Breaking Away

    Breaking Away
    1979

    Synopsis

    Dave, nineteen, has just graduated high school, with his three friends: the comical Cyril, the warm hearted but short-tempered Moocher, and the athletic, spiteful but good-hearted Mike. Now, Dave enjoys racing bikes and hopes to race the Italians one day, and even takes up the Italian culture, much to his friends and parents annoyance.

    Your Movie Library

    Cast

    • Dennis ChristopherDave Stoller
    • Dennis QuaidMike
    • Daniel SternCyril
    • Jackie Earle HaleyMoocher
    • Barbara BarrieEvelyn Stoller
    • Paul DooleyRay Stoller
    • Robyn DouglassKatherine
    • Hart BochnerRod
    • Amy WrightNancy
    • Peter MaloneyDoctor

    Recommendations

    • 100

      Chicago Sun-Times

      Breaking Away is a wonderfully sunny, funny, goofy, intelligent movie that makes you feel about as good as any movie in a long time.
    • 100

      The New York Times

      The cast is unknown, the director has a spotty history, and the basic premise falls into this year's most hackneyed category (unknown boxer/ bowler/jogger hopes to become sports hero). Even so, the finished product is wonderful. Here is a movie so fresh and funny it didn't even need a big budget or a pedigree.
    • 90

      NPR

      The way the movie handles cycling, which isn't one of cinema's more heavily covered sports, introduces another entire dimension and transforms Breaking Away from a nice character piece to a literally breathtaking story.
    • 90

      Time Out London

      Class conflict and small town chauvinism are the subject of Yates' ingenious youth movie, a film which intrigues as much by its portait of working-class America bitterly opposed to the affluent society as by its large measure of lovingly-crafted fantasy.
    • 90

      Time

      There are a few moments when the picture's easygoing pace turns into wobbliness, but these are insignificant compared with its many moments of shrewd insight into the lives of amusingly shaded but very recognizable human beings. This is the kind of small, star less film that big studios sometimes do not know what to do with. Audiences should have no such difficulty. They will, if they have any sense, simply cherish it.
    • 90

      Washington Post

      A lucid depiction of familiar adolescent uncertainties and social tensions in an authentic mid-american setting, the movies is affectionate but never sappy, neat but never overcalculated, unobjectionable but never innocuous. It leaves a positive, heartening impression, dramatically earned and emotionally justified. [02 Aug 1979, p.F1]
    • 80

      TV Guide Magazine

      Breaking Away is a very funny and touching story about love, growing up, bicycle racing, and class consciousness.
    • 80

      Variety

      Though its plot wins no points for originality, Breaking Away is a thoroughly delightful light comedy, lifted by fine performances from Dennis Christopher and Paul Dooley. The story is nothing more than a triumph for the underdog through sports, this time cycle racing.