Summary

Content warning: the following article contains discussions of suicide and suicidal ideation

Actor Timothy Hutton is one of the many actors interviewed for theHulu documentaryBrats; though he’s not a member of the Brat Pack, he’s considered its unofficial godfather.The documentary was created by official Brat Pack member Andrew McCarthy, who produced it as a catharsis to process how the"Brat Pack"label affected his career. The coin was termed in a 1985New York Magazinearticle by David Blum (who also appears in the documentary). McCarthy interviewed fellowBrat Pack membersDemi Moore, Rob Lowe, Ally Sheedy, Emilio Estevez, and others for the film.

A custom image of Ally Sheedy and Emilio Estevez in Breakfast Club

The actors dominated the box office with movies likeThe Breakfast Club(1985),St. Elmo’s Fire(1985), andPretty in Pink(1986). The movies dawned a new era for Hollywood, in which young people were featured in motion pictures marketed to other young people. Hollywood had previously focused on more adult narratives.A cultural shift happened in the early 1980s that allowed young people to become wildly successful in honestly representing their stage of lifein the movies. Though there are certain actors associated with the era of the Brat Pack today, it was really Timothy Hutton who got the ball rolling.

Every Movie Mentioned In The Brat Pack Documentary (& Where You Can Watch Them)

Dozens of classic ’80s movies were mentioned in Brats, but filmmaker and brat Andrew McCarthy focused on those at the center of the Brat Pack.

Timothy Hutton Broke Out A Little Earlier Than The Brat Pack (But Was Only A Few Years Older)

Timothy Hutton Landed His Break-Out Role A Few Years Before Most Of The Brat Pack

While most of the Brat Pack members and their affiliates got big breaks in the mid-1980s, Tim Hutton broke out a little earlier (even though he was only a few years older).Hutton’s first major role was in the 1980 family dramaOrdinary People,directed by Robert Redford. In it, he portrays Conrad, an alienated teenager who attempts to take his own life. He starred opposite Mary Tyler Moore, who portrayed his mother, Beth, and Donald Sutherland, who portrayed his father, Calvin. The movie received critical acclaim, earning six Oscars nominations for the 53rd Academy Awards in 1981, winning four.

Ordinary Peoplewas Robert Redford’s debut directing role.

Hutton’sOrdinary Peoplewon the Oscar for Best Picture, Robert Redford took home an Oscar for Best Director, and Alvin Sargent won for Best Adapted Screenplay. But the most tremendous significance to the next generation of films is thatTim Hutton, at just 20 years old, won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor forOrdinary People. Hutton succeeded in taking the risk of portraying a young person at one of the most vulnerable moments in a person’s life. His success in doing so created a model.

His Movie Ordinary People Could Be Considered A Proto-Brat Pack Movie

Ordinary People Set Up The Rest Of The Youth-Centered Films Of The 1980s

InBrats,Andrew McCarthy argues that"the origins of the youth film"started with Hutton’s role inOrdinary People.While it wasn’t a teen movie, McCarthy notes that the Academy Award-winning film took Hutton’s young character seriously and set the right tone for films to center on the vulnerabilities of young people in the future. Hutton’sOrdinaryPeoplecould be considered a proto-Brat Pack movie becauseitcreated the mold for a young person to take shape on the screenin a way that one had rarely been portrayed before, and with such honesty to the human condition.

Hutton’s Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor inOrdinary Peoplemade him the youngest recipient of the award ever. 40 years later, he’s still the youngest person to win the Best Supporting Actor award.

Timothy Hutton talks with Mary Tyler Moore in Ordinary People

One common element betweenthe Brat Pack movies of the 1980sis that they focus on genuine portrayals of the tumultuous life of young people. Director John Hughes was particularly gifted at allowing authentic characters to guide his movies, andRobert Redford set the stage for young people to flourish on-screenwith Hutton’s character inOrdinary People.Hutton recounts inBratshow many scripts featured young people in their 20s during the Brat Pack era, when previously Hollywood had rarely allowed them to be the central focus of movies.

Why So Much Of The Brat Pack Looked Up To Tim Hutton

The group looked up to the actor becauseTim Hutton achieved a level of success early on in his career that the Brat Pack aspired to. After theNew York Magazinearticle came out, many Brat Pack members lamented the loss of a more “serious” career that could have happened had the article not been published. But Tim Hutton evaded the Brat Pack label, as Andrew McCarthy notes inBratsas he winds through the hills to the home where Hutton keeps 60,000 bees. That said,Bratsrevealed that Hutton alsohated the Brat Pack nickname.

Andrew McCarthy specifically looks up to Hutton because he feels like his"showbiz younger brother.“ThePretty in Pinkactor recounts in the documentary how Tim was one of the first people in the business he met, and Hutton took McCarthy under his wing. They also did a sci-fi show together by Steven Speilberg calledAmazing Storiesin the mid-1980s, which solidified their bond early on. McCarthy reveals to Hutton inBratsthat he looked up to him because he felt he and the otherBrat Pack members metaphorically stood on Hutton’s shoulders.

Timothy Hutton In Brats Hulu Brat Pack Documentary.jpg

Brats

Cast

Brats offers an in-depth look at the lives of military children, capturing the complexities of growing up on the move. Through heartfelt interviews and vivid storytelling, the documentary highlights the resilience and adaptability required to navigate frequent relocations.

Brats 2024 Documentary Poster