Shermer, Illinois isnât a real town, but it might as well be given its place in the pop cultural consciousness. Itâs an amalgamation of a lot of Chicago suburbs (really, any suburb anywhere), and it’s the place that so many of John Hughesâ characters called home.
The late director left behind a body of work that defined American comedy in the â80s, one that told a generation of adolescents and their parents and all those who followed them that itâs okay to be weird and uncertain, that living off the beaten path is sometimes the best way to live.
With no shortage of deliberation, our staff has broken down all of Hughesâ work that he either directed, wrote, or both. (That is, aside from Reach the Rock, that weird 1998 dramedy he wrote that not a single one of us had seen or could find in a timely manner. Soundtrackâs cool, though.) We took a trip through his highs, his lows, and some of his weird experiments that didnât quite work but still linger in memories just because they came from him.
Hughes was as empathetic a filmmaker as youâd ever find. He believed that everybodyâs story mattered and that even though life gets harder when you get older, that doesnât mean that being a teenager is any easier. Sometimes his characters were the butt of the joke, sometimes the ones telling it, but they were always treated with a warmth and respect that few comedians have ever truly been able to manage. And so, as The Breakfast Club turns 35 this month, hereâs the best and worst of John Hughes.
–Dominick Suzanne-Mayer
Senior Writer
Ranking: Every John Hughes Movie from Worst to Best
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