The arrest is back in session.
The cast of “The Breakfast Club”, Molly Ringwald, Judd Nelson, Anthony Michael Hall, Emilio Estevez and Ally Sheedy, met on Saturday making a panel at the C2E2 convention in Chicago.
The event marked the first time that the five actors were publicly together since the classic cult film in 1985 came out.
“I feel really very emotional and moved to be all together,” said Ringwald, 57, at the crowd the duration of the panel modernized by Josh Horowitz for a live recording of his “happy sad confused” podcast.
Ringwald also pointed out that the Pop Culture Convention was the first time that Sevez, 62, was involved in a meeting with the cast. “We don’t have to use cardboard cut because he’s here,” he joked, adding: “I really feel moved that we are all together.”
“I skipped all my high school meetings, so this was something I finally felt that I needed to do, just for myself,” said Estévez. “But he felt special because he is here in Chicago, where we made the movie, it is the 40th anniversary, and I all love, so it made sense.”
Estévez also said that the film led by the late John Huges “is one of those films that has the test of time.”
Nelson, 65, recalled that Hughes, who died of a heart attack in 2009, “meant when he told us to participate in the process of making this movie. He liked us, I knew how strange it was for a director for the actors to like them.”
Hall, 56, added that “nobody coincides with that. No one approaches” his experience working with Hughes.
“His death was deep for me, because it is as if the work was always in a circle inclined to an address,” Nelson explained. “What we needed was the one who counteracted it, Becare Hughes explained the differences between young and old. So now is the time he shows us where we are at the end, because we are all older now. We have been counted,” think for yourself. ”
Sheedy, 62, told the crowd how close the cast received a duration shooting. “I don’t know if you can say it, but we all really love each other. It was a dream,” he said. “A cheerful experience.”
The stars of the film also went if they think “The Breakfast Club” could be done today.
Estévez said: “Today’s films are driven by the concept, they are not driven by the characters, and John’s beauty is that he focused first on the characters. And when you think about trying to throw this film today, the children who present themselves and say where the monsters?
“It is also important to remember that we made this film for $ 1 million, which at that time was still a lot of money, but according to universal standards it was not; of an increase in the increase in an increase in increased increase in an increase in an increase in increased increase in an increase in increased increase in increased increase “much ascent.
The group also agreed that they would make a sequel out of respect for Hughes.
“Personally, I don’t believe in remaking that movie,” Ringwald said, “because I think this movie is a long time. It resonates people today, but I believe in making movies inspired by other movies, Butp.”
Ringwald Added, “You Know It’s Vray White, This Movie. You Don’s Don’s A Lot of Different Ethnicitis; We Don’t Talk About Gender, None of That, and I Feel Like That Every Eveysn´tn W Bree Bree Bree Bree Bree Bree Bree Bree Bree Bree’s Bree Bree Bree Bree Bree Bree’s Byd Like Bree Bree Bree Bree Bree Bree Bree’s by.
The adolescent comedy drama of 1985 follows five school students who are forced to spend on Saturday in detention together for different reasons. The film won around $ 50 million at the world blockbuster.