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The occupation of the legendary film “The Breakfast Club” from the 1980s – – Molly Ringwald, Ally Sheedy, Judd Nelson, Anthony Michael Hall and Emilio Estevez – rejoic up for the first time in 40 years during a pop culture event in Chicago.
On Saturday, the former occupation colleagues entered the stage at C2E2 to remember their experiences The classic coming-of-age filmin which five students of different high school cliques connect during the common detention on Saturday.
“I feel really very emotional and moved to have all of us together” played Clarie Standish In the film, the crowd told the crowd The Hollywood reporter.
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“The Breakfast Club” occupied, including Molly RingwaldPresent Ally Sheedy, Judd Nelson, Anthony Michael Hall and Emilio Estevez reunited themselves at C2E2 in Chicago on April 12th. (Barry Brecheisen/Wireimage)
While other members of the line -up were reunited in the past, this was the first time that Estevez had joined them.
“We no longer have to use the cardboard section because it is here.” Ringwald added. “I really feel moved that we are all together.”
Estevez, who played star athlete Andrew Clark, admitted that the accession to reunification was “something that I finally had the feeling that I only had to do for myself”.
The five performers have not all been together since the film’s premiere in 1985. (Universal Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection)
“He felt special, it is here in Chicago where we made the film,” he said. “It is obviously the 40th anniversary, and it just felt like it was time. Someone told me that Molly said: ‘Well, Emilio just doesn’t like us?’ And that broke my heart.
At one point during the panel, Nelson said that criminal John Bender played that he would not have thought that it would take so long for everyone to unite. But this time he, Estevez and Ringwald together with Hall, who played socially uncomfortable Brian Johnson, and Sheedy, who played as a shy loner Allison Reynolds.
Ringwald, center, thanked for the moment. (Barry Brecheisen/Wireimage)
“I always had strange that the work was half done, that at some point we would all come back together – because there were too many questions from everyone: ‘What happens on Monday?’ The film is about the fact that everyone has to make this decision for themselves [about] What happens on Monday. But I personally felt that it was a shoe and I needed the second shoe, and that could only come from John, “said Nelson, referring to the deceased writer and director of the film, John Hughes.
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“So his death was profound for me, because it is as if the work would always be in a circle that leans in one direction,” he added. “What we needed was the one who balanced it because Hughes explained the differences between young and old. Now it is the time for him to show us where we will meet in the end because we are all older now, but we won’t get what is sad.
The fans quickly shared their reaction to reunification on social media.
Ringwald admitted with Sheedy in “The Breakfast Club” that as a young star she was exposed to “questionable situations”. (Universal Pictures/Getty pictures)
“I love to see that, great film!” one The user wrote on X.
“Fantastic. Great for fans, but I hope you enjoyed getting together and realizing what the effects of this film had on so many.” Another wrote.
Last year Ringwald – who had recently seen “The Breakfast Club” With her daughter – in an interview with the Times about the film.
“There are a lot that I really love about the film, but there are elements that are not well aged – like Judd Nelson’s character John Bender, who essentially sexually molested my character,” she essentially harassed sexually ” told the outlet.
“I am glad that we are looking at it and say that things are really different now.”
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