John Hughes



         


John Hughes (born February 18, 1950 in Lansing, Michigan) is a noted film director and writer, responsible for some of the most successful comedy films of the 1980s and 1990s.

Whilst he is probably best known for his genre-defining 1980s teenage comedies such as The Breakfast Club, Ferris Bueller's Day Off, Sixteen Candles, Weird Science and Pretty in Pink, he was also responsible for producing and writing Vacation, a Chevy Chase comedy, Uncle Buck, Home Alone, Home Alone 2: Lost In New York and Home Alone 3, virtually a live-action cartoon strip featuring a young boy mistakenly left at home using all manner of tricks to painfully foil two inept thieves. In the process, he made Macaulay Culkin one of the richest children on the planet.

Hughes' "teen flicks" are acclaimed by many critics for their complex, three-dimensional portraits of the tragicomedy of adolescence, as well as their acute probing of the social hierarchies of high school.

A 1968 graduate of Glenbrook North High School in Northbrook, Illinois, Hughes used Northbrook and the surrounding Chicagoland area for location shooting in many of his films.


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