Posted on 12/26/2013 4:22:41 PM PST by LS
RE 70’s:
I was a teen in the 70s. Muscle cars were cheap - my first muscle car was a 1969 Chevelle SS convertible for 350.00. Bought it in 1977. Gas - other than the artificially-created “oil shortage” in 74(time frame??) - was still cheap; I think I remember 58 cents a gallon at one point.
Drugs weren’t rampant yet in the white neighborhoods.
It wasn’t a bad time - other than disco and polyester leisure suits. The ONLY good thing about disco was the slutty disco chicks...
Overall, on a scale of 1-10, the 70s were about a 7.
Previews made it look like a ‘Boogie Nights’ rip off. And of course ‘Boogie Nights’ was something of a Goodfellas rip off...
I had a normal childhood. My dad was unhappy because he did well financially early in the 70s but we struggled during the Carter years. Both my dad and mom officially became republicans because of Reagan.
Disco music was not really that bad, I bet there are secret disco fans among us. Donna Summer was great.
Jenny L. looked pretty good in the trailers. I was 5 1/2 when the ‘70s ended. Technically, the ABSCAM stuff was in the early ‘80s. Unfortunately, what could’ve been a premier opportunity to take out Sen. Pete Williams in NJ turned into another fiasco (as Lautencorpse took his place).
Personally, the era (late ‘70s) was a better time for me, for reasons some of you already know (even though as a kid, I was obviously insulated from the worst of it). I guess I have a warm, fuzzy feeling for it, the disco era, even though I wasn’t really old enough to partake of it (though I well remember the teens and adults did and my wanting to be older so I could, too... though by the time I was old enough, it was all gone). In other ways, though, it was an awful time for the country, as we had been in freefall for a decade (since about 1965), and leadership was almost as bad as now.
I can’t quite imagine a nostalgia for the current period (except perhaps in 3-4 decades things may well be far worse, so looking at it as better only in that regard) because now we have such a divided culture, and an undefined sense of fashion (which has been the case for over a decade now, which is highly unusual as almost every decade has had it).
Until the ‘90s, we still had a somewhat basic unity of culture and shared experiences to a degree (even if there were subcultures within), but that has come apart so dramatically in my lifetime. Cultural touchstones, values, etc. have been changed, and not for the better. Degradation is de rigeur.
I mean, what will we have warm and fuzzy feelings for ? The dangerous boy emperor fascist ? Neverending wars ? Miley Cyrus on a wrecking ball ? Kandy-Ass West ? Even sports isn’t what it was anymore. Pampered multimillionaires who bring their thug hip hop culture with them ? Shock and outrage by the purveyors of degradation and filth over a bearded man who expresses what was, for most of my life, a mainstream Christian viewpoint ?
A sick, degraded and shameful era with no sense of class or style, let alone direction (except down).
I don’t see Boogie Nights as being a ripoff of Goodfellas. It certainly wasn’t a gangster movie (although we’ve seen other movies with a story arc of rise to power, fall from grace and then redemption). The only problem is that Boogie had a happy ending, whereas some of us know full well the real-life people did not (Dirk Diggler would’ve been reduced to doing gay pornos before succumbing to AIDS before the ‘80s was out).
I didn’t mean in terms of subject matter but style and theme. It’s about a naif and his rise and fall within an outwardly alluring subculture and its extended cast of characters. The use of music and the swirling camera are clearly derived from Scorsese’s film.
Boogie Nights is way weirder than a Goodfellas ripoff. Good movie too. American Hustle is excellent, it is a Scorsese imitation, but it’s a form he’d abandoned for a while (before of course returning for Wolf released a week later). It’s more fun than Scorsese though, the characters are actually likable misfits more than conniving scumbags.
It’s hard to believe I remember what it was like BEFORE (C)rap music. Disco was everpresent in my early childhood and then sorta faded, with the remnants of the great Motown era still hanging around.
When rap first came on the scene, it was initially harmless and funny, but before the ‘80s were out, it had descended from guys doing neat moves and spinning on their back and making weird sound effects with their mouths to an ugly, drug-fueled, misogynistic and ultraviolent cult, inextricably linked to the Black criminal underclass (which sadly, each feeding off the other — meaning it dragged down Black culture, and then the culture dragged down the music even more, so on and so forth).
It is the national anthem of the feral class. I, for one, wish it had never come into being. We’d all have been better off for it.
I love BN. But it is highly imitative of Goodfellas in various ways. Scorsese imitated his models too.
I secretly liked disco, but as a long-haired, maggot-infested rock and roller of course had to disparage it.
******************************
I'm a fan of both.
Gadzooks, I am old, too-- And do I... recall the 70s?
Of course, I... do!
The long hair... and the crazy clothes--
Even had a big hair Jennifer Lawrence clone... before there were clones.
Yet I must confess, I was more crazy about my Amy Adams... of that period.
Just to make sure, we are speaking of the 1970s, but if not, I loved the 1870's... too!
Love that ‘70’s hair! (both centuries!)
;-)
You have an amazing likeness to Sonny Bono but you look to be 6 feet tall.
I hated disco at the time, but appreciate it now, especially since the advent of rap, which seems to be the musical equivalent of locusts.
Early seventies Motown had strong moral lessons, which are especially poignant today, in comparison.
Saw it yesterday somewhat reluctantly. We felt like going to a movie and there isn’t much out there. About 20 minutes into it I thought - cr@p how am I going to sit through this. But it just kept getting better and better. Bale was unbelievable, he will get a nomination for sure. And Jennifer Lawrence was awesome as well. Good casting all around.
I agree I almost got up and left, but it got better.
My bad.
*sigh*
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.