Text: Film Title: The Breakfast Club Director: John Hughes The breakfast club is an inspiring film directed by John Hughes about five different teen stereotypes a brain‚ an athlete‚ a basket case‚ a princess and a criminal. They break down barriers and realize they are much more alike then they all thought they would be. John Hughes uses the five different stereotypes as social barriers. However he breaks each one of these down showing how each one is the same through how they got themselves
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Communication is what essentially drives the world around. Whether it is online or face-to-face‚ communication plays a critical role in our lives. Social penetration theory is a communication theory that deeply defines how important communication as it relates to the relationships people have with one another and how individuals build them up and make them stronger. As humans‚ we interact with each other on a daily basis and relationships are developed‚ some you may refer to as acquaintances‚ some
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Social penetration theory was formulated by psychology professors Irwin Altman and Dalmas Taylor as their attempt to describe the dynamics of relational closeness. They proposed that closeness occurs through a gradual process of self-disclosure‚ and closeness develops if the participants proceed in a gradual and orderly fashion from superficial to intimate levels of exchange as a function of both immediate and forecast outcomes.[1] This psychological theory‚ as with many others‚ is applied in the
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The Breakfast club (1985) is a comedy-drama film directed and written by John Hughes. The plot revolves around 5 high school students‚ each part of a different stereotype; Judd Nelson plays Bender the ‘criminal’‚ Claire the ‘princess’ is portrayed by Molly Ringwald‚ Emilio Estevez takes on the role of Andrew the ‘athlete’‚ Anthony Michael Hall plays the ‘brain’ Brian Johnson and Ally Sheedy is Allison the ‘basket case’. The film starts with the students being stuck in Saturday detention together
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Interpersonal Communication April 3rd‚ 2013 The Breakfast Club The Breakfast club quickly begins to define each character into their stereotypical roles within the first few minutes of the movie. Within the first few minutes you will begin to notice that Alison is one who craves the attention of other and is kind of the weird one out‚ Bender gets the stereotype that he is some smooth guy that is a rebel‚ Claire is the popular girl that everyone is high school longs to look like and tries to
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“The Breakfast Club” In the movie “The Breakfast Club” three interpersonal Terms that I found to be successfully use in the movie is. Interpersonal communication when the five high school student has to realize their mean to communicate with one another. Affection‚ the basic human need to be liked‚ this is when the tough guy that show himself not as one of the high school student‚ but show some affection and caring toward other as well‚ and Self-disclosure‚ an occasion when you just want to tell
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Introduction Attention getting material Imagine yourself in close proximity with 4 strangers nothing like you. That’s what the characters’ in The Breakfast Club were faced with. Tie to audience For this specific setting a group of 5 eclectic students are forced into serving 9 hours of Saturday detention for whatever they had done wrong. In attendance is a “princess” (Claire Standish)‚ an “athlete” (Andrew Clark)‚ a “brain” (Brian Johnson)‚ a “criminal” (John Bender) and a “basket case” (Allison
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basket case...a princess...and a criminal...Does that answer your question? Sincerely yours‚ the Breakfast Club." The Breakfast Club is a story about five seemingly different students who have to spend their Saturday in school detention. They are each given an assignment to write an essay on who they think they are. Throughout the day‚ the students bond with one another and redefine their own social stereotypes. In the end‚ they decide to write one essay instead of them all writing one each. The
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Breakfast Club Breakfast Club is a comedy that was released in 1985. It was written‚ produced and directed by John Hughes. It’s about five teenage students from different social groups when forced to spend a Saturday together in detention they find themselves interacting with and understanding each other for the first time. A jock‚ Emilio Estevez‚ a stoner‚ Judd Nelson‚ a princess‚ Molly Ringwald‚ a basket case‚ Ally Sheedy‚ and a brain‚ Anthony Michael Hall‚ talk about everything from parental
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Roya Sanders GE 347 12-29-11 The Breakfast Club Critique: Group Formation Forming is the anxiety and uncertainty about belonging to a group. As the group forms and matures‚ natural leaders will emerge. Members in these roles will change several times during the forming phase of group development. In the beginning of the movie‚ all five students arrive at the school on a Saturday morning for detention. The bully- bender‚ is the first to start talking and cause trouble. Storming is when competition
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