Pretty in Pink Movie Review
Pretty in Pink Review

"Pretty in Pink" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1986
Cast and Crew
Director : Howard DeutchProducer : John Hughes,Lauren Shuler Donner
Screenwiter : John Hughes
Starring : Molly Ringwald,Harry Dean Stanton,Jon Cryer,Annie Potts,James Spader,Andrew McCarthy,Jim Haynie,Alexa Kenin,Kate Vernon,Andrew Dice Clay,Emily Longstreth
The youth of today -- the kids just entering their teens -- will they regard
Molly Ringwald as a teen dramedy princess, or will she be known as a B-list
queen of cheesecake horror films?
Pretty in Pink stands out as the perennial ladies' favorite from the Brat Pack
era, with Ringwald turning in an unforgettable role (and role model) as a poor
girl named Andie who takes care of dad (Harry Dead Stanton playing a
stereotypical drunk), makes great grades (and her own clothes), all while
finding herself pursued by no fewer than three guys. The real competition
comes down to a war between the rich kid (Andrew McCarthy) and Andie's fellow
poor-boy (Jon Cryer, whose wannabe hipster "Duckie" has become a legend of the
era).
In the end, Pink turns into more of a treatise on economic strata than a
romance. In fact, writer John Hughes (and Some Kind of Wonderful director
Howard Deutch, who no one ever remembers) originally had Duckie getting the
girl at the end of the movie. Audiences thought it rang false, and the ending
was changed in reshoots. (You can tell McCarthy has lost weight if you watch
closely. The bad wig he's wearing is more obvious.) Hughes wasn't making a
statement about love, he was making entertainment by giving the audience what
it wanted.
Regardless, the dialogue, scenarios, and emotions on display in Pretty in Pink
are as close to real as 1980s teen romances could get. While I (and most
males) would probably pick The Breakfast Club as our favorite film of the
genre, it's also the most unrealistic (goth chick ends up with the football
player? uh huh). For that, Pink deserves credit. It may not be the greatest
love story ever told, but it might be the one with the most heart.
Unfortunately, the tons of extras on the new DVD are apparently lost in the
ether somewhere. There's nothing (literally) in the way of bonus material
here, which means that still we're not to be treated to the movie's original
ending. Sob!
Pretty in, er, black.
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Review by Christopher Null
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