Total Film, 08/01/2003, p.129, "...The story is age-old but the execution is dew-fresh..."
New York Times, 02/28/1986, p.C8, "...[Ringwald] is once again appealing..."
Variety, 02/12/1986, "...Intelligent....A solid emotional center..."
Chicago Sun-Times, 08/21/1992, p.35, "...The characters are fresh..."
Ultimate DVD, 10/01/2006, p.111, 5 stars out of 5 -- "It's cute, it's twee, but it's still as entertaining a bit of fluff as it ever was."
Entertainment Weekly, 09/01/2006, p.56, "[T]he ultimate high school love triangle....There's an underlying dignity in Hughes' movies..."
Los Angeles Times, 02/28/1986, p.C1, "...Delightful....The film is buoyed by a captivating performance by Ringwald....The rest of the cast is equally stellar..."
DVD Features:
Keep Case
Widescreen - 16:9
Audio:
Dolby Digital 2.0 - English, French
Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround - English
Subtitles - English
Additional Release Material:
Audio Commentary - Howard Deutch - Director
Featurettes · 1. "The First Time: The Making of Pretty in Pink"
2. "Zoids and Richies"
3. "Prom Queen: All About Molly"
4. "Volcanic Ensembles"
5. "Prom Stories"
6. "The Lost Dance: The Original Ending"
7. "Wrap Up: The Epilogue"
Text/Photo Galleries:
Photo Gallery
Pretty but poor, Andie's (Molly Ringwald) a good student who develops a crush on Blane (Andrew McCarthy), the sensitive, well-born preppie. But Blane runs with a fast crowd of haughty rich kids, the kind of clique Andie and her new wavy best friend Duckie (Jon Cryer) can't stand. Going against her fretting father (Harry Dean Stanton), peer pressure and social expectations, she decides to date him. But their big plans for the senior prom ultimately fall apart when Blane heeds his friend Steff's (James Spader) warning to "quit slumming." Will Blane find the courage to claim what he really wants and give up the so-called friends he doesn't need?
This classic 1980s teen film from the master of the genre, writer-producer John Hughes features plenty of great '80s pop tunes from the Psychedelic Furs, The Smiths, Echo and The Bunnymen, New Order, and more. The continued success of Hughes' films and actors ushered in the era of the "brat pack" and teen films as pop culture.