- Joined
- Apr 22, 2015
In honor of Megalopolis, I thought it would be fun to bring up horribly out of touch movies made by boomers that are trying to relate to a younger audience.
Megalopolis by Francis Ford Coppola (the director of Godfather and Apocalypse Now) inspired me to make this thread:
George Romero's 2nd Dead Trilogy is equally as bad.
"They're just looking for a new home, just like us." Fuck you, George.
Another one I return to a lot is Toys (1992):
This one, from the director of Rain Man, honestly has some things of interest but it's more or less remembered as a fascinating failure. It was grossly mismarketed as a kids or family movie when it isn't. The production design and overall idea of using toys in warfare (essentially predicting the use of drones) is interesting. Scenes like this are great:
But the tone is all over the place and the movie promotes the confusing and extremely simple message of "War toys and things made for children that are violent are bad and will make kids into mindless killing machines" is woefully out of touch. I grew up watching G.I. Joe, ultra-violent Schwarzenegger and Stallone flicks (not to mention horror, of course), and had a realistic toy machine gun and Rambo knife and never had the desire to kill Brown people until only after I discovered my own racism and how shithole 3rd world cultures truly are in a lot of cases. As you do.
Megalopolis by Francis Ford Coppola (the director of Godfather and Apocalypse Now) inspired me to make this thread:
George Romero's 2nd Dead Trilogy is equally as bad.
"They're just looking for a new home, just like us." Fuck you, George.
Another one I return to a lot is Toys (1992):
This one, from the director of Rain Man, honestly has some things of interest but it's more or less remembered as a fascinating failure. It was grossly mismarketed as a kids or family movie when it isn't. The production design and overall idea of using toys in warfare (essentially predicting the use of drones) is interesting. Scenes like this are great:
But the tone is all over the place and the movie promotes the confusing and extremely simple message of "War toys and things made for children that are violent are bad and will make kids into mindless killing machines" is woefully out of touch. I grew up watching G.I. Joe, ultra-violent Schwarzenegger and Stallone flicks (not to mention horror, of course), and had a realistic toy machine gun and Rambo knife and never had the desire to kill Brown people until only after I discovered my own racism and how shithole 3rd world cultures truly are in a lot of cases. As you do.