2 Comments

  1. Sounds like a good read — I'll have to look this one up.

    Couple of thoughts: I seem to have had almost exactly the opposite experience with these movies than you, and I wonder if it isn't because I'm just a shade older (I graduated high school in '87). The common trope that the John Hughes cycle "defined my generation" works for me, because Sixteen Candles, The Breakfast Club, and Ferris Bueller all seemed to closely mirror my teen experiences (well, in the case of Ferris, my teen daydreams, but still…), whereas the later Hughes films — Pretty in Pink and Some Kind of Wonderful — have always struck me as just retreading the ground covered in the earlier films. Also, I saw them when they actually came out instead of picking them up when I was older, which no doubt made a difference, too.

    On the other hand, the intense affection so many hold for Say Anything has always mystified me. Not because it isn't a good movie — it is — but it just didn't make much of an impact on me. To tell the truth, I really don't remember much about it all, aside from the iconic "In Your Eyes" bit and a couple of random gags (like the thing about the guys who are full of advice being dateless and sitting behind the Kwik-E-Mart "by choice"). And this despite seeing it several times over the years — it just doesn't stick with me for some reason. Better Off Dead, another highly regarded Cusack movie, is the same way — I know I've seen it, but it's like that disc sector of my brain is dead. Possibly because I was in college and busy with my own first major romance at that point? I don't know… but I find it interesting…

  2. I have to admit, I've only seen "Say Anything" once – and I was firmly in this generation (graduated in 90)

    This is a book I *need* though! I'm sure.

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