After high school slacker Ferris Bueller successfully fakes an illness in order to skip school for the day, he goes on a series of adventures throughout Chicago with his girlfriend Sloane and best friend Cameron, all the while trying to outwit his wily school principal and fed-up sister.
Ratings
Curator score: 7.3/10
IMDb: 7.8/10
Letterboxd: 3.95/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 83%
Metacritic: 61
TMDB: 7.6/10
Director
John Hughes
Production
Paramount Pictures, Hughes Entertainment
Cast
Matthew Broderick, Alan Ruck, Mia Sara, Jeffrey Jones, Jennifer Grey, Cindy Pickett, Lyman Ward, Edie McClurg, Charlie Sheen, Ben Stein, Del Close, Virginia Capers, Richard Edson, Larry Jenkins, Kristy Swanson, Lisa Bellard, Max Perlich, Scott Coffey, Eric Saiet, Jason Alderman
Where to watch
fuboTV, Paramount Plus Premium, Paramount Plus Essential, MGM Plus
Curator Review
Verdict
A breezy, sharply observed teen comedy with real emotional undercurrents, Ferris Bueller's Day Off is both a wish-fulfillment fantasy and a surprisingly melancholy portrait of adolescence, friendship, and the fear of moving on.
Best for
viewers who like smart, quotable comedies
fans of 1980s teen movies with style and warmth
people who enjoy Chicago as a cinematic playground
audiences who like comedy with a bittersweet edge
Skip if
you want high-stakes plotting or strong narrative tension
you dislike charmingly self-involved protagonists
you prefer grounded realism over heightened fantasy
you are not in the mood for an iconic but very familiar classic
Overview
John Hughes turns a skipped school day into a miniature city symphony, using Chicago as both playground and emotional map. The movie is built on pure momentum: jokes, detours, disguises, and set pieces that keep escalating while never losing their easy, conversational rhythm.
Worth noting
What gives it staying power is that it is not just about rebellion. Ferris is a fantasy figure, but Cameron is the movie’s heart, and his anxiety gives the comedy a real ache. The film understands that teenage freedom can feel exhilarating and terrifying at the same time.
Bottom line
It remains one of the defining 80s comedies because it is so confident in tone: playful, affectionate, and just a little bit wistful. Even when it is being broad, it has an eye for character that makes the whole day feel lived-in rather than merely plotted.
Top Letterboxd reviews
ScreeningNotes (3★) · 12862 likes
In a selfish attempt to cope with his separation anxiety, a sociopathic student abuses his relationship with his mentally unstable best friend in order to throw his future away on a single day of raucous debauchery.
vi (5★) · 12362 likes
i got lost today in the art institute trying to find the painting that cameron had an existential crisis in front of but it was fucking worth it
Grooveman (5★) · 8535 likes
"Oh, he's very popular Ed. The sportos, the motorheads, geeks, sluts, bloods, wastoids, dweebies, dickheads - they all adore him. They think he's a righteous dude."
Charlotte Thornton (4★) · 7956 likes
when i was a kid i always thought cameron had a crush on ferris and you know what? i was right
1985 · Comedy, Drama · 1h 38m · R · Curator 6.5/10 (2.3M ratings) · Where to watch: Netflix, AMC+, Philo, Netflix Standard with Ads
A John Hughes companion piece that trades one-day freedom for one-day confinement, with the same sharp sense of teen identity and emotional vulnerability.
1999 · Comedy, Drama · 1h 43m · R · Curator 7.8/10 (309.8K ratings) · Where to watch: fuboTV, Paramount Plus Premium, Paramount Plus Essential, MGM Plus, Philo
A sharper, more acidic look at ambition, self-mythology, and the absurdities of school politics.