
Emilio Estévez was thinking clearly when he with his co -star of “The Breakfast Club”.
The stars of the 1985 film met for a 40th anniversary panel at the C2E2 Convention in Chicago on Saturday, the duration of 62, revealed that it was a high position when the cast and the late director John Hughes first Gothic as an Aer-Therther California.
“The four teeth of the trial had the four teeth, it affects the teeth of the trial,” Estévez recalled. “I was taking pain pills, and my agent called and said:” Listen, they are going to read and you have to appear. “
“I said:” Look, my face is swollen, I’m taking pain pills, I’m bleeding! “They said: ‘No, no, no, it’s important.
Estévez, who joined the stage of the Convention by Molly Ringwald, Judd Nelson, Anthony Michael Hall and Ally Sheedy, remembered that he could not drive due to their surgery, so the producers made a car bring it to the hotel, where the cast made the first reading of the film script.
“At the end of reading, John says:” Hey, I heard, I brought the first cut of my movie “Sixteen candles,” I want to show you, “said Estévez.” And we said: “Okay.” He puts the movie, we are sitting there, I don’t believe it through opening credits.
“I woke up at the end of the credits, and looked at Judd, and Judd says:” I think you’re being fired, “Estévez recalled.
“And I believed it too,” he added. “I thought,” Oh my God, the final test has just failed. “
“The Breakfast Club” follows five high school students who are forced to spend on Saturday in detention together for different reasons. Estévez played the athlete Andrew Clark.
The film, considered a cult classic, was written and directed by Hughes, who died of a heart attack in 2009 at age 59.
The Pop Culture Convention on Saturday marked the first time in 40 years that the five stars of the film were together in public.
Last year, Andrew McCarthy, another member of The Brat Pack, launched his doctor “Brats.” Hall, Nelson and Ringwald decided to choose not to appear in the movie.
“I skipped all my high school meetings, so this was something that finally seemed to do, only for Myelf,” said Estévez, who lost other meetings of “breakfast club” in the past.
“But he felt special because he is here in Chicago, where we made the movie, it is the 40th anniversary, and I love everyone, so it makes sense made,” added the actor.
Estévez also called the promised adolescent comedy drama “one of those films that has the test of time.”
Later, the panel, the cast closed the possibility of making a sequel to “The Breakfast Club”.
“Personally, I don’t think that movie,” said Ringwald, 57, “because I think this movie is a lot of time.”

