Just finished Andrew McCarthey's documentary Brats on HULU. This was his, and other fellow members (et al), POV of the infamous 80s 'Brat Pack'. I was highly interested in watching this documentary having grown up smack dab in the middle of that era.
#classof85 🤘
I HIGHLY recommend to all fellow classmates who wish to immediately take a nostalgic and familiar trip down memory lane :)
As I was watching, I realized that this was not only their story but ours. They set the tone for that ERA, and we embraced every freaking moment of it! For the first time, Hollywood was invested in our journey. Our generation. They were relatable and highly entertaining. We actually had a voice.
I remember watching their movies, St Elmo's Fire and ESPECIALLY The Breakfast Club, to name a couple. I can probably quote the latter ver batim and I am dang proud of that! ;) #lovemesomebender #screwsfalloutallthetimetheworldsanimperfectplace
It might seem silly or cheesy to some, but to us it was a revolution! A cultural phenomenon!
They were our peers, our dysfunctional role models, our 'heroes'. Even though they struggled with the title, I wonder if they actually understand the impact they had on our young lives? This was pre-social media, a different era, a different mindset albeit, a much better one.
The youth of today will never understand what it was like to be part of that culture and it's their loss because it was amazing!
At this stage in my life, having not much difference in age than theirs, I find myself reflecting on the past. I suddenly realized my entire 'coming of age' was culminated in those moments, those mindsets, those movies. They set the tone, they defined the moment, and they ROCKED our world!
So, thank you, Andrew McCarthy, Emilio Estevez, Demi Moore, Judd Nelson, Ally Sheedy, Molly Ringwald and Rob Lowe. A couple of you were MIA from the documentary, but you will always hold a special place in my fond memory of that era ❤