The Breakfast Club ending is a much more profound, ambiguous, and thought-provoking conclusion than the average teen comedy, with storylines left unresolved and questions left unanswered. Released in 1985 to critical acclaim and box office success, The Breakfast Club revolves around a group of high school misfits in Saturday detention under the watchful eye of their totalitarian vice principal. One of John Hughes’ most iconic high school movies marked the peak of the “Brat Pack” era, with such stars as Emilio Estevez, Molly Ringwald, and Anthony Michael Hall giving some of the best performances of their career.
Decades after its release, The Breakfast Club remains a celebrated classic and a staple of popular culture. With some of the most memorable quotes, characters, and cinematic moments of its decade, it's a cornerstone of the ‘80s movie aesthetic. Its unforgettable final scene leaves a lot of crucial questions unanswered, though. Most coming-of-age movies reveal the fate of their characters, but The Breakfast Club subverts expectations of the genre by leaving its players' fates uncertain.
Why Claire Gives Bender One Of Her Earrings
Clare & Bender Connect Throughout The Movie
At the end of The Breakfast Club, when Claire kisses Bender and bids him farewell, she gives him one of her diamond earrings. It’s not immediately clear why she’s only giving him one and not both, or why she’s giving him an earring at all. Claire gives John one of her earrings as a symbolic gesture to say she can meet him halfway. By pursuing a relationship with each other, enemies-turned-lovers Claire and Bender are both stepping out of their comfort zones. The olive branch of the earring proposes that they meet in the middle, and Bender accepts.
Why The Characters Refer To Themselves As "The Breakfast Club"
Brian Coins The Term In The Movie
Brian’s essay to Mr. Vernon ends with the iconic sign-off, “Sincerely yours, The Breakfast Club,” the last line in the movie. This nickname isn’t explicitly explained in the movie, but there was a real-world reason for John Hughes’s use of this moniker.
Actor |
Character |
Stereotype |
---|---|---|
Emilio Estevez |
Andrew Clark |
"The Athlete" |
Anthony Michael Hall |
Brian Johnson |
"The Brain" |
Judd Nelson |
John Bender |
"The Criminal" |
Molly Ringwald |
Claire Standish |
"The Princess" |
Ally Sheedy |
Allison Reynolds |
"The Basket Case" |
He originally titled his script Detention, a wholly unexciting name for a movie, before he overheard a friend’s teenage son refer to Saturday morning detention as “the breakfast club.” After learning this phrase, Hughes changed the title of his movie and its final line to reflect it (via the American Film Institute). The rest is film history.
The original title of The Breakfast Club was simply titled Detention.
What's The Punchline To Bender's Joke?
Judd Nelson Improvised This Joke
When Bender, the most quotable Breakfast Club character, is crawling through the air ducts, he starts telling a joke, but he falls through the vent before getting to the punchline. The setup goes like this: “A naked blonde walks into a bar with a poodle under one arm and a two-foot salami under the other...the bartender says, ‘So, I don’t suppose you’d be needing a drink?’ The naked lady says...” The joke is never finished and the punchline is never revealed. The seemingly dirty joke was ad-libbed by Bender actor Judd Nelson and no punchline ever actually existed.
Why Allison's Ending Is So Controversial
Allison Received A Makeover
Every character in The Breakfast Club gets a resolution to their story arc, but one person's ending has garnered controversy over the years. Claire abandons her goody-two-shoes persona; Andrew stops being defined by what his dad wants; Brian writes the essay that closes out the movie.

The Breakfast Club's Most Important Scene Was Completely Ad-Libbed
The Breakfast Club's confession scene is one of the movie's most pivotal and revealing, and it was also surprisingly ad-libbed by the film's cast.
The Breakfast Club, Allison’s ending is by far the most rushed and unbefitting of her character. Claire gives her a makeover, which suddenly attracts romantic interest from Andrew. This sends the wrong message by telling audiences they have to be conventionally physically attractive to have any value.
Why Bender Pumps His Fist In The Air
Bender's Final Action Has Become Iconic
In the final moments of The Breakfast Club, Bender walks across the football field and pumps his fist in the air. Of all the characters in The Breakfast Club, Bender is the one who is most profoundly changed by making friends with kids outside his social circle and escaping his stereotype. He pumps his fist in the air, one of the most memorable The Breakfast Club, to show that he realized he doesn’t have to be defined by his father’s abuse; he’s embraced kindness and opened his heart to his new friends.
What "Don't You (Forget About Me)" Means
Simple Minds Sings The End Credits Song
The Breakfast Club ends with one of the most memorable soundtrack needle-drops of all time. As the kids leave Saturday detention, Simple Minds’ “Don’t You (Forget About Me)” kicks in on the soundtrack. John Hughes uses this song to close the movie because its lyrics tie into the five characters’ motivations.
"Don't You (Forget About Me)" was a number-one hit on the Billboard Hot 100
The Simple Minds song refers to the characters hoping to remain friends instead of habitually returning to their pre-established high school social structures. As they’ve opened up to each other, they’ve felt more seen and heard than ever before; now, they want to be ed.
What Happens On Monday?
The Breakfast Club Likely Goes Their Separate Ways A Bit
In one of the best teen movie endings, The Breakfast Club is deliberately ambiguous about what could happen to its main characters when they return to school on Monday. After their soul-searching Saturday, their next steps could go either way. They could ignore each other and resume their comfortable positions in the established social order, or they could start hanging out together on a regular basis, upending that hierarchy.
The real answer is probably somewhere in the middle. They might have remained separate during school hours to keep up appearances, then gotten themselves sent to Saturday detention every week so that they could have that time together again.
What Was The Premise Of The Unmade Sequel?
John Hughes Wanted To Make A Sequel Years Later
While a sequel to The Breakfast Club was never produced, John Hughes did have an idea to explore the same existential themes in a different stage of the characters’ lives. Anthony Michael Hall explained,
“[Hughes] did mention the potential of doing a sequel to The Breakfast Club. It would have been all of us in our middle age. His idea was to pick up with them in their 20s or 30s" (via MovieWeb).
Since Hughes died in 2009, it’s unlikely The Breakfast Club 2 will ever get made. After the success of Top Gun: Maverick proved ‘80s nostalgia is stronger than ever, though, a Breakfast Club sequel isn't an impossibility.
The Real Meaning Of The Breakfast Club's Ending
John Hughes Believed No One Should Be Boxed In
The Breakfast Club is about American teenagers' struggle with identity in a world where parents and educators box kids in with presumptuous labels. Brian's essay reflects the group's bonding and their realization that they're not as different as they thought.
No one falls into a stereotypical category like "a brain, an athlete, a basket case, a princess, and a criminal." Humans are more complex and three-dimensional than that, but people tend to underestimate other people's depth. Brian's essay outlines why The Breakfast Club refuse to allow Mr. Vernon to generalize them based on those labels.
The Alternate Ending Was Much Darker
The Breakfast Club Almost Had A Very Different Ending
The Breakfast Club had some dark moments. Brian was in detention because he brought a starter pistol to school to attempt suicide, and Bender spoke about his father burning him with a cigarette. This shows some darkness was already under the hood, but John Hughes almost made it much worse. The way the movie ended left things open for what happened next, with most viewers agreeing they remained separate after this but had a better understanding of others.
While Anthony Michael Hall said John Hughes had plans for a sequel years later, looking at where they ended up, this almost happened at the movie's end. The news about the alternate ending came from John Kapelos, who played Carl the janitor (via Reuters). He said Hughes was going to add a scene revealing where everyone ended up, and it wasn't good.
Brian became a stockbroker who died of a heart attack at 35. Claire will become a housewife, and Bender will end up in prison.
Brian became a stockbroker who died of a heart attack at 35. Claire will become a housewife, and Bender will end up in prison. The Breakfast Club might not be as fondly ed if Hughes had gone with this darker alternate ending. Instead, the movie kept things light and ended on an optimistic note that the kids would all move on and at least learn that they could accept others and not let the world pigeonhole them. If Brian dies and Bender goes to prison, it changes that meaning completely.
How The Breakfast Club Ending Was Received
The Freeze Framer Remains An Iconic Cinematic Moment
The Breakfast Club is one of the most iconic teen movies of all time and the ending is a big reason for that. There are those rare moments in cinema history in which a single frame has become iconic to many generations of fans. Slashfilm acknowledged the iconic nature of Bender fist-pumping at the end of The Breakfast Club with the freeze-frame moment making for an instantly recognizable movie moment:
It's very possible that many fans of "The Breakfast Club" cannot listen to Simple Minds's "Don't You (Forget About Me)" without throwing in a fist pump or two for good measure, and that famous scene definitely solidified Bender as one of the coolest and most bad ass characters in the entire film.
However, along with being an iconic movie moment, the ending has been praised as being an ideal one for the story it tells. Part of this is because of how it gives each of the characters a completed arc in which they are able to escape the stereotypes that have been thrust upon them for so long. However, another aspect of the ending that adds to how well it was received is that there are still moments that can be debated.
While The Breakfast Club could be seen by many as having a happy ending, it can also be seen as bittersweet. BFI's look back on the movie's iconic ending pointed out that these teens did indeed go through a cathartic change together, but questioned whether it was just a fleeting escape before returning to the reality of their high school lives:
"But it’s notably unclear whether these are a reminder not to fall back into old ways, or a souvenir from a fleeting moment in time. Earlier, Claire speculates that none of these new bonds will be able to survive the scrutiny of their peers; while she is derided for her comments, she likely gives voice to an uncomfortable truth. Framed in this way, those Simple Minds lyrics seem to take on a pleading air: “Will you recognise me? Call my name or walk on by?” That this detention may be a respite and not a revolution is an idea encapsulated by that freeze-frame, that slow fade. The future is far from certain."
It is a bold way to end a teen movie, but that boldest has made The Breakfast Club ending unforgettable.

The Breakfast Club
- Release Date
- February 15, 1985
- Runtime
- 97 minutes
- Director
- John Hughes
Cast
- Molly Ringwald
- Ally Sheedy
After receiving detention, a group of five high-school students bonds as they realize they have quite a bit in common despite being from different friend groups. Despite being over 35 years old, The Breakfast Club still stands as one of the quintessential movies of the ‘80s and one of director John Hughes standout films.
- Writers
- John Hughes
- Distributor(s)
- Universal Pictures
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