Rating: PG-13
Movie Release Date: February 27, 1987
DVD Release Date: August 20, 2002
Plot 411: A story of teen angst involving a tomboy who is in love with her best friend.
Review: This is a John Hughes film that I wasn't familiar with until watching He's Just Not That Into You. It's used in the dialogue and there's a small clip in the film so I figured I'd watch the movie to get the whole picture. It was surprisingly good because the characters were all pretty complex, especially for a teen film. The movie stars Mary Stuart Masterson as Watts, a tomboy who is in love with her best friend Keith (Eric Stoltz). Both live their high school lives outside the popular kid's club and are from the wrong side of the tracks. However, Keith is intrigued with Amanda (Lea Thompson), who has been accepted into the club because she's pretty. This is one of those films about searching for one's identity, growing up amidst peer pressure, longing and teen angst. Despite this, the characters, especially the three main ones, are fully developed and you can picture them in kids you grew up with. Their problems, although not particularly important to anyone but them, are issues that all teens face. At the time, these problems are critical to your survival and may seem powerful enough to kill you. I like that the movie doesn't demean teens by downplaying the crucial nature of these life experiences. Again, Hughes seems to capture a time in everyone's lives that usually becomes idyllic or completely forgotten with age and recreates the highly charged atmosphere that was growing up.
Watch It: For a snippet of John Hughes brilliance.
Skip It: If Pretty In Pink and Sixteen Candles is enough teen angst to last a lifetime.
Some Kind Of Wonderful
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Labels:
comedy,
Eric Stoltz,
He's Just Not That Into You,
John Hughes,
Lea Thompson,
Mary Stuart Masterson,
Pretty In Pink,
romance,
Sixteen Candles,
Some Kind Of Wonderful,
teen
8.04.2009
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