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St. Elmo's Fire (1985)

6.1 | Jun 28, 1985 (US) | Drama, Romance, Comedy | 01:48
Budget: N/A | Revenue: 37 803 872

The passion burns deep.

Reluctant to let go of college life, a close-knit team of seven friends--irresponsible saxophone player Billy, young Republican Alec, his girlfriend Leslie, struggling journalist Kevin, drama queen Jules, lovesick waiter Kirby, and Wendy, a social worker with a heart of gold--realise the party is over. And as the burdens of maturity close in on the young dreamers, the complexities of adulthood and the daily struggle of growing up put their sacred friendship to the test. But everyone knows life is not a bed of roses. It won't be easy, but when all is said and done, what will it take for St. Elmo's clique to find its place in the real world?

Featured Crew

Director, Screenplay
Choreographer
Director of Photography
Property Master
Original Music Composer
Stunt Double
ADR Editor
ADR Voice Casting
Sound Editor
Second Assistant Director

Cast

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Emilio Estevez
Kirby Keger
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Rob Lowe
Billy Hicks
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Andrew McCarthy
Kevin Dolenz
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Judd Nelson
Alec Newbary
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Ally Sheedy
Leslie Hunter
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Mare Winningham
Wendy Beamish
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Martin Balsam
Mr. Beamish
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Andie MacDowell
Dale Biberman
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Joyce Van Patten
Mrs. Beamish

St. Elmo's Fire Collection

Reviews

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phx611
N/A | Oct 26, 2021
As with most Joel Schumacher films, this one is beautifully shot. The locations of the film stand out and never overshadow the characters as they go on about their lives. St. Elmo's fire is not comedy-driven and there isn't much of a plot. This is more of a slice of life piece about a group of young people embarking on their careers and lives. The soundtrack works well, the music was good for the time. Andie MacDowell and Andrew McCarthy are great in their respective roles even if Andie's character doesn't speak much. Emilio Estevez and Judd Nelson make honest attempts with the material they are given, and they aren't horrible, but both actors have done much better in lesser roles or maybe they needed more of a role. The other members of the cast just appear to be plodding through the script but that may be what the script called for; if this is the case they did well.