for Bender's weed? They were somehow never found out.
@donaldprocknow22984 ай бұрын
You can’t remake and touch on perfection it just won’t be there
@adrianbaker59164 ай бұрын
So where's the Alternate Ending then?
@Kathmak4 ай бұрын
Click bait! One passing mention about an alternate ending.
@karenorgan62034 ай бұрын
@@Kathmakah sweet, I can skip this pos then, thank you for saving me ten min, have a g8 weekend … no more detention for us
@Sean-ms8hx4 ай бұрын
@@Kathmakthey talked about it. It was with Clare and bender kissing at the end instead of the fist pump.
@chrisb.12144 ай бұрын
@@Kathmak Glad I skipped through it.
@mrlongbone26674 ай бұрын
Clare and bender did kiss at the end
@mandycook90374 ай бұрын
One of the best movies made for the time along with st elmos fire and the outsiders they dont make them this good anymore.
@sierra72024 ай бұрын
I agree!
@INKOSK41144 ай бұрын
This channel should be called “Classic Clickbait”.
@lordcron3 ай бұрын
I was a teen at the time this movie came out. I was in the 10th grade/Sophemore and got my first job at the new Cinema 4 Theater that opened. It was a great time to be a teenager.
@GKnSeattle4 ай бұрын
Let's do a bit better on fact checking, because The Breakfast Club is Rated R.
@hobowithawaterpistol90704 ай бұрын
But as sure as I’m typing, they will make a remake! I kind of want to see one in this generation!
@bartfart38474 ай бұрын
A.I don't care about facts.
@ebinrock4 ай бұрын
And it was Allison who said, "When you grow up, your heart dies", not Claire.
@loridameron38384 ай бұрын
Hughs was brilliant and the actors really did their job. I was only a year out of high school, and I really felt like I was back. GREAT movie! I totally had teachers like Vernon. I guess you needed to be a kid to see it.
@JAMessinaJr4 ай бұрын
I was in HS when this came out. Vernon definitely captured several teachers I had during my bout with school.
@hermanator743014 ай бұрын
' Hughes '...dummy.
@jameseverett90372 ай бұрын
another "poor oppressed actors are so abused and their jobs are so hard " like they're all homeless street crazies now, due to the relentless stress of being actors, as if it's a volunteer profession for kind sensitive people who want nothing more than to contribute to the quality of movie art through self-sacrifice.
@altereddogma2 ай бұрын
A lot of people in their 20s and early-30s liked the movie too.
@Jerepasaurus3 ай бұрын
I was born the year this movie released, so I grew up watching it. None of it resonated with me exactly until I was in middle school, which by that point, I now recognize all of my friends were these kinds of people. I even knew a guy a bit like Bender, though quieter. But, due to my youthful fear of confessing anything that kind of heartfelt, I didn't tell him that I'd cared about him for the last few years. He seemed slightly skuzzy sometimes, had been arrested like a thug by the time he was 12, and his real life seemed to be a mystery to most. But he was part of our big friend circle, and we welcomed all kinds of weirdos and oddballs and outcasts. By junior year, I'd begun to realize, or more consciously so, that any time I was alone with this "Bender" friend, dark features, tall, a bit punk/goth... he would tell me all kinds of stories about things he'd done or seen. And most of them were elaborate or nonsense lies. I'd wondered about it for years, because he only told such things to me, always when it was just us... because I would often linger near him, subtly keeping him company, since he so easily drifted off from people and would get quiet when not being bombastic, dramatic, sarcastic, or even trollish. I knew, even at 13, that loud obnoxious side wasn't actually him. He just wanted attention, distractions, or something interesting to be happening. And he'd just act it out himself, if he had to. But I seemed to pay him closer attention than anyone, and even when he drifted to the edges of the group, I'd go find him. Just stand with him. Standing with him, just being quietly beside him, ready to listen, checking in on him... I think I was the only one that really did that. And honestly, I was thankful it was just me. I valued that quiet, modest role of being his support, even if I never had the sense or nerve to tell him, and just hoped one day he'd figure it out, that I was always glad to see him. The thing I'd realized though, but more strongly as an adult, was that whenever he told me lies... and only me... it was because he wanted to talk to me. He wanted to tell me things that made him sound more interesting. But... he wasn't truly that arrogant about it. I could tell talking himself up for general attention wasn't really a thing with just me. I think he'd just had severe depression for most of his life, didn't truly know how to interact "normally" with anyone, but sometimes he would have days of clarity where he would see me, always there, willing and eager to listen to him, about anything at all. And one day in october, I was standing at the edge of our massive group, band and theater kids, all the "weirdest", most problemed in life, but most truly supportive and familial with one another, I was playing with a large plastic "steel" chain from a costume piece. I was just zoning out, listening to blending conversations in a comfortable and admittedly brainless haze, idly messing with the chain by wrapping and unwrapping it from my arm or arms. And after doing so for about 5 minutes, I'd twisted them around in dumb loops like I'd actually had my wrists chained together in front of me. No one was paying me any mind... or so I thought. I'd only been twisted up like that for maybe 5 or 6 seconds, but I saw someone in black from the corner of my eye walking up to me, which I hadn't expected. Though many of my friends loved me and enjoyed my company, I was still one of the odder oddballs, and was often a bit of a tag-along. It would be years when I learned that my friends assumed I was too innocent to ever tell any of their darker interpersonal teen drama, like someone having a sex life, trying weed, or sneaking out of the house. They seemed to want me to stay happy and untarnished... which, while I was a little socially inept at reading between the lines (undiagnosed autism), I did in fact understand a lot of the subjects they were going through, we were all around 16.) But there I stood, brain gone as no one had said anything to me directly for a good half hour, my senses perked at the strangest "change in the air". The tall figure drifted over from a farther edge of the crowd and straight up to me, smooth and quiet steps. I was only about 5'2", and he was nearly 6ft. I just froze, like a deer in the headlights, slowly looking straight up at him, because he was standing... unusually close for a conversation. But both of us were dead silent. He then subtly reached a hand forwards, my gaze following, and he gently placed his much larger hand on the middle of the chains where they crossed between my bound wrists. And he held them there. Firm but gentle. Grasping the end of the chain with the rest in a way I think we both knew meant I couldn't suddenly undo them. But, his grasp was not aggressive. He was just as still as I was, both of us tuning out everything else happening as we stood beneath a large lush tree on that cloudy and cool afternoon. I'm absolutely certain my face turned pink and my brain melted out my ears, looking back up at him. His calm dark eyes just gazing down at me, and just the ever so faintest hint of a confident, gentle, but knowing grin. It almost wasn't there that anyone else would have seen, but I'd spent enough time the last few years just observing him quietly, watching his shift in moods or expression, learning what was genuine or a mask. But in that moment, perhaps less than 10 seconds, but feeling like 10 minutes, I felt nothing but my weak knees, vulnerability, and hope that this meant he wanted to tell me he wanted to keep me with him, and that he knew how I always felt, knowing that beneath the surface, he was a sweet, tender, quiet and affectionate person. I was always proud of him for opening up and being himself with me, even if he was often telling nonsense stories. I was always patient for the day he felt comfortable to tell me more about how he really felt, dreams he had, or struggles he'd overcome. But, that moment was broken as someone called to him from across the courtyard. His hand only lingered a moment before letting go, and his louder 'dude' persona went up quickly, as if he felt it wasn't safe to let anyone know his real identity. I hate to say... not long after that, he was around less often. It was harder for me to find him, let alone get him to look at me that close way again. Another girl in our group, far prettier than my pale and squishy self, had begun flirting with him. And in mere days which turned into weeks, I started getting more upset and worried when I couldn't find him, and finally asked my friends if they'd seen him. I was told with a tired eyeroll and disappointment, that he was brainlessly and hopelessly smitten with this other girl. And not only that, but over the coming weeks, heard that he was spending every penny on her, gifts, food, jewelry, desperately trying to get approval. I got the impression from friends that this girl had flirted and strung him along so badly, so easily, that he thought she was going to give him sex in return, which, if I understood correctly, she may have given him some of, or a "sample", but then, much later... cast him aside. She was never actually interested in him. She just accepted everything he tried to offer, following her around like a desperately loyal puppy. And much to my dismay, while everyone seemed to know what was happening better than me, everyone had turned on this girl who behaved so shallowly and flippant to him. His heart had truly been broken... and he was too depressed to want to be around anyone else for the rest of the year. My heart was equally crushed, both for him, but also that I never really got to see him again. My father forbade me from going back to high school my senior year, and demanded I go get a job to "make myself useful" and "stop playing with my little friends." He had no idea that I'd been making hundreds of dollars selling my art to other students, and I wasn't going to tell him, lest he demand I hand all of it over. He was convinced me being an artist would go nowhere, despite claiming he was proud of my skills growing up. Many years later, probably around 6 or so years ago, I was lamenting about school friends I never talked to nor heard from, understanding better that despite my having best friends, I was seldom their best friend, and was mostly the sweet and loyal tag-along with a bad home life. I went on Facebook and found him. He was married. He was a father with small children. He was surprised to hear from me, but he was mellow and laid back. I know I asked him a few things, talked a little about life, but I don't really remember any answers he gave. But I apologized to him, worked up the sad nerve to say that I'd always cared about him... which I guess he never truly knew, and he admitted that he did like me as well, but was too dumb and brainwashed by the other girl to ever realize I was always waiting there for him. So I asked, if things had been different, would he have wanted to date me? He thought only briefly and said yes. I asked if he really would, even if I wasn't pretty, and I was heavy. He said... that never would have bothered him or mattered. I thanked him very deeply from my heart for telling me, that even if things didnt happen for us, it meant the world to me anyway to know I was right, right about him, that I did know him, and that we as two dumb and troubled teens had actually cared about one another. I wish I could have hugged him, even once.
@kellymeade45874 ай бұрын
I grew up in the 80s just like in the movie…Class of ‘87! It’s One of the greatest movies ever! I never knew that in my adult life …my best friend, would actually be Ally Sheedy’s cousin…Paul B. Thankful for that connection!!!👏💯
@jsivco3sivco7854 ай бұрын
"5 teenagers." Well... Emile Estevez and Ally Sheedy were 23 at the time, and Judd Nelson was 25! Molly R. & Tony Hall were 17, so there were only two who were still teens. The other 3 weren't even close!!
@sicfrynut4 ай бұрын
makes it hard to believe that there weren't enough actors closer to the characters ages' available. hard to say. still wondering how nicolas cage would have done in the bender role. he was great in the movie valley girl.
@marcclements38064 ай бұрын
They told what each of them was in detention for: Clare~ Ditched class to go shopping. Bender~ pulled the fire alarm. Andrew~ Taped a dudes hairy butt together. Brian~ Brought a flare gun to school Alison~ Didn’t have anything better to do.
@Scott-ri2sy3 ай бұрын
I would have done same as Andrew did
@donaldprocknow22984 ай бұрын
When I graduated in 1989 I walked out and the very first thing I did was the John Bender first bump as high in the air as I could and several of my classmates did the same thing and we stood together and said in one shot THE BREAKFAST CLUB
@DameDarcy9994 ай бұрын
I graduated in 1989 too ✊ gen x rules!
@jeannewolfenbarger64282 ай бұрын
I was 13 when I first saw this movie. To this day, I still find it to be one of the most brilliant movies made. "Each one of us is a brain, an athlete, a princess, a criminal, and a basketcase.". Words that are a little bit of a stretch, but it emphasizes how we are all more similar than we think. The fistbump acene is one of my favorites, too.
@octavianicole69584 ай бұрын
I had a breakfast club moment … we were on the bus in 10th grade we all new each other since kindergarten. We all got into a weird conversation which kid had it the hardest middle, oldest, youngest. Then there was this quiet sweet moment like the breakfast club … it was awesome I wish I could have recorded it … it was a nice moment
@thelemonademan62354 ай бұрын
Class of 1985 is when I graduated and 1 of those 5 main actors is actually my cousin 🎉
@kitfisto18274 ай бұрын
The film had an R rating, not PG-13
@PinkHairedChristian4 ай бұрын
Someone didnt do their research.
@skeletorment4 ай бұрын
It's written and narrated by A.I.
@DavidFuller-x1o4 ай бұрын
Human creativity is dead
@Folthorn4 ай бұрын
I graduated in '83 and I never understood this movie until years later. I went to a small school (28 in my graduating class) There weren't any "jocks, nerds, or whatever". Most of us were friends and not looked down upon because you did this or didn't do that.
@NextWorldVR4 ай бұрын
The A.I. voice did not know the word: 'us', and reads it multiple times as "You Ess". Ridiculous!
@VeracityLH3 ай бұрын
To be fair, it was capitalized in the subtitles. If it was that way in the script the AI read, it was the appropriate reading. That said, where's the effing editor who should have corrected it?
@RedVynil4 ай бұрын
"They had 32 days to shoot the movie, barely a month." Got news for ya, robo-voice, 32 days is OVER a month!!
@sagsfv31224 ай бұрын
Most indie films are shot in 3 - 4 weeks. Nothing new there!
@kylermurray19774 ай бұрын
Ohhhhhh got em!!!! Super good catch… 👌🏽 Wipe your own ass too?
@recoveringsoul7554 ай бұрын
It's still barely. Barely could be over or under
@mgtowmonger27293 ай бұрын
@@sagsfv3122 there were no indie films when this film was made... although there must of been some kind of bollywood back then! (so there is that...)
@altereddogma2 ай бұрын
@@recoveringsoul755 No, barely means almost. It does not mean a little more.
@ebinrock4 ай бұрын
Before The Breakfast Club, Rebel Without a Cause (1955) showed that the 50s weren't all Happy Days and Back to the Future. Teen struggles were always universal, even if the culture was different. And James Dean was such a GREAT actor, real shame we lost him too soon.
@parakeet81574 ай бұрын
Allison-"When you grow up, your heart dies."
@mariap20083 ай бұрын
.... "I care"
@4Xscalper4 ай бұрын
I was a HS Freshman when this came out and it was huge, touching on so many aspects of our lives we were all witness to one way or another.
@BioFactory14 ай бұрын
6:53 - - Don't forget, that school's gym was redone for the Breakfast Club library and for the house interior of the Home Alone movie.
@LarryLeeMoniz4 ай бұрын
Hey, where's the alternate ending? Effing click bait.
@tomgraham36124 ай бұрын
15:26 If you want evidence that the narration for this KZbin video MIGHT be computer-generated, you'll find it around here. "US versus THEM".
@PinkPalmPufffannnnn2 ай бұрын
Also "Dee Plaines" Everyone anywhere near Chicago says "Dess Plaines".
@leslieweeks92794 ай бұрын
60 here. This is my all time favorite.. Just watched it yesterday.
@Krullmatic4 ай бұрын
Man, Hughes nailed how it was in highschool at the time. I was a sophomore when this came out. We all did these stupid things. Life is one big high school, really. People rarely change when they grow up, so they grow up the same way, with the same type of people and clique'ing up.
@bmommyx24 ай бұрын
I was a teen when this movie came out but I never heard any controversy about it. Also I worked at a movie theater at the time.
@williamj.dovejr.86134 ай бұрын
Hughes had the idea of making a sequel every ten years.. except he clashed with Nelson, and he had a falling out with Hall and Ringwald.
@allycat74864 ай бұрын
That's the story, but there was some interview where he said he considered a sequel briefly, but felt he wouldn't be able to capture that magic a second time so he decided to leave it as is.
@jedironin3803 ай бұрын
I'm also fed up with click-bait/AI narrated videos, but as to the subject... I just watched this movie again just a couple weeks ago. Still love it! I had forgotten about Alison's admission near the end: "Do you know what I did to be here? ... Nothing! I didn't have anything better to do!" And Principal Vernon didn't notice she wasn't assigned to detention?! ROFL Well played!
@lrajic82813 ай бұрын
In my middle school, we had around 12 kids who volunteered for a group “rap group” or group mental therapy session/ talk club. It was not assigned a specific day or time, so I would miss out 1 hour of class that was randomized. We sat in an empty classroom, with a licensed psychologist, and one or two student psychologist. We talk about our struggles, things we had learned or observed, and each of us took turns to briefly comment. It was soul stirring. Some kids cried. We all learned something. “Breakfast Club” couldn’t hold a candle to this.
@skippepper31684 ай бұрын
Biggest surprise on this video is that somehow it is concluded that it’s received a PG-13 rating. Look up the movie anywhere and it’s rated R!
@SteveBerryhill4 ай бұрын
I graduated in 1985. This film hit home. But it was Allie who said, “When you grow up your heart dies.” And Judd Nelson, as Bender, was 26 playing a 16 year old. Repeating comments… Lazy A.I.?
@frommatorav1Ай бұрын
Repeating comments? The whole video was on a loop, repeating at least twice.
@slayerduval14 ай бұрын
Hughes filmed a totally unnecessary fully nude scene of a young, female teacher swimming naked while Vernon spied on her. Molly Ringwald convinced him to cut it. Thank God.
@CheesyMacCheese3 ай бұрын
There actually is an alternate version that contains a few scenes that are not in the official release. These scenes only exist on the versions made for tv syndication because some of the content in the version we've all seen doesn't fly on tv. I spent a hot minute trying to get this footage, but I never got a copy of it. On a side note, there is an adult movie titled "Not the Breakfast Club." That takes some rando adult actors that some quasi look like the OG cast. Happy Hunting.
@tomhedlund45242 ай бұрын
Anthony Michael Hall is four months my senior, and in 2004 someone thought that I was Hall. In my late teens and 20s I audition several times with Emilio Estevez’s speech on taping Larry Lester’s buns together. I was 16 when I first saw The Breakfast Club.
@positivelysimful12834 ай бұрын
Clickbait. No alternate ending. And it was Allison who said that when you grow up your heart dies. I'm clicking 'do not show channel' I hate titles that don't deliver what they claim.
@BINSNEWS3 ай бұрын
The video included a lot of things, that I didn't know. The genius of the film was the fact that there was no real conclusion. Therefore, we will debating these issues of class, isolation & teenage issues forever. Brilliant. People need this. It can help society.
@projectjaguar56384 ай бұрын
The reason Hughes had issues with Nelson was because of his method acting, he was being a jerk to everyone even when not filming. I think it was Gleason that vouched for him and got Hughes to let him stay
@sicfrynut4 ай бұрын
curious that nicolas cage didn't get it. he was great in valley girl. judd nailed it though, so maybe it was the better choice.
@ChrisReise4 ай бұрын
15:20 The group does NOT take the fall for Bender's weed.
@linuxman04 ай бұрын
As a Gen-X, this is my favorite film ever. This is the only film that attempted to tell the world what I was feeling. It was my voice to the world.
@teresaj273 ай бұрын
And one of my top ten and I was a baby boomer!
@glenn_r_frank_author4 ай бұрын
I am not advocating for a 45th high school reunion sequel... probably best left alone... but I am imagining all the club members decades down the road from their detention day.
@erictaylor54624 ай бұрын
It just blows my mind that kids today find this movie to be as relevant today as it was 50 years ago. Sure, there are some differences. A kid takes a gun to school these days (even a flare gun) and he's not getting detention, he's getting arrested. You know recently a kid got in trouble and they called the police because a teacher decided his half eaten sandwich vaguely resembled a gun. I think it more likely the kid wasn't worried about the shape of his sandwich. He was hungry.
@DaveFriedman-qt6tm4 ай бұрын
50 years ago ? What are you smokin' ? It's barely been 40 !
@sicfrynut4 ай бұрын
@@DaveFriedman-qt6tm maybe he was in the "weed" scene and we missed him ?
@jayhandron94354 ай бұрын
I enjoyed watching this video but some of the information is inaccurate. For example, the movie did end up being released with an R rating, for strong language including multiple F-bombs, not a PG-13. My only other gripe is the multiple endings were barely mentioned. Very misleading thumbnail.
@craigorlikowski25074 ай бұрын
And don't forget the U.S. vs them bs. Enough with this Ai crap!
@351wmustanggt4 ай бұрын
This is a prime example of a movie that never needs to be rebooted.
@Harley-D-Mcdonald3 ай бұрын
I watched this movie every day one summer when I discovered it in junior high. It was the best thing I had ever seen up to that point and I loved it.
@bassdvant4 ай бұрын
He got it wrong, this movie was rated R. I remember because I was 14 when it came out and wasn't allowed to go to rated R movies. It wasn't until I finally saw it that I realized that the audience who would relate to it wouldn't even be able to go see it.
@aaronloree22264 ай бұрын
This movie is very well done
@craigorlikowski25074 ай бұрын
Unlike this misleading and inaccurate Ai mess.
@sagsfv31224 ай бұрын
I saw this in the theater when I was in college. I thoroughly enjoyed it!
@Buc_Stops_Here4 ай бұрын
It is really not an alternative ending but more about the turmoil when the film was made. Chaning the casting of different characters. So, the cast members were changed from original consideration. Dentation drama unleashed. In Chicago, in an abandoned school, that was cold and pressure ridden with only 32 days to film it. Improving the script did not help matters. Made for only $1 million the studio left everyone alone, including one take for many scenes. Making just over $50 million it was a huge financial success. The only alternative endings were a kiss between characters (not used) and other romantic endings (not used) they went with the fist pump instead. So sure, they had other endings but they picked the right one (mostly improvised).
@Sindollx666x4 ай бұрын
I would end up graduating high school in 1998. I didn't actually see The Breakfast Club UNTIL I was a couple years into high school. I had seen LOADS of John Hughes films...I was REALLY happy I saw it at the age I did. I always wanted to write it into a modern (for that time period) stage play. I thought it would be SO MUCH FUN to do as a play. I'd still love to give it a stage treatment.
@guitartecАй бұрын
They left out the great $2 scene... the 108º wrap-around camera shot when Andrew is telling everyone about taping Larry Lester's buns in the locker room. In one take, with heavy music, the camera slowly pans around Andrew as he tells this historic and super-sad story of why he did this horrible thing to another person. BRILLIANT!!!
@darkshadow92914 ай бұрын
I am 51 and this was and still is one of my favorite movies and all 4 of my son's especially my 22 year old all have copies and watch it regularly
@MaryTere2 ай бұрын
12:09: they TALK about the "alternate ending" for like 14 seconds. That's it.
@CampbellCornLab4 ай бұрын
This came out when I was a senior at UW Madison and was too busy trying to graduate. Im just barely too old to have had this on my radar. I should watch it I guess.
@justinhuston68554 ай бұрын
I never saw this movie until I was in my late teens I realized that the reason it had such an impact on me personally and my friends in general was because the movie in one way or another was telling us who we were I didn't have a whole lot of friends in high-school but the friends I did have we were our own little Breakfast Club
@anthonydoria70243 ай бұрын
I WAS IN MY EARLY 30'S WHEN ME AND MY WIFE SAW THIS MOVIE. I MUST SAY THAT IT WAS OUTSTANDING ! RESPECTFULLY ANTHONY
@Dadofer19703 ай бұрын
If you are going to watch it despite the clickbait title, speed up the playback. 1.25 sounds more like a normal voice, but faster is better.
@cs2924 ай бұрын
These movies were my life graduated in 1987.
@TheSteel-oy7hr4 ай бұрын
This movie's impact continues to this very day. Think about this for a moment. That film came out in 1985, and its 2024 and we still are talking about it almost 40 years later. I hope Hollywood leaves this film alone and does not try to remake it. I think any remake given how Hollywood has become so toxic politically a remake would ruin the legacy of this film. Unlike Hugh's who was a brilliant storyteller, these writers of today lack any real creativity or talent which is why we keep seeing so many reboots, and remakes of classic films. Instead of coming up with their own groundbreaking movies, they all piggyback off the talented writers and story tellers of yesteryear. This film should never be given any type of reboot or sequel, but instead should honor the legacy of John Hughes and let his creative vision be as he intended which has stood the test of time.
@the_Real_Grammy_of_63 ай бұрын
This is one of my top 5 favorite movies of all time. I hadn’t realized that it was only John H. 2nd movie!! We lost a great writer and director way too soon. I wish Emilio would have done more movies. He’s a great, albeit, underrated actor!!
@jqxznetwork4 ай бұрын
This video was clickbait, and is inaccurate on some things.
@craigorlikowski25074 ай бұрын
Yuuuuuuup. Report em.
@naimac10154 ай бұрын
Allison’s neurodivergent quirks were a problem? Which psychologists actually said something back in the 80’s? Teen neurodivergence wasn’t a thing that was openly discussed until mid to late 90’s.
@Dman4254 ай бұрын
It was rated R. I clearly remember this
@OG.Mikentosh4 ай бұрын
There is a PG version too.
@Dman4254 ай бұрын
@@OG.Mikentosh the tv version, yes. But, it definitely came out in the theaters in 1985 as rated R. I couldn’t see it in the theaters because it was R rated
@TheSiralex763 ай бұрын
The sad thing is this video didn’t need the click bait title. It stands on its own with an honest title.
@LovisMirac2 ай бұрын
I thought it was repetitive.
@rlccar85184 ай бұрын
Just wanted to say, it took you almost an entire minute and a half before you used the word 'iconic'. Good job!
@judyberes86553 ай бұрын
I'd love to see a sequel that shows what happened to our teens. Maybe at their 40th high school reunion?
@janetduncan874 ай бұрын
This movie is in a class all its own. Joh. Hugh's knew a lot about family life too. He had a great running for movies that family can watch together.
@gavinojdomingueziii79913 ай бұрын
I remember back when I was a kid in the 80s not quite a teen I overheard a lot of talk about the breakfast club from the younger, mid and older teens in different social groups of that generation that where around back then such as stoners, jocks, gamers, skaters, punk rockers, breakers, bangers, and nurds I always herd the movie being mentioned and talked about hear and there I always herd good things about it not knowing what the movie was actually about not ever having seen it for myself and also even reading articles about it years latter in the news paper's and magazines in the late 90s and 2000s and hearing this movie still being talked about till this day as one of the best classic films of all time. I personally got the idea in my head that the breakfast club was another over the top type of teen movie full of partying and wild situations of crazy teen activity's of a wild teenage life and so I finally got around to watching it for the first time about a couple of years back on Netflix and it was nothing like I expected it to be and I do think this movie definitely lived up to all the hype that I herd about over the years I thought it was a really good film over all.
@AMJDG4 ай бұрын
The Breakfast Club is still one of my favorite movies - a movie that I have rewatched more than almost any other - Sixteen Candles being my second favorite and rewatched...
@redbaron4744 ай бұрын
Info on the alternate ending starts at 12:00
@octavianicole69584 ай бұрын
Benders moment with the principle … loved it. I sometimes will hear ole what did Clair and Bender do in the office . My answer none of the audiences business. I think they had a sweet kiss an talked. The breakfast club is a classic it is American culture reflective of teenage issues especially the highlights of mental health and the changing world of American culture. The impact of tapping into teens and tweens was a sure revelation of a new avenue not appreciated. They had loyalty moments, raw emotional battles of their families and lives. They were friends. Budding romances. Quiet brillance how they played and understood each other yet held their own in defending their temples and courtyards. It would be interesting if all of them did walk down the school corridor together. But walking out together was beautiful
@MikeP-sq6be4 ай бұрын
It's pronounced "Des Plaines" not "day Plaines". And it wasn't FILMED there either. That's just where their hotels were.
@stevealkire76264 ай бұрын
*Da plane, da plane boss...*
@66desdichado4 ай бұрын
@@stevealkire7626 🤣🤣🤣
@froggietwanger3 ай бұрын
Yeah, growing in Illi-noize, and working in Chi-cah-go, gotta love how AI can butcher not that uncommon of place names.
@MikeP-sq6be3 ай бұрын
@@stevealkire7626 lol
@robertbartoii34014 ай бұрын
FANTASTIC MOVIE I'VE WATCHED THIS MOVIE MANY TIMES FROM WHEN IT WAS RELEASED TO NOW WHAT IT DID FOR THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE OVER THE TIME - IT HELPED MANY OF MY FRIENDS AND OTHER KIDS THROUGH PAINFUL PROBLEMS BRINGING THEM TO HEALING THEMSELVES GETTING AWAY FROM THINGS LIKE GANGS, DRUGS, ETC. TO A MUCH BETTER LIFE AND ALL GOOD THINGS HAPPENED TO THEM BECAUSE OF THE BREAKFAST CLUB MOVIE - AN HELPED ME REMAIN A GOOD YOUNG MAN FROM THEN TO A GOOD MAN STILL TO THIS DAY, EXCELLENT
@kenvaughan66943 ай бұрын
That whole library was hand built from scratch in the highschool's gymnasium. It was also the same school as seen in 16 Candles and Farris Bueler's Day Off😊
@jeremylee88442 ай бұрын
John Hughes was the Master Mind behind the 80's.
@williampaul79324 ай бұрын
I was so naive, I thought this movie would end High School cliques!
@rjsledz4 ай бұрын
Where's the alternate ending? It was never shown what's going on?
@realSamAndrew4 ай бұрын
They never said they would show it to you. Only that there was one that was never shown.
@benc.enlots4 ай бұрын
@realSamAndrew stfu,it was implied. It is clickbait bullshit. Take your kamala voting ass elsewhere... and I say that because only a blue voter would say such stupid shit.
@LilacDaisy24 ай бұрын
This channel is full of lying titles and thumbnails.
@benc.enlots4 ай бұрын
@@realSamAndrew You're the kind of asshole that would post clickbait titles like this, eh? That is what you basically said.
@rjsledz4 ай бұрын
@@realSamAndrew I think that is pretty lame
@tommissouri48713 ай бұрын
The new KZbin ad-blocker ban and mandatory ads is making the KZbin experience bad. Time to find other places to watch videos.
@jameseverett90372 ай бұрын
I agree. There are at least a few channels on Rumble that are partly duplicates of youtube channels but have all the uncensored content not allowed on KZbin. But I expect eventually they'll be bought and and made into censored content once everyone leaves youtube for it. Enjoy it while it lasts.
@christopherlue-shing87803 ай бұрын
So even if this video showed the "never shown" alternate ending that "could have dramatically altered the film's legacy", this simply would have been a scene showing a kiss between Clair and Bender or a kiss between Andrew and Allison as opposed to Bender giving a fist pump. Wow, now that's controversial!! How gutsy. You made a 20 minute video with 15 seconds describing what is in the title. Good job.
@cmscms1234564 ай бұрын
I like the movie a lot. I think it should be seen by every Freshman entering high school... to let them know, they are not alone,
@cmscms1234564 ай бұрын
@nukkinfigure And you are stronger because of it... I dont know a strong man that had a easy life.
@kathrinsides28383 ай бұрын
There was no PG-13 when the movie came out. That rating wasn’t a thing until many years later.
@addie_is_me4 ай бұрын
When A.I. writes and edits a video. Lol
@YouTubeChris233 ай бұрын
"despite these challenges or perhaps because of them..."
@sharazar4 ай бұрын
The cold building explains why they keep thier coat or multiple layers on for most of the movie. All the actors were cold until later in the day when the building probably warmed up al ittle
@jordanturner22024 ай бұрын
Why did they say the movie cut things so it would be rated PG-13 and not R? It was rated R
@craigorlikowski25074 ай бұрын
Cuz they're stupid.
@supercyberfunkАй бұрын
I don't know about Ringwald and Sheedy, but I know Paul Gleason advocated for Judd Nelson, reminding John Hughes that Nelson was method acting (in regards to his treatment of Ringwald between scenes).
@jeremyroberts398 күн бұрын
One of my top 5 fave films, I watch it on a very regular basis. I'm now 66 😊🇬🇧