In an extremely personal essay for The Watch Brooklyn NineNew Yorker, actress Molly Ringwald wrote about revisiting her teen classic The Breakfast Clubwith her daughter, and about how we reexamine stories in the post #MeToo era.
SEE ALSO: America's sweetheart Molly Ringwald was harassed, and the sickening Hollywood stories just don't endThe Breakfast Clubcontains many sexual references, including a scene where it is applied that John (Judd Nelson) inappropriately touches Claire (Ringwald) under a table. This time, Ringwald watched the scene with her young daughter, and it stayed with her.
I kept thinking about that scene. I thought about it again this past fall, after a number of women came forward with sexual-assault accusations against the producer Harvey Weinstein, and the #MeToo movement gathered steam. If attitudes toward female subjugation are systemic, and I believe that they are, it stands to reason that the art we consume and sanction plays some part in reinforcing those same attitudes.
Ringwald came forward in October, shortly after the Weinstein allegations, and spoke about her experience with sexual misconduct in Hollywood as a teen star. Since that and the resultant reexamination of Hollywood's gender dynamics and power structures, many have taken a second look at pop culture's advocacy of toxic masculinity, such as with romantic comedies where a man pursues a woman until she relents.
In her essay, Ringwald describes being wary of how this newly-awakened worldview will affect her reading of the 1985 film.
"I worried that [my daughter] would find aspects of it troubling, but I hadn’t anticipated that it would ultimately be most troubling to me," she wrote. In this viewing, Ringwald found John Bender to be a repeat harasser who never apologizes for how he treats Claire before they end up together at the end. She found a similarly troubling scene in Sixteen Candlesand learned that actress Haviland Morris is equally unsure of her role, decades after playing the drunk girl Caroline who was ostensibly raped.
Ringwald's essay is mostly effusive toward writer-director John Hughes, with whom she describes having a "symbiotic" relationship. She finds some fairly graphic and sexual writings in his past as a National Lampoonwriter before he got into movies, including a satire called "Sexual Harassment and How to Do It!" (which the co-author denies having written).
The tricky conclusion Ringwald comes to – that we're all coming to – is that art is multifaceted. You can swear off The Breakfast Clubforever or you can rewatch it, as Ringwald did, with a wiser and more critical eye. You can shift the conversation around beloved works of art and how they treat women, people of color, and the LGBTQ+ community, and change will come from having those difficult conversations.
5 things I noticed during my 24 hours with Google's Nest AudioYeah, 'Emily in Paris' is bad. But the memes are so so good.Why the next presidential debate could totally be on ZoomThis may be the greatest interaction with a delivery man of all timeDoctor takes a break from giving birth to deliver another babyDoctor takes a break from giving birth to deliver another babyPrince William and Sir David Attenborough launch £50 million environmentalism prizeTesla breaks record with 139,300 delivered cars in third quarterLyft dips toes into food delivery for first timeTwitter is developing a new misinfo moderation tool called BirdwatchThe best podcasting apps on iOS in 2020Ivanka learned about her dad's transgender military ban just like the rest of us — on TwitterSlack problems: Messages not sending, completely down for some users7 things that somehow lasted longer than Anthony Scaramucci in the White HouseAll the stuff in my fridge that lasted longer than Reince Priebus [Update: Also, Scaramucci]The 5 best Apple TV apps that you should install right nowThe best politics podcasts: 9 shows that'll keep you informed and entertainedApple kicks third party speakers and headphones out of its storeHighway gets a 'Game of Thrones'Florida online voter registration deadline extended after website crash There's more to worry about at Etsy than just canceled internships Zuckerberg sheds tears and gets political in Harvard commencement speech Burger King upsets actual king with Belgian ad New poll shows US drivers started ditching cars for ride hailing apps 'The Spider DJI is requiring owners to register their drones... or else The U.S. prison system isn't transparent. This nonprofit uses data to expose the truth. Hackers just gave you another reason to hate vaping Break the mold and get a cookie fidget spinner instead Apple rumored to go with 18:9 screen a ratio for iPhone 8 DARPA reveals design of its space plane for faster, cheaper satellite launches Stephen A. Smith picks the Cavs to win the NBA Finals ... which is very bad news for the Cavs At least 'Baywatch' has one thing going for it (and no, it's not The Rock) Rosario Dawson will not rest until she is in every superhero universe 'The Get Tesla leak reveals just how quickly the Model 3 can hit 60 mph 'Game of Thrones' Season 7 trailer hits viewing record South Korea has the highest concentration of robots in the world Police still don't know why this creepy SOS signal appeared in Australia Here's what 24 hours at the Cannes Film Festival looks like
1.4541s , 10114.796875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Brooklyn Nine】,Information Information Network