50 Life-Changing Movies To See Before Your Freshman Year

15º – Blue Is the Warmest Color (Abdellatif Kechiche, 2013)The film explores the discovery of sexuality by two young, showing the warm relationship contrasts between them. Permeated by more hot scenes, ‘Blue is the Warmest Color’ is not a film for all audiences, with a concise history, but sometimes loses its essence in dozens of plans with very strong graphic content. However, here we have a film that manages to enter all the changes contained in the world by unpacking each fragment of the most turbulent period of youth.

 

14º – The Virgin Suicides (Sofia Coppola, 1999)In the plot, a group of teenagers finds himself completely obsessed with some sisters neighborhood living under an insurmountable conceptual dome. The film gains its substance exactly to explore the daily life of adolescents and sisters amid the American scene of the 1970s ‘The Virgin Suicides’ is an engaging film from first to last scene, using the figure of human curiosity to give weight to its tangle of situations.

 

13º – Prozac Nation (Erik Skjoldbjærg, 2001)During its start in college, a young woman begins to suffer severe emotional instability, seeing his life entering a relentless degenerative routine. ‘Prozac Generation’ questions the meaning of life had as a collective in our society, showing how this notion of existence can be destructive to certain individuals, and, of course, to study the nuances of assertively depression.

 

12º – Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (John Hughes, 1986)A teenager decides to take a day off from school, pretending to be sick to their parents. However, the teenager does not intend to spend a sunny day like that locked up at home. And to enjoy the day, it will be attended his best friend and his girlfriend. ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’ is the greatest exponent of the 1980s in film. A film that brings together the best of the decade, still mixing his plot with compelling philosophical concepts.

 

11º – Fast Times at Ridgemont High (Amy Heckerling, 1982)The plot is simple, trying to tease out the daily lives of a group of high school students in California in their search for what is most common in this turbulent period of mankind. The film governs a carefree aura, giving the viewer the most common and entertaining elements of teen movies of the time. ‘Fast Times at Ridgemont High’ still in delivering one of the most famous characters of the decade, the misfit Jeff Spicoli, played by Sean Penn.

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