1. Welcome! Please take a few seconds to create your free account to post threads, make some friends, remove a few ads while surfing and much more. ClutchFans has been bringing fans together to talk Houston Sports since 1996. Join us!

Favorite John Hughes Movie

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by Rox_fan_here, Apr 22, 2008.

Tags:
?

Which is your favorite John Hughes Film?

  1. Curly Sue

    0 vote(s)
    0.0%
  2. Uncle Buck

    6 vote(s)
    5.9%
  3. She's Having A Baby

    1 vote(s)
    1.0%
  4. Plains, Trains & Automobiles

    16 vote(s)
    15.8%
  5. Ferris Bueller's Day Off

    33 vote(s)
    32.7%
  6. Weird Science

    10 vote(s)
    9.9%
  7. The Breakfast Club

    22 vote(s)
    21.8%
  8. Sixteen Candles

    13 vote(s)
    12.9%
  1. ima_drummer2k

    ima_drummer2k Member

    Joined:
    Oct 18, 2002
    Messages:
    36,416
    Likes Received:
    9,363
    It must have been the dollar theatre.
     
  2. WildSweet&Cool

    Joined:
    Jun 22, 2007
    Messages:
    1,768
    Likes Received:
    0
    In the past, some of these films have rotated as being my favorite.... Uncle Buck... Breakfast Club..... Sixteen Candles..... PT&A .... Ferris was my fav for a long time......

    But the movie that has really kept my favor the most over time and as I've aged has been Plains, Trains & Automobiles. That one just never gets old.
     
  3. MadMax

    MadMax Member

    Joined:
    Sep 19, 1999
    Messages:
    76,683
    Likes Received:
    25,924
    i'll meet you at the bike racks, sucker.
     
  4. Achilleus

    Achilleus Member

    Joined:
    Aug 30, 2003
    Messages:
    4,313
    Likes Received:
    24
    http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/movies/la-et-goldstein25mar25,0,3535882.story

    [​IMG]

    John Hughes' imprint remains

    He's still revered in Hollywood, but whatever happened to the king of the teens?


    By Patrick Goldstein
    Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

    3:38 PM PDT, March 24, 2008

    JOHN HUGHES hasn't set foot in Hollywood for years, but his influence has never been more potent. The king of 1980s comedy, Hughes now qualifies as something of a Howard Hughes-style recluse -- he doesn't have an agent, doesn't give interviews and lives far away, somewhere in Chicago's sprawling North Shore suburbs where most of his films were set.

    But he has an entire generation of fans in the industry who grew up infatuated with his films, especially a string of soulful mid-1980s teen comedies that helped capture the eternal drama of modern teenage existence. They include "Sixteen Candles," "Pretty in Pink," "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" and "The Breakfast Club," which no less an authority than Courtney Love once called "the defining moment of the alternative generation." Any number of successful actors and filmmakers, from Judd Apatow and Kevin Smith to Vince Vaughn, Ben Stiller and Wes Anderson, are fans, having soaked up Hughes' keen observational humor, love of mischief and shrewd dissection of social hierarchies.

    "John Hughes wrote some of the great outsider characters of all time," says Apatow, the writer-director-producer whose new film, "Drillbit Taylor," is loosely based on an old Hughes story idea. "It's pretty ridiculous to hear people talk about the movies we've been doing, with outrageous humor and sweetness all combined, as if they were an original idea. I mean, it was all there first in John Hughes' films. Whether it's 'Freaks and Geeks' or 'Superbad,' the whole idea of having outsiders as the lead characters, that all started with Hughes."

    Hollywood is full of older masters who've been mentors to younger acolytes. But Hughes, 58, is the only one who's disappeared without a trace; he quit directing in 1991, moved back to Chicago in 1995 and has basically stayed out of sight ever since.

    "He's our generation's J.D. Salinger," says Smith, whose film "Dogma" shows its heroes, Jay and Silent Bob, on a pilgrimage to Shermer, Ill., a mythical town that only exists in Hughes' films. "He touched a generation and then the dude checked out. If it weren't for him, I wouldn't be doing what I do. Basically my stuff is just John Hughes films with four-letter words."

    Smith says whenever he's in Chicago promoting a film he asks his local publicist if they know how to find him, to no avail. The one person who made contact was Vaughn, who grew up in the North Shore suburbs and met with Hughes when shooting "The Break-Up" in the area in 2005. It's in keeping with this aura of mystery that while Hughes came up with the idea for "Drillbit Taylor," the Owen Wilson comedy that opened Friday to lackluster reviews, his name isn't anywhere on the film. But his handprints are everywhere.

    The story evokes memories of Hughes' teen sagas, being a comic tale about a trio of nerdy high-school freshmen who recruit a supposedly fearsome bodyguard to protect them from a nasty school bully. As the film's scruffy hero, Wilson is something of a throwback to John Candy's character in "Uncle Buck," Hughes' 1989 comedy that stars Candy as a bedraggled bachelor forced to look after his brother's three smart-aleck kids.

    Based on a treatment Hughes wrote some years ago, the "Drillbit" story is credited to frequent Apatow collaborators Seth Rogen and Kristofor Brown, who also wrote the screenplay, and Edmond Dantes, a favorite Hughes pseudonym. Susan Arnold, who produced the film with Apatow and her partner, Donna Arkoff Roth, is married to producer Tom Jacobson, who is one of the few people in Hollywood still in contact with the reclusive filmmaker.

    "Tom is the unsung hero here," says Roth. "He'd always remembered the story and knew there was a great movie in there. He got permission from John to use it and got us involved." Arnold and Roth were fans of Apatow, who once had offices on their floor at Revolution Studios. "We'd always felt we were lucky to get Judd involved," says Arnold.

    If anyone is a repository of Hughes lore, it is Jacobson, who calls him "one of the most interesting people I've ever met" but is scrupulously tight-lipped when it comes to offering any speculation about the filmmaker's retreat from view. When Hughes was looking for someone to produce "Ferris Bueller," Paramount executive Dawn Steel introduced him to Jacobson, who spent a decade working on various Hughes films.

    Jacobson says Hughes could write the first draft of a script in a week. "Once he had the characters and a strong idea, it would carry him all the way through," he recalls.

    Hughes' method of shooting comedy has become virtually an industry standard. He'd often let the camera roll through four or five takes in a row, looking for the right tone and rhythm for a scene. "He loved his actors and loved language, so he'd shoot a lot of film," says Jacobson. "It became a big thing in comedy after John did it -- listening to the actors and looking for those great moments. John would hear a line and get the actor to go with it. It really wasn't the actors who were improvising. It was John improvising."

    No one who knows Hughes is eager to theorize about why he dropped out of sight. It's possible that the filmmaker, who gave studio executives headaches when he was riding high, simply grew tired of the messy business of making movies and chose to pursue a simpler life.

    Still, it's hard to find a thirty- or fortysomething writer or filmmaker who doesn't credit Hughes as a seminal figure in their movie education. "You see Hughes' influence on all TV comedy, especially the stylized single-camera comedy," says Apatow. "His great film characters, starting with Anthony Michael Hall in 'Sixteen Candles,' were big inspirations. When we were growing up, we were all like Hall -- the goofy skinny kid who thinks he's cool, even if nobody else does. 'Superbad' has that same attitude, that mix of total cockiness and insecurity."

    Hughes' influence remains so lasting that when Paramount Vantage needed an iconic image for the poster for "American Teen," a documentary due out this summer that chronicles the lives of five high school seniors, it re-created the look of the poster from Hughes' "The Breakfast Club."

    It's interesting that for all of Hughes' identification with teen films, some of his biggest fans, notably Apatow and "Wedding Crashers" director David Dobkin, cite his "Planes, Trains and Automobiles" as a favorite film. The 1987 picture offers a distinctive Hughesian riff on the odd-couple buddy picture, pitting Steve Martin's sophisticated marketing executive against John Candy's garrulous salesman when the two are thrown together trying to get home for Thanksgiving after their flight to O'Hare is canceled.

    It is perhaps Hughes' most grown-up film, especially in the way it shows how the caste system in his teen films could carry over to adult life. Stuck in a dumpy motel far from home, Martin erupts, making no secret of his contempt for Candy's mindless chatter. Though clearly wounded, Candy throws us off guard with his response. "Yeah, I talk too much" he says. "I could be a cold-hearted cynic like you, but I don't like to hurt people's feelings. [And] I'm not changing. I like me. My wife likes me. My customers like me. Because I'm the real article."

    Dobkin says scenes like that are great examples of what he calls Hughes' "clear voice. That argument in the motel is pitch-perfect. . . . It's the great thing about Hughes' films. He made them for himself, but when you watch them, you always feel that he made them especially for you."

    This sense of personal attachment is a big part of the Hughes mystique. Producer Scott Stuber was such a fan that, as a teenager, when he wanted to impress a girl, he'd get her a soundtrack from a Hughes film. "He somehow knew we were all struggling with the same things," Stuber says. "Whenever I watch a Hughes film now, I remember the euphoria of being 13 and falling in love with movies."
     
  5. ima_drummer2k

    ima_drummer2k Member

    Joined:
    Oct 18, 2002
    Messages:
    36,416
    Likes Received:
    9,363
    I've just reported this post.

    Didn't John Hughes have a creepy sort of crush on Molly Ringwald or something like that? I seem to remember hearing about how he wanted to cast her for Some Kind of Wonderful, but Ringwald didn't want to work with him anymore.
     
  6. hooroo

    hooroo Member

    Joined:
    Oct 16, 2003
    Messages:
    19,296
    Likes Received:
    1,914
    she was trying to become a serious actor instead a teen movie one.
     
  7. rrj_gamz

    rrj_gamz Member

    Joined:
    Aug 15, 2002
    Messages:
    15,595
    Likes Received:
    198
    I picked sixteen candles...most of them are great, but c'mon, Long Duck Dong...
     
  8. RunninRaven

    RunninRaven Member
    Supporting Member

    Joined:
    Jun 16, 2000
    Messages:
    15,268
    Likes Received:
    3,214
    I'd like to go on record right now and say that I absolutely, without qualification, HATE Ferris Bueller's Day Off. HATE IT. With the passion of 1000 suns. I heard for years that I needed to see this movie, and when I finally did, I spent the entire run-time wanting to punch Ferris in the face.

    As for the poll, I said Uncle Buck. Freaking great movie.
     
  9. Lady_Di

    Lady_Di Member

    Joined:
    Apr 11, 2007
    Messages:
    5,354
    Likes Received:
    155
    I haven't seen any of those movies except TBC.

    That was a great movie!
     
  10. StupidMoniker

    StupidMoniker I lost a bet

    Joined:
    Jul 18, 2001
    Messages:
    16,151
    Likes Received:
    2,817
    For me, this is incredibly close. I voted for The Breakfast Club, but it easily could have gone to Ferris Bueller's Day Off. I can just identify more with the Breakfast Club, because I have had Saturday detention, but I never stole my friend's dad's Ferrari and had the awesomest day ever.
     
  11. pgabriel

    pgabriel Educated Negro

    Joined:
    Dec 6, 2002
    Messages:
    43,783
    Likes Received:
    3,705
    the breakfast club is a good movie for entertainment value, but I never related to it like some. just seemed like a bunch of brats on saturday detention.
     
  12. coolbluemoon

    coolbluemoon Member

    Joined:
    Aug 2, 2007
    Messages:
    85
    Likes Received:
    1
    John Hughes = God, at least in the 80s.

    I'm happy to see people still fondly remember his work. As Dobkin beautifully says in the article, his movies had a certain personal touch and authenticity that makes them relevant even to this day.
     
  13. StupidMoniker

    StupidMoniker I lost a bet

    Joined:
    Jul 18, 2001
    Messages:
    16,151
    Likes Received:
    2,817
    Chances are, if you were a suburban white kid in the '80s, you would have related to one or more of the characters. They have all of the high school archetypes.: the jock, the stoner, the nerd, the cheerleader, and the freak.
     
  14. pgabriel

    pgabriel Educated Negro

    Joined:
    Dec 6, 2002
    Messages:
    43,783
    Likes Received:
    3,705

    i understand the stereotypes, and that kids think they have to conform, i just don't buy into the idea that life can be so hard on teenagers because of that. i'm much more into teen comedies, because life on teens in this country of all walks of life is fairly easy.
     
  15. percicles

    percicles Member

    Joined:
    Jun 11, 2002
    Messages:
    11,987
    Likes Received:
    4,438
    Sixteen Candles is the superior of all his teen films. It had the right blend of comedy, teen angst, and tenderness that helps it rise above the rest.

    Besides it had The Dong.
     
  16. MadMax

    MadMax Member

    Joined:
    Sep 19, 1999
    Messages:
    76,683
    Likes Received:
    25,924
    I don't think he presented anything to suggest that their lives were really were that hard....just their own perceptions of their lives as being hard...which i think is dead on.
     
  17. ima_drummer2k

    ima_drummer2k Member

    Joined:
    Oct 18, 2002
    Messages:
    36,416
    Likes Received:
    9,363
    No love for She’s Having A Baby? That is one of the most underrated films on this list. It’s one of those rare flicks that could be classified as a “chick flick” but really isn’t.

    I love the scene where Bacon packs the car to take his wife to the hospital – then drives off without her. :D

    Also, don’t forget about all the great cameos during the closing credits when they are all trying to think of a name for the baby.
     
  18. FranchiseBlade

    Supporting Member

    Joined:
    Jan 14, 2002
    Messages:
    51,803
    Likes Received:
    20,461
    the correct order is:

    1. Sixteen Candles

    2. Weird Science

    3. Ferris Bueller's Day Off
     
  19. MadMax

    MadMax Member

    Joined:
    Sep 19, 1999
    Messages:
    76,683
    Likes Received:
    25,924
    [Girlie]the scene where he almost loses her in the hospital...and he's reflecting on it all..kills me every freaking time[/Girlie]
     
  20. thegary

    thegary Member

    Joined:
    Jul 22, 2002
    Messages:
    11,006
    Likes Received:
    3,128
    well, i love them all so much...
     

Share This Page