|
Post by SharksFan99 on Oct 8, 2018 22:31:20 GMT 10
A thread to discuss/share any movie observations.
I watched "Back To The Future: II" in it's entirety for the first time on Saturday night. It was actually quite interesting to watch, because in the movie, Marty McFly and the Doctor travel to the year 2015 and it's interesting to note how accurate the predictions turned out to be. They were well off the mark with most of the predictions. One aspect about the movie which particularly interested me was the fact that there is an underlying theme of '50s idealism present throughout the entire movie. You can really sense the level of nostalgia that people had for the 1950s at the time the movie was produced and it was evident in the world of 2015 envisioned by the producers back in 1989. For instance, the Mum was a "stay-at-home" Mum and the father was the breadwinner for the family. When the father walked through the front door after work, the wife was waiting for him to enter through the door and he walked in and kissed her on the cheek, which is something stereotypical of the Mid-20th Century.
|
|
|
Post by Telso on Jul 8, 2020 19:14:29 GMT 10
I discovered that Robert Zemeckis, the director of "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?", the movie that revived critical interest in Disney's animated movies in the late 80s, was also involved in Disney's biggest animated bomb, "Mars Needs Moms". Pretty ironic fact
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
|
0 |
|
Post by Deleted on Jul 8, 2020 20:31:59 GMT 10
I discovered that Robert Zemeckis, the director of "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?", the movie that revived critical interest in Disney's animated movies in the late 80s, was also involved in Disney's biggest animated bomb, "Mars Needs Moms". Pretty ironic fact Sometimes you've got that special something, and sometimes you're a one-trick act. After all, can we name anything that George Lucas did that was even in the same ballpark as Star Wars? Willow was a lukewarm hit and Indiana Jones is Spielberg's movie even if Lucas produced it.
|
|