“I want to do this movie about a kid who takes a day off from school and … that’s all I know so far,” John Hughesreportedly told a Paramount executive back in the ’80s. Six days later, Ferris Bueller’s Day Off was an official screenplay, the draft written in haste to avoid a looming writers’ strike.
What emerged was not only one of the defining teen classics of the decade, but also a film packed with instantly iconic music moments. So, it’s no wonder Ultimate Classic Rock later named the comedy the best rock movie of 1986.
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“John Hughes created three famous scenes out of diverse music in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off,” UCR writes. “But the most evocative was when Hughes placed The Dream Academy‘s instrumental cover of The Smiths’ ‘Please, Please, Please, Let Me Get What I Want’ as the three principles stared at Georges Seurat’s A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte at the Art Institute of Chicago.”
The other two moments the outlet is referencing are when Cameron, played by Alan Ruck, and Ferris, played byMatthew Broderick, summon Cameron’s father’s fiery-red Ferrari from his vintage car garage to the tune of Yello‘s “Oh Yeah.” And the other one happens later in the film when Cameron, Ferris, and Ferris’ girlfriend, Sloan, played by Mia Sara, hit up a in the streets of Chicago with Ferris boarding a float to lip-synch Wayne Newton‘s “Danke Schoen” and The Beatles’ “Twist and Shout.”
As manic as the writing process was, production hit a similar key. With Rat Packer and frequent Hughes collaborator Emilio Estevez turning down the role of Cameron, the part went to a nearly 30-year-old Ruck. Despite the age gap, Ruck captured Cam’s misery brilliantly. Meanwhile, Molly Ringwald wanted to play Sloan, but Hughes told her the part was too small for her. And lastly, several of the film’s actors were falling in love. With each other.
Jennifer Grey stars in the film as Ferris’ perpetually irritated sister, Jeanie. But behind the scenes, sparks were flying between the actress and Broderick, who got engaged shortly before the movie’s release. They ultimately called it off in 1988. Ferris’ on-screen parents, meanwhile, found lasting chemistry of their own. Cindy Pickett and Lyman Ward married after filming wrapped and later welcomed two children together before divorcing in 1992. Still, it’s safe to say love was certainly in the air on that set.
Today, Ferris Bueller’s Day Off feels so much bigger than a fun teen comedy romp about ditching school. Its eclectic soundtrack transformed scenes into lasting culture moments, while Ferris’ carefree philosophy became part of pop culture itself. Decades later, there is still one line that hits just as hard: If you don’t stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it. Right? Here’s your sign to give Hughes’ best film ever a rewatch.
Ferris Bueller’s Day Off is streaming on Paramount+.
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