John Hughes: Don’t You Forget About Him
by Carl KozlowskiIt’s odd to consider which celebrity death will hit you the hardest. Michael Jackson’s bizarre and untimely passing certainly floored people around the planet. But for me, it’s this morning’s passing of John Hughes while he was walking in New York City at the also-far-too-young age of 59 that has hit me like a ton of bricks.
Just last night, I went through my DVD collection and stacked up all the movies I own of his, and was planning to spend the next week watching them whenever I had a spare moment. Just thinking of the titles brought back 25 years’ worth of memories, from “Sixteen Candles” to “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off,” and from the three Chevy Chase “Vacation” movies to the immortal holiday classic “Planes, Trains & Automobiles.”
These weren’t just movies to me, and to many others in my generation and the ones since. They were touchstones of our lives, that freeze-framed moments and memories both of the times we watched them and the amazing way in which they seemed to shine a light on our existence. And in particular, one character and one movie of John’s shaped my entire showbiz career ambitions.
“Pretty in Pink” is the movie that made me want to write movies and led me to idolize John Hughes as a movie god ever since. Why? Well, I used to have a crush on Molly Ringwald but I got over that – especially when I met her for about two seconds last fall and she blatantly tried to keep it at two seconds. (Rude!)
But it’s really because of Duckie Dale, the character immortally portrayed by Jon Cryer. At the time I saw “Pretty,” I was having my heart torn out and stomped on by my unrequited first love and when I saw the movie I related to every damn thing Duckie was going through. I felt like John Hughes had rigged my room with spy equipment and had translated my life right onto the screen.
Now I was nowhere near as cool as Duckie was (Ok, he’s a dork, but i never realized it then). But I loved his sense of style, odd dialogue, manic energy (especially the dance to “Try a Little Tenderness” – perhaps my favorite film scene, and one that inspired a love for Otis Redding’s music I’ve harbored ever since as well).
I wished I lived in Chicago and could dress like that and felt that if it had been me, I’d win over Molly’s character. Most of all, above everything else, it made me feel that someone out there understood what I was going through, and made my intense teenage angst lighten up just a little bit. And I felt if I could someday write or act in something that made someone else feel less alone, and could help them laugh away their problems, well then that would be the pinnacle. It is truly God’s work.
The whole rest of the ’80s, I kept seeing and loving Hughes’ other movies, from “Sixteen Candles” to “Ferris Bueller” to “The Breakfast Club.” Ferris Bueller is another character that spoke to me, as the teenage Superman I wish I could become. I wasn’t popular in high school and wasn’t able to get out from under the iron thumb of my then-super-strict (but now surprisingly hip) parents, but when I saw Ferris’ adventures, I knew that I wanted to be like that someday.
When he came out with the more mature film “Planes, Trains & Automobiles,” that became my favorite film of all time. I worked in a movie theater while it was out, and saw it 9 times for free (hey, I was a 16 year old loser in Little Rock, Arkansas – what else was I gonna do?!) I related even then to John Candy’s character Del Griffin, a too-talkative way-too-nice guy who people usually tuned out because they couldn’t see the wonderful heart he had under his goofy, lumbering surface. His speech with Steve Martin, where he defends his life after Martin rips him to shreds, is in my book one of the most underrated scenes in movie comedy history.
And so I did wind up in Chicago for nearly a decade. I entered the world of standup comedy and a fun type of journalism, working for alt weeklies where I’ve had an amazing amount of creative freedom to pick the topics I want to write about and am able to get “in the door” at almost every event I could possibly want to attend, since everyone wants their events publicized. Concerts, movies, plays, special events – with the newspaper career, my new blogging and my Internet radio talk show, I’m getting to experience all the cool stuff I never got to do in high school and treat my friends and dates to world-class, Ferris Bueller-style fun. My parents are still wondering if and when I’ll ever grow up, but I know Ferris Bueller never would.
Sadly, even the greatest of men eventually fall. John Hughes made nearly 20 big ‘80s films, before writing the “Home Alone” movies and exploding to a whole other level. But then he got trapped in the world of kiddie flicks and lamely recycling other people’s products like “Dennis the Menace,” before eventually giving up and retiring around 2001 to…well, no one’s really quite sure. Somewhere on a farm in northern Illinois is the best anyone can guess.
I guess that means that John Hughes grew up finally and moved on.
And now he’s gone forever, having barely worked for the past decade, leaving us with the sharply etched memories of his best work and the life-changing moments he created. His disappearance helped ensure he wouldn’t keep losing his touch, and made us forget the big missteps of the mid-to-late ‘90s.
We have DVDs now, and a chance to watch his greatest work anytime we want and to pass it on to the next generations of lonely, mixed-up kids who feel totally alone that are coming up behind us.
Don’t you forget about him.







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20 Comments
…..sniffle.
Sadness.
Please don't forget that Hughes was also one of the original crew of comic geniuses at the National Lampoon, along with Doug Kenney, Michael O'Donaghue (both also gone), Chris Miller, PJ O'Rourke…
For a man who worked for such a short period of time, he really provided us with some classic comedy, and did a great job defining an era.
RIP John Hughes; nice piece, Carl.
As a very noire friend of mine put it, "Despite my artsy posturing, I will still watch Ferris Bueller and yes– enjoy his day off."
Planes, Trains & Automobiles – driving the wrong way scene
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s7v0eth4XAM&fe...
A bit of Ferris Bueller's Day Off fun: http://www.realtor.com/realestateandhomes-detail/...
(copied from the other Hughes thread)
I'm 26 and my brother is 23. Our dad bought our first camcorder (a VHS-C from JVC) in 1989 or 1990. By that time, we were already familiar with Hughes thanks to Home Alone, Christmas Vacation, and Planes, Trains & Automobiles (albeit edited for TV).
One of the very first home movies my dad shot was a scene re-enactment that my brother and I did: the "driving the wrong way" scene from Planes, Trains & Automobiles. I was Steve Martin and my brother (who was short enough to stand on the driver's seat!) was John Candy and we did that scene from memory. My mom scoffed when she heard me say, "You broke the damn seat!" And you haven't seen cute till you've seen my then 4-year old brother say, "How can you bweak a caw seat, it's impossible!"
Mr. Hughes, you will be missed. As someone who's tried writing his own teen comedy, you've set the bar quite high for me.
Rest in peace, sir. And tell Mr. Candy we miss him too.
I guess the Hughes-influenced generation would include me. I was in high school from 1988-1991. John Hughes formed my idea of what high school would be like when I got there, and while I was there, I loved his movies (and had friends who could have easily filled out the casts of his movies). They were the height of humor for me (until I discovered Monty Python, anyway, but that's apples and oranges), and though his movies lost a lot when he started into the "Home Alone" franchise, I always fondly remembered what he had done before.
And, man, that's just way too young to die.
For those of us who grew up with his movies in the 80's, his death is like a kick in the gut. R.I.P. John Hughes.
Please somebody mention "Some Kind of Wonderful." Best. Movie. Ever.
Great tribute Carl! I was sooo bummed to hear this. KFWB in LA was talking about how to remember John Hughes…I thought…it sounds like the way you'd talk about someone who died. I hoped it was just a way to analyze what his legacy might be. A couple news breaks later they gave the news. Wow. Reminds us to watch our heart health. Even though I loved most of his films…my favorite was Vacation. Forget all these political/ Cannes types…Hughes was the best American filmmaker of the '80s. He will be missed.
Like was said in the other post some of Hughes movies will last the decades, I love the “Vacation” movies even with Chevy Chase. I find myself using his words in life like, Cousin Eddie “I’m holding out for a management position.” – - Clark “it’s all part of the experience.” Sad indeed.
Great tribute Carl. I also had the pleasure of discovering the greatness of Otis Redding thanks to that scene from "Pretty in Pink."
I watch the Alone Alone movies every year. Greatest physical humor ever- the films still tear me up every time I watch. What a wonderful man. What a wonderful legacy.
Not be negative, but the re-mix of the Psychedelic Furs' "Pretty in Pink" made for the soundtrack was weak compared to the original single.
O'Rourke's call for the formation of a splinter party, "The Pants-Down Republicans" (nothing to do with Ensign or Sanford), in the old NatLamp is still the closet anyone's come to spelling out my personal political philosophy.
I'm not sure, but I think Hughes may have co-authored the piece.
Better Off Dead.
I'm sure everyone knows this by now, but for anyone who doesn't… watch Ferris Bueller all the way to the end of the credits. there's an extra funny scene at the very end when the credits have finished rolling.
That scene where Ducky dances to "Try A LIttle Tenderness" is one of my all-time favorite film moments, and easily the best scene in that movie. Ducky was wonderful.
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