Michael Scott
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Following in recent patterns, Paramount continues to release it's litany of classic titles in 4K steelbook special editions. Usually with nothing more than a packaging upgrade, but sometimes timed with the release of a 4K remaster and a re-release in the Paramount Presents lineup. Sadly this is one of the former releases, giving us the same disc we've had for over a decade, and repackaged up for the steelbook collectors. This means the same mediocre video quality, as the movie DESPERATELY needs to be remastered.
Widely considered John Hughes biggest cult hit, surpassing even Pretty in Pink for the most popular and wide appealing film he ever did. It was the movie that made skipping school fun, abusing the principal funny, and Matthew Broderick a god among men for a while. Plus, it just so happens to have a million quotable lines that still make themselves prevalent in today’s pop culture. It was THE teenage adventure movie of the 1980s and probably one of my top 3 comedies of all times. I’ve very rarely said that a movie is “perfect” (even with a 5/5 rating), but Ferris Bueller’s Day Off is about as close to perfect as you can get.
Ferris Bueller (Matthew Broderick) is the class clown at his school, and probably the most beloved person at said school. Well, except for Principal Rooney (Jeffrey Jones) and Ferris’s own sister Jeanie (Jennifer Grey). He’s been absent WAAAAAAY too many days to count, and while Principal Rooney thinks he’s got Ferris right where he wants him, young Master Bueller has access to a computer and a desire to have a day off with the company of his girlfriend Sloane (Mia Sara) and best friend Cameron (Alan Ruck). What ensues next is a day of fun, hijinks, moral quanderies, and a off Principal Rooney trying to catch Ferris at his own game.
The humor is nothing short of magical, and both Alan Ruck and Matthew Broderick destroy their respective roles. But what always makes a John Hughes movie so memorable is not JUST the main characters. It’s the side kicks and background characters that fully flesh out his films, and Ferris Bueller does so in spades. Jennifer Grey as Ferris’s jealous sister, a cameo by a VERY young Charlie Sheen, and Jeffrey Jones is priceless as the fall guy Mr. Rooney. When I heard that they were trying to do a remake of this film I felt sickened and horrified. Not because I felt like it was sacrilegious and the first movie above reproach, but simple that Ferris Bueller’s Day off was the very definition of lightning in a bottle. It was the type of movie that could only have been made during it’s respective time period, and was such a fantastic and wonderful mixture of EVERYTHING blending perfectly, that even trying to replicate that by having lightning strike twice in the same place is an effort in futility.
Rating:
Rated PG-13 by the MPAA
Video:

Audio:

Extras:

• The Making of Ferris Bueller's Day Off
• Who is Ferris Bueller?
• The World According to Ben Stein
• Vintage Ferris Bueller: The Lost Tapes
• Class Album
Final Score:

Ferris Bueller’s Day Off is probably one of the most iconic “playing hookey” comedies of the 1980s, and a MASSIVE favorite of mine growing up. This marks the 6th release of the film I’ve owned on home video, and the 3rd release on Blu-ray (as it was included as a single release AND in the John Hughes 5 Film Collection a few months ago), but this is one of the few times that Paramount has actually disappointed me in their steelbook re-releases. It’s not that the case isn’t nice, but it feels like a throwaway event, as this is the EXACT same steelbook as the F.Y.E. release up in Canada that was released a year ago (but not for the states). We get the SAME Blu-ray release that we’ve had since 2009, and this movie really desperately needs a remaster. The audio is pretty solid, but the video has always been middling, and it’s a crying shame that it hasn’t gotten a 4K remaster and put on the Paramount Presents line considering how beloved it is. The steelbook IS nice, but after having owned the previous two releases that are identical disc wise, I’d say that this release caters ONLY to those who really want the collectible packaging. GREAT movie, just not the release we were all hoping for.
Technical Specifications:
Starring: Mathew Broderick, Mia Sara, Alan Ruck, Jennifer Grey, Jeffrey Jones
Directed by: John Hughes
Written by: John Hughes
Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1 AVC
Audio: English: Dolby TrueHD 5.1, Spanish, French DD 2.0
Subtitles: English, English SDH, French, Portuguese, Spanish
Studio: Paramount
Rated: PG-13
Runtime: 103 Minutes
Blu-ray Release Date: June 8th 2021
Recommendation: Great Watch, middling release