Posted on 03/23/2007 2:55:00 PM PDT by qam1
There is a spectre haunting movieland. Its a terrifying hybrid monster mercilessly built from a rag-tag collection of shoulder pads, talking cars, oil barons, dual-purpose robots, tough-talking coppers, pint-sized investigators and high-kicking amphibians. It is, of course, the Eighties.
The briefest glance at upcoming movie release schedules reveals an industry thats worryingly in thrall to a decade often viewed as, well, culturally bereft. A new big-screen version of that irritating kiddie staple Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, out this week, will be followed in July by Michael Bays blockbusting adaptation of the champion nerd-fest Transformers a movie based on a cartoon series based on a toy. There is also a Knight Rider movie on the way, plus a big-screen adventure for The A-Team. And dont forget Gurinder Chadas upcoming Dallas adaptation or a new outing for pint-sized TV investigator Nancy Drew.
So what is happening here? Has everybody in Hollywood gone simultaneously insane? Are the corridors of power wholly populated by men of a certain age with Optimus Prime dolls on their desks, A-Team box-sets in their bags and David Hasselhoff pictures on their walls? Or are we simply witnessing a savvy marketing trend that knows how to snag a swath of financially solvent former Generation X-ers, and their kids?
There is finally enough distance between us and the Eighties to make it seem nostalgic rather than just embarrassing, says Archie Thomas, a trendspotter for the industry bible Variety. These movies were green-lit a couple of years ago when the Eighties began to be perceived as fashionable again.
The period Thomas is describing is when bands such as the Strokes, the Killers and Bloc Party began wearing their Eighties musical references on their sleeves, and when reality TV began plundering the Eighties for source material and stars. The likes of Brigitte Nielsen and Flavour Flav had a chance to be famous again. Most recently, the original Eighties A-Team star Dirk Benedict proved to be a hit on Celebrity Big Brother.
No surprise, then, that film producers sensed a consumer appetite for The Dukes of Hazzard, Miami Vice and even Sylvester Stallones Rocky Balboa. And yet, despite this taste for cheesy nostalgia, the movies themselves seem uncertain about being standard bearers of naff Eighties style. Films such as Miami Vice and Transformers eschew the essence of
Theyr their source material a sense of naive Eighties camp in favour of a deadly earnestness and decidedly modern sincerity. Even the Ninja Turtles have ditched most of their comic signature lines (Cowabunga dude!) for a darker postBatman Begins feel.
Listen to Shia LaBeouf, the 20-year-old star of Transformers, on the demands of this emotionally intense project. Its a serious movie, he explains. For me its like honouring my past, and something that I was thoroughly in love with as a kid . . . So, yeah, the movie is serious. Its deadpan and its done in such a real tone that its possibly the coolest movie Ive been a part of.
Deadpan? A real tone? Dude, this is a movie about a truck that turns into an oversized Tin Man with a thyroid condition how real can it be? Similarly, just as the big-screen Miami Vice rejected the originals wind-flicked Duran Duran look in favour of grizzly digital framing and convoluted narrative, so we can only imagine the type of esoteric interpretations to come in the A-Team and Knight Rider movies. The former project, for instance, is simply riddled with lugubrious plot possibilities (Howling Mad Murdock as a genuine schizophrenic, B. A. Baracus as a former pimp), while the latter will no doubt cast original Hasselhoff hero Michael Knight as a leather-clad former junkie in need of personal redemption. Johnny Depp, anyone?
And yet, to expect remakes of Eighties products to embody Eighties cultural values is naive, says Thomas. Instead, he says, unsurprisingly, the Eighties revival is not about movie style but about target demographics. The key teenage movie audience has become notoriously difficult for movie-makers to get a handle on, says Thomas. And so the audience profile for Eighties products like Transformers is going to be a lot easier to market to from a business point of view. And look at the likes of Rocky Balboa. It showed the studios that theres a new market for young dads who want to take their kids to the same movies they grew up on.
Thomas adds that the biggest movie of the summer is also an Eighties revamp, but one that doesnt appeal only to action-obsessed dads and their sons. The Simpsons Movie is, in some ways, the ultimate Eighties movie [ The Simpsons began in 1987 as an offshoot of The Tracey Ullman Show]. It is what they call a four-quadrant movie it will catch everyone from kids to grandparents.
In the meantime, however, the potential to do gangbusters at the box office will be the deciding factor in whether the Eighties revival continues at full pelt or disappears quietly into the cultural night. If Dallas or The A-Team are hits, the nostalgia machine will be cranked up, suggesting some soul-shuddering creative possibilities. How many of us can happily contemplate the idea of a big-screen version of The Fall Guy? Or The New Adventures of T. J. Hooker? Or Metal Mickey: The Movie?
Ping list for the discussion of the politics and social (and sometimes nostalgic) aspects that directly effects Generation Reagan / Generation-X (Those born from 1965-1981) including all the spending previous generations are doing that Gen-X and Y will end up paying for.
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Ping me when "Mr. Belvedere: The Motion Picture" is released.
I won't consider the 80's to have returned until I hear the roar of electric guitars.
My family and I are thrilled.
I have cousins back home who still look like that!
Kyrie eleison! No! '80's metal bands were the nadir of rock-and-roll. Until Metallica revived the idiom, heavy metal was dead as an art-form. But fortunately the '80's weren't about youth-culture. They were the only decade since the '40's that weren't: the '80's were about imitating Old Money. Hence the revival of classic-styled clothing, the penchant the general populace developed for well-engineered automobiles, and the sudden general availability of *real* gourmet food and genuinely good restaraunts throughout the US (though it took until about 2 years ago for arugula to be readily available in Kansas).
TMMT is still cute..
If they green-light this, it better have William effin' SHATNER -- corset, toupee and all -- sliding across cruiser hoods. Oh, and Adrian Zmed. I'd pay CASH MONEY to see that cheese-fest.
I pity the fool who makes B.A. Baracus into a whoremonger.
The problem is the remake of these shows into movies that stink.
The 80's were a great decade.
I've been kicked out of Gen-X? When did that happen? I went to all the meetings.
Go to Yahoo and watch the trailers for the "Transformers"...it's actually pretty good.
Too bad Jonathan Frakes didn't try to be serious when he made "The Fabulous Thunderbirds" and turned it into a waste of celluloid ala "Spy Kids".
Actually, they have just ran out of original material to write about and won't make movies from anything intellectual because they fear the morons that go to movies will snooze.
I hear they are finally going to make "Atlas Shrugged" and I'm totally convinced they'll ruin it.
I'm no doubt in the minority but the 80s get slagged off as the decade of techno-pop just as the 70s are equated with disco or c***-rock. Both are oversimplistic and just plain wrong.
Musically, the 80s gave us plenty other than what aired on MTV. A partial list: REM, U2, the Paisley Underground (Plimsouls, the Three O'Clock, the Bangles - yes the Bangles), cowpunk and the roots of Alternative Country aka No Depression, hardcore punk, New Order, the Stone Roses, Madchester, the Jesus & Mary Chain, Echo & the Bunnymen. I could go on and on but the point is made.
Nostalgia is great because it allows the good, or occasionally the kitchy, to shine through while the bad is all forgotten. Perhaps I'm nostalgic about the 80s and too dismissive of the bad parts culturally but I'll take the music any day. And if I'm greedy I throw in 1979 so I can also have the Jam, the Pretenders and Elvis Costello.
Plus of course GWAR. The greatest show I've ever seen.
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