66
Metascore
25 recensioni · Fornito da Metacritic.com
- 80Film ThreatBrad LaidmanFilm ThreatBrad LaidmanThis could have been an unmitigated disaster, but Hughes' way with the material ensured it a special place in the heart of just about everyone who happened to be in high school while Ronald Reagan was President.
- 78Austin ChronicleMarjorie BaumgartenAustin ChronicleMarjorie BaumgartenBefore lapsing into the land of the insipid,... John Hughes actually made a few movies that shined some light on the trials of modern adolescence. The Breakfast Club is one of them.
- 75Entertainment WeeklyTy BurrEntertainment WeeklyTy BurrFrom the neon-sign opening titles to the derivative angst of the dialogue, it's a touchstone of '80s pop culture, and a schizophrenic one, too.
- 75ReelViewsJames BerardinelliReelViewsJames BerardinelliEminently watchable and consistently entertaining...It has a candor that is unexpected and refreshing in a sea of too-often generic teen-themed films.
- 75The Globe and Mail (Toronto)Jay ScottThe Globe and Mail (Toronto)Jay ScottFor all its contrivance, it's lively and amusing and occasionally disconcerting in its reproduction of what life was like in the mid-to-late teens.
- 70Chicago ReaderChicago ReaderComes to the comforting conclusion that they're just as alienated, idealistic, and vulnerable as the baby boomers of the 1960s.
- 70Washington PostWashington PostTheir conversations give The Breakfast Club its snap, crackle and pop. And this is that rare movie that could benefit from another half hour of talking time. [15 Feb 1985]
- 60TV Guide MagazineTV Guide MagazineHughes, though he gives the material a sense of fun and achieves several moments of genuine warmth, too often resorts to obvious cliches, stereotypes, and easy answers, and throws in the near-obligatory rock video as well.
- 60The New York TimesJanet MaslinThe New York TimesJanet MaslinThe five young stars would have mixed well even without the fraudulent encounter-group candor towardS which The Breakfast Club forces them. Mr. Hughes, having thought up the characters and simply flung them together, should have left well enough alone.
- 30VarietyVarietyDoes director John Hughes really believe, as he writes here, that 'when you grow up, your heart dies.' It may. But not unless the brain has already started to rot with films like this.