Watched: 06/13/2024
Format: Hulu
Viewing: First
Director: Andrew McCarthy
I can remember a time in my life when I was weird about the non-John Hughes movies by "The Brat Pack". I can't remember why. I do remember people would say "oh, that's a Brat Pack movie" and I'd say "oh, then I won't watch that", but it was so long ago, I don't even remember what the reasoning was.
When I figured out who was *in* the Brat Pack, I realized I was really not the market for those movies. I was too young for the stuff produced before 1985 or so, and we didn't have HBO for me to watch those movies. Add in whatever that vibe was, and I just never circled back to see them. Anyway - the concept of the Brat Pack is pretty loosey goosey, with no exact filmography or even common understanding of who is in it. We can debate that in the comments.
This doc is written and directed by former Brat Packer Andrew McCarthy, who is a writer these days, and a pretty good one. He's digging into the fall-out and feelings of the clutch of actors discussed in a 1985 New York Magazine front page article called "The Brat Pack", written by then-young journalist David Blum.
The article followed Emilio Estevez, Rob Lowe and Judd Nelson as they went about a night-in-the-life of young Hollywood during a period when there had been a spike in movies starring, and aimed at, younger people. It is largely considered to be a hit piece, and by 1980's standards, I guess it is. Now it just reads like a jealous dork seeing how these extraordinarily fortunate young people spend their time. It lumps in other actors and co-stars not in attendance and slaps the sobriquet upon them.