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RIP John Hughes

Very sad and unexpected news. As a child of the 80s, his films were a big part of my childhood and teen years. Ferris Bueller's Day Off in particular is one of my favorites to this day. Thanks for the memories, John Hughes, and rest in peace. :(
 
Various YouTube clips from his movies...

http://blog.newsweek.com/blogs/popv...john-hughes-dead-at-59-a-life-in-youtube.aspx

News article about his passing...

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_obit_hughes

From the Article:


Ben Stein said:
"He made a better connection with young people than anyone in Hollywood had ever made before or since," Stein said on Fox Business Network. "It's incredibly sad. He was a wonderful man, a genius, a poet. I don't think anyone has come close to him as being the poet of the youth of America in the postwar period. He was to them what Shakespeare was to the Elizabethan Age."

High praise rarely gets better than that right there. What a wonderful eulogy.
 
I saw this on Facebook earlier. I still can't believe this news. Ferris Bueller's Day Off, The Breakfast Club, and Home Alone are some of my favorite movies.

Rest in peace. :(
 
The Breakfast Club is my favorite movie of all-time. Many others he wrote, including almost all of the ones he wrote AND directed, are also dear to my heart.

Danke schoen, John Hughes. We will NEVER forget about you. :(
 
Seen way too few of his movies but I have seen I've liked. And 59 is way too young to go.
 
Hughes was a great talent who made commercially viable films that were also, more often than not, films that had genuine emotion behind them. It's hard to believe that he didn't direct after 1991. He'll be missed.

I read that his last film was in 1991 as well, and I was wondering if there was any particular reason why he stopped directing...seems strange, and I don't recall any big career-ruining scandal.

In any case, sad news. He directed some of the best comedies of the 1980's.:(
 
He apparently stopped making films because he didn't get the new generation of '90s teens the way he got the '80s teens.

I remember reading something about that.

It's funny, though, because the '90s-'00s teens relate to his '80s teen films just as much. Even though these films were made for Gen X, a lot of Gen Y people 'get' this era quite well. '80s films haven't really gone out of style for Gen Y the way previous eras have, IMO (and I say this as a '50s nut, which basically means the era that the Depression/WWII babies made--the PRE-Boomers). Gen X and Gen Y have a lot of cultural crossover. Gen Z doesn't have the same connection as Gen Yers do to Gen X, though. I've noticed that dramatically. Gen Z are the kids and teens now.

Gen Y actually have the habit of trying to usurp the '80s as theirs, even though they were babies/small kids at the time.

Everyone I know that's in my age group (Gen Y) seems VERY attached to the Gen X media. Most of what Gen Y grew up with was Gen X (probably the advent of home video caused Gen Y to get a ton of the prior generation's media in a way that other generations didn't). John Hughes is a Gen X icon.
 
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He revealed to his Pen Pal, who tells her story in the above link, that he left Hollywood for his children. He did not like the effect the Hollywood culture was having on them. Also the death of his good friend John Candy.
 
Does anyone have a picture of John Hughes? Just wondering. I loved his "Pretty in Pink" movie, as well as "Uncle Buck" and "Farris Bueller's Day Off". Those were classic 80s movies!!!!!!!!!
 
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