Shane Seemann The Nonverbal Club The Breakfast Club is such an interesting movie to use with this topic. The wide range of characters allows for a variety of different interactions. The way we are going to approach this‚ is to look at each character and examine the different interactions between. Let us first start off with some good examples of Physical Appearances and Artifacts‚ or the personal objects we use to announce our identities‚ interests and backgrounds. Our appearance includes
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By Hunter Hulscher We watched the Breakfast Club. One of the main character’s name was Brian. He changed throughout the movie. At the beginning of the movie he was picked on a lot and no one cared about what he said. It was hard for him to talk to other students or try to say something‚ but they didn’t listen to them or tell them to shutup. When he was in the car his mom wanted him to study constantly. He was trying to be funny and did a weird pencil thing to be funny. People in his class
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The Breakfast Club The Breakfast Club has a few characters‚ whom are portrayed with different personalities. There is Andrew Clark‚ the athlete; Claire Standish‚ the princess; Allison Reynolds‚ the lonely girl; Brian Johnson‚ the nerd; and John Bender‚ the criminal. Each one has unique characteristics‚ that set them apart from each other. My personal favorite out the entire bunch‚ would be John Bender‚ the criminal. Bender has a different attire‚ then the rest of the adolescents. He wears plenty
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family‚ setting‚ race‚ mentors‚ peers‚ music‚ or social media. Identity changes over time as certain things about an individual also change. An individual’s identity is formed by two main factors; one being out of their control‚ a person’s background‚ and the other being who a person chooses to be‚ what choices they make. The first and most prominent factor of one’s identity during adolescence is the background of the individual. In The Breakfast Club‚ John Bender is seen as a delinquent‚ “a criminal
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The film we watched in class was The Breakfast Club. I had heard of this movie and seen some parts of it before‚ but never really sat and watched the movie‚ so it was a pleasure to observe and analyze the characters and how they developed. I chose to do the characterization of Allison‚ whose labeled as weird and different. Allison was a fascinating character to watch develop seeing that there are a lot of hidden things about her and her personality in the beginning of the movie. I found that she
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Erik Erikson’s Psychosocial Theory highlights one stage that is relevant and demonstrated in the 1985 movie‚ The Breakfast Club. Identity vs. Role Diffusion‚ or also known as‚ Stage 5‚ is the foundation for the characters and plot of this movie. To begin with‚ the plot of the movie deals with a group of adolescents dealing with stereotypes and finding their identities. At the beginning of the movie‚ the teens are in “fragile” and “detrimental-like” stages. They do not really know who they are‚
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The movie The Breakfast Club is about five students in spending their day in saturday detention. All of these characters have completely different personalities from one another‚ which makes the movie more interesting than it already is. The character that I will be doing my character analysis on is named John Bender. John Bender is the troublemaker of the group‚ and‚ in my opinion‚ the funniest. John is introduced into the movie at the same time as the other characters. Some of the first impressions
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A look at the inside and the outside. In the movie‚ the breakfast club five completely different‚ even though they all have struggled at home. A high school student is like an onion the layers reveal more there are some which the students keep hidden amongst them. For example‚ the criminal has an abusive household‚ which is how he became a rebel. Home can be where the danger is and how the trouble can begin. Creating anger and rage within eventually it will come out thus all the bad behavior. For
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The Breakfast Club was a movie about five very different characters‚ Claire‚ Andrew‚ Brian‚ Allison‚ and John Bender. Claire was a popular girl‚ Andrew was a wrestler (jock)‚ Brian was intellectually gifted‚ Allison was a basket case‚ and John Bender was a rebel. On the outside they seem like very different people‚ in fact they were all socially opposite‚ but they also shared so much. As the movie starts out‚ the five teenagers are being punished with Saturday detention; their assignment for
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The character John Bender in the Breakfast Club is one of the five representational teenagers of stereotypical cliques. He is depicted as the criminal‚ and reveals a past that correlates to that of many who maintain similar lifestyles and recreational choices that Bender exhibits. As displayed by many teenagers‚ behavioral habits typically correspond with the conditions in which they live. This common assumption is further accredited upon disclosure of Bender’s home life. The parenting style that
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