Broderick brings some real charm and chutzpah to the part.
Ferris Bueller's Day Off (1986)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:46
Fresh:37
Rotten:9
Average Rating:7.4/10
Consensus: Matthew Broderick charms in Ferris Bueller's Day Off, a light and irrepressibly fun movie about being young and having fun.
Runtime: 1 hr 43 mins
Genre: Comedies
Synopsis: Ferris Bueller (Matthew Broderick) is a tricky but harmless fast-talker. But he knows how to have fun, which is exactly what he sets out to do when he feigns illness and talks his parents into... Ferris Bueller (Matthew Broderick) is a tricky but harmless fast-talker. But he knows how to have fun, which is exactly what he sets out to do when he feigns illness and talks his parents into letting him stay home from school. The perpetually lucky Ferris enlists his hypochondriac best friend, Cameron Frye (Alan Ruck), into springing his girlfriend, Sloane Peterson (Mia Sara), from class, and the three embark on a raucous downtown Chicago adventure. From Wrigley Field to the Art Institute of Chicago to a Polish pride parade, Ferris and his friends make the most of their day off. But Ferris, Sloane, and Cameron might not get away with playing hooky. Ferris's sister, Jeanie (Jennifer Grey), is determined to prove that Ferris is faking sick and make him pay for it, and the bumbling school dean, Ed Rooney (Jeffrey Jones), is sure that Ferris is pulling a fast one. Another classic from writer-director John Hughes (SIXTEEN CANDLES, THE BREAKFAST CLUB), this film features a star turn from Broderick as the charismatic Ferris. Watch for Charlie Sheen as the juvenile delinquent in the police station and comedian Louie Anderson in a brief appearance as a flower deliveryman. [More]
Starring: Matthew Broderick, Mia Sara, Alan Ruck, Jeffrey Jones
Starring: Matthew Broderick, Mia Sara, Alan Ruck, Jeffrey Jones, Edie McClurg, Jennifer Grey, Cindy Pickett, Lyman Ward, Charlie Sheen, Ben Stein, Del Close, Virginia Capers, Richard Edson, Larry "Flash" Jenkins, Louie Anderson, Kristy Swanson, Max Perlich, Polly Noonan
Director: John Hughes
Director: John Hughes
Producer: John Hughes, Tom Jacobson
Screenwriter: John Hughes
Composer: Ira Newborn, John Robie, Arthur Baker
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Reviews for Ferris Bueller's Day Off
There are some great comic set pieces with a seize-the-day vibe for teens. Broderick is amiably charismatic and high school dean Jones almost matches him in comic skill.
This is John Hughes' best teen film, and it's a call to arms to everyone in the world who doesn't want to follow society's lame-ass rules at the expense of living a cool life.
This is John Hughes' best teen film, and it's a call to arms to everyone in the world who doesn't want to follow society's lame-ass rules at the expense of living a cool life.
The quintessential teen comedy, this is a movie that could and should serve as a model for movies of this sort in the future.
One has to marvel at just how perfectly Hughes nails his frustratingly entitled mise-en-scène, which he unquestionably does in the film's mesmerizing detour inside an art museum.
Writer-director John Hughes' snappy and thought-provoking film about adolescence.
Whether you're coming to this happy-go-lucky comedy with fresh eyes or through a miasma of nostalgia, there's something here for everyone to enjoy.
Not only captures what being a teenager and a high schooler felt like, but also embodies what life ought to be like.
It's a fun film that has a message (like all of Hughes' films) and also serves as a promotional tour guide of Chicago.
...funny, satiric, bright, and inventive, sagging around the two-thirds mark but coming through with an exhilarating finish.
Time has caught up with the movie's once-iconic status, and it now seems more an artifact of its era than the 'with it' movie it once was.
If there was one quintessential director in the 80s, it was John Hughes, and Ferris Bueller's Day Off might be his best film.
Latest News for Ferris Bueller's Day Off
July 09, 2009:
Alan Ruck: From Ferris' Best Friend to Cool Dad ![]()
More than 20 years after his "Ferris Bueller" character lashed out at his father, actor Alan Ruck has graduated into playing dad roles of his own. More...
November 24, 2005:
A Day to Give Thanks (for Good Thanksgiving Movies!)
The Newsday column gets to take a few days off during the big holidays, but I couldn't let today go by without offering our friends a handful of Turkey-day treats. If you're... More...
July 12, 2005:
Paramount is Sending Us Back to "Summer School"
Screenwriters Kyle Pennekamp & Scott Turpel have been enlisted by Paramount to pen a remake of the 1987 comedy "Summer School," says Variety. More...
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