Exploring Youth Stereotypes in 'The Breakfast Club'

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The area of expertise being discussed in this paper are the stereotypes found between young adults. The film The Breakfast Club, is a composition in the genre of 80s comedy-drama films which is a perfect representation of stereotypes passed within the generation of young adults. The composition’s attributes such as humor, romance, and emotional connections allow the audience to form bonds to each character by discovering the way teens are categorized throughout their early years. The Breakfast Club is a controversial film which holds many different messages and life lessons. On the surface this movie is very humoristic and its main purpose seems to be to entertain with comedy in order for the audience to form connections to the characters. The movie uses jokes and vulgar comments from many of the …show more content…

In this film the main characters fall in love and relations are created. The viewer can see Bender and Claire fall in love through the realization that they both have similar issues and long to be accepted for who they truly are, similar to how Andrew and Allison grow keen of each other. In addition to love, this film also includes social issues such as Claire and Andrew’s insecurity, Allison and Brian’s anxiety, and Bender’s family abuse. The aspect of peer pressure is present in the film through Bender’s perseverance to make each character rebel against their detention professor. The Breakfast Club does subvert to some of these specific common features of 80s comedy-drama films. Rather than only having one main character, there are five who all feel out of place. Two of which are considered “popular,” and three “outsiders.” Instead of focusing on only the story line of one loner character this film directs its attention of five story lines of, not only someone who is considered lame, but also the popular kids which sometimes are made to be the bad guys in other films in this

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