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The Breakfast Club and Changing Perceptions

While the latter can be debated and has been debated as something of an antithesis to the idea of individuality, I think “The Breakfast Club” is often unfairly misinterpreted. Sure by the final half of the movie, Allison Reynolds changes herself, but not because she's seeking the approval of Andrew Clark. “The Breakfast Club” is about perceptions of ourselves and others and how we're often pigeonholed at young ages. The characters we meet in “The Breakfast Club” have been handed roles that they don't want, and are likely going to be stuck in their roles forever.

When we meet him, for reasons that's not quite clarified, he takes a liking to the people he's assigned to endure detention with. He spends the afternoon trying to convince at least one of them that he's not the man many have categorized him as. Ironically he finds kindred spirits in the four students he's among, all of whom are basically just people sitting in a rut without any hope of escaping. Andrew Clark is a meat headed jock, and likely has to play sports to get in to college, while Brian is an overachiever who puts too much pressure on himself because he simply can't fail.

By the end, Sheedy is struggling to convince everyone she's not this freak they see her as. So she makes, what I assume is a temporary break from her pigeon holing, showing that she's so much more, and she pulls it off. I never saw it as her shedding the image she flaunted so proud, but lifting the veil to show she has so much more dimension to her than what everyone sees. The entirety of Hughes' teen drama is about a group of teens that have been pegged as one role. One is the jock, one is the brain, one is the prom queen. They even admit it in the final scene when Vernon is reading the letter that Brian has left behind.
It will always be a disadvantage to them, definitely, but it can also be something they can use perhaps to benefit themselves and others. The movie ends famously on Bender pumping his fist in the air. But it's not because he won Claire, it's because he convinced her and everyone else that he's a person of depth, and pain, and might actually have something to look forward to beyond a miserable abusive life. When he goes to school on Monday he probably won't talk to Claire at all, but he's convinced her he's not a bad guy, so he can probably change someone else's mind.

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