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Teen Identity

Decent Essays

The teen film genre aims to shatter the construct or provide moments of self-discovery to symbolize how teens react against the adult world and struggles within society. At the end of the film the high school a voiceover of Brian reading out a letter written by him to Mr Vernon, the teacher, effectively embodies the teen process of finding their identity:
You see us as you want to see us -- in the simplest terms, in the most convenient definitions: a brain, an athlete, a basket case, a princess, and a criminal. Correct?
That's the way we saw each other at 7:00 this morning. We were brainwashed.
The opening scene acts as commentary to a universal struggle: the relationship between teenagers and their parents. Immediately, they are classified by their stereotypical high school identities which ultimately analyzes the social class. After the opening credits, the camera focuses on the front of a Mercedes Benz car, a “swank sedan” (Wood, 1986), framing its logo in close up to emphasise the wealth of the owner, a character who is successful in Reagan's capitalist America. Claire and her father are the occupants and her role as the rich popular girl or the princess is immediately established. Her father's clothes reinforces their wealthy status as he wears a Burberry scarf and a “Brooks Brothers suit” (Wood 1986). Claire is depicted as pretty, pristine, clean-cut and “exudes an elite nonchalance”' (Shary, 2002). But her true character is revealed as more complex and infused with a

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