Ferris Buellers Day Off



         


Ferris Bueller's Day Off is a 1986 film written and directed by John Hughes.

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Cast

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Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot or ending details follow.

Ferris Bueller is a wise-cracking high school student from an affluent suburb of Chicago, Illinois, who decides to take a day off from school for a little fun by pretending to be sick. As Ferris says "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop to look around once in a while, you could miss it." Ferris convinces his best friend Cameron to take his father's 1961 Ferrari 250 GT California out for a spin, and tricks the high school principal, Ed Rooney, into thinking his girlfriend Sloan's grandmother is dead, in effect excusing her from school.

Ben Stein delivers a memorable performance as the Economics Teacher. He discusses the Hawley-Smoot Tariff Act while semi-conscious students look on.

Rooney sees Ferris's attempt to get a little fun as an act of rebellion against his authority. He sets out to catch Ferris and make an example of him for other students.

During Ferris's "day off," he enjoys a baseball game at Wrigley Field, dines at an elite restaurant, sneaks onto a float during the Von Steuben Day Parade to sing "Danke Schön", enjoys the view at the top of the Sears Tower and visits the Art Institute of Chicago.

Later on, the Ferrari is "killed" and Cameron is forced to stand up to his father for the first time in his life.

After sharing a kiss with his girlfriend, Ferris realizes he is late and dashes back home, running through neighbors' backyards, hopping over fences, and arriving just in time so his parents can check on him.

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Trivia

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Soundtrack

Director John Hughes refused to release a soundtrack album for FBDO because he thought the eclectic collection of songs in the movie wouldn't "work" together.

If they were ever compiled in an album, it would include:

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Filming Locations

(For photos of the locations and .)


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Television series spinoff

In 1990, NBC created a television series based on Ferris Bueller's Day Off, titled simply Ferris Bueller. It was styled similarly to Fox network's Parker Lewis Can't Lose, and both began airing in September, 1990. Unlike Parker Lewis Can't Lose, which ran three seasons, Ferris Bueller was a ratings failure, and was cancelled after only four months on the air.

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