Watched: 05/23/2024
Format: Paramount+
Viewing: First
Director: Joel Schumacher
Selection: Household Joint Decision
Birth of a Nation. The Jazz Singer. Porky's.
All movies that captivated a nation at one point or another for a variety of reasons. But, also, proof that, no matter their popularity in the moment, not every movie holds up over time.
I had never seen St. Elmo's Fire (1985). I was ten when it came out, so too young and not interested. We only sporadically had premium cable during the era when I suspect a lot of my peers watched the movie. But over the years, I had seen no particular reason to watch this film. For a movie that was often mentioned as of a certain place and time - usually in talking about "The Brat Pack", it was never referenced textually or subtextually; ie: no one was suggesting that one should see this movie to be culturally literate - but there often seemed to be a belief that everyone *had* seen it.
But the thing is, I'm just young enough that a lot of the Brat Pack stuff didn't hit me. I think they're mostly elder Gen-X, but in 1985, I was concerned with soccer practice and robots, not dealing with my friend's personal problems as they flexed to grow into adulthood. So this movie was *not for me*. Nor were a lot of the movies made by the Brat Pack in the general time of their release. And as I'm sure the doc will cover, the Brat Pack stigma deeply impacted those actors as it made them a brand, a brand that spoiled as we hit 1990, when maybe I would have been interested in young Hollywood (which I never really was).*
The movie is most famous, really, for the cast of then-young stars, more than anything. It was like an Avengers of former Tiger Beat features pushing into more adult territory.