In an extremely personal essay for The Cute DevilNew 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.
Previous:Juneteenth, From Atlanta to Oakland
How to (Hypothetically) Smuggle a Cheese Ball Through Airport SecurityWe’re Starting a Book Club. Read Along!Why “Junket Is Nice” Is One of the Weirdest Children’s BooksHow the State Department Kept Faulkner’s Drinking in CheckDjordje Ozbolt’s “More Paintings About Poets and Food”Seeing the World Through Broken GlassesIn Which George du Maurier Feels Neglected By His MomHow a Tchotchke Became a Family Heirloom, of SortsWhat’s the Emotional Value of a Word?On Train Delays and SelfishnessStaff Picks: Walser, Verhoeven, Lead Belly, and MoreStevie Smith’s Eccentric Reading StyleYasmina Reza on the Frivolous and the Profound“Voyages to Disperse Enchantments”: Rimbaud in EthiopiaWhen Should a Series End?Here's Frank O'Hara Reading from “Lunch Poems”An Excerpt from Francis Ponge’s “Soap”The Nervous Systems of BooksWhy “Junket Is Nice” Is One of the Weirdest Children’s Books“Bankspeak”: Your New Least Favorite Language Couples are celebrating 50 years since interracial marriage was legalized with #LovingDay 'Far Cry 5' gameplay is here to inspire more internet anger Author Roxane Gay hits back at website for its 'cruel and humiliating' article Someone just paid $133,000 for 2 NBA Finals tickets Heat scorches eastern U.S. as snow (yes, snow) falls in California Binky is a fake social media app for antisocial people There’s an epidemic of LGBTQ hate violence. Here's how you can curb it. We played 15 minutes of the new 'Star Wars Battlefront II' story Kid owns Icee New York Times is using Google’s AI to expand online comments Katy Perry livestreams until the word 'overexposure' has lost all meaning Read about Jamie Fraser's quest to lose his virginity in a new 'Outlander' anthology A new Doctor has been picked, says former 'Doctor Who' showrunner Buy this house and you'll live in 2 countries at once 'Black Mirror' the book is coming soon to haunt your nightmares Game of Thrones star Michiel Huisman cast in Netflix's Haunting of Hill House series Apple iPad Pro 10.5 is Apple's best tablet The 'Covfefe Act' is now a thing that exists, because of course it does Tonys 2017: Here's the full winners list Everyone's getting a wardrobe upgrade on 'Game of Thrones'
1.7926s , 10130.796875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Cute Devil】,Inspiration Information Network