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Friday, 7 October 2016

The Breakfast Club Production Design Review

John Hughes’ The Breakfast Club’s setting is so perfect, it can’t be improved. The majority of the film is set in Shermer High School in Chicago and was filmed in North High School in Des Plaines, Illinois. It looks so normal that it could be anyone’s high school, fitting in with the whole idea of the events of the film being a part of an experience. Anyone that has seen the film, especially while they were in school, would consider this as a part of their own high school experience because the characters are so easy to identify with and identify as people they would know. John W. Corso’s setting is so perfect that it feels both timeless and so completely 80s all at once.



The props and costumes express the character’s personalities expertly, and the costume designer Marilyn Vance has thought through each character’s experiences in order to create their look. Each character gets one costume as the film takes place over one day, with each piece of clothing creating a layer that recognises a little part of their personality. As the characters start to get to know each other and let their guards down they start to take off some of the layers, effectively taking away aspects of their look or personality they have constructed as a barrier to other people.


At the end of the film one of Claire’s earrings is given to Bender, and Allison takes a patch from Andrew’s jacket, showing that each member of the group aren’t really that different at all. These moments of recognition and solidarity show that they will remember their time together and their similarities. The set pulls them together into this one group, and although they seem to be different at first their shared surroundings unite them.



Georgia x

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