The Breakfast Club
Class reconciliation in the film comes through the intentional working out of personal issues in a supportive group setting and by the end of the film the two characters who began the film as complete conformists, Claire and Andy, are romantically attached to the two most unconventional characters, Bender and Allison, respectively. It is worth noting that this transformation is made possible by Molly Ringwald’s character, who provides Allison with a makeover in order to feminize her appearance and make her more palatable. Transformation through acquisition is again the driving message of Ringwald’s presence in the film. Like its predecessor, The Breakfast Club works through class differences on a personal, individualized level while largely ignoring social/cultural forces but, in its construction of teenage humanity as a subculture opposed to dominant adulthood, the film manages to say something profound about adolescence and identity.