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JediTalentAgent posted:As to some of the more 90s things out there, the 90s retro nostalgia for the 60s-70s in the form of the Saturday Morning Cartoons Greatest Hits and the Schoolhouse Rock cover albums by several alternative and Gen X acts of the day. I own both of those and they are awesome. For 90's soundtracks, Singles and Judgement Night are very, very 90's. 1. "Would?" Alice in Chains 2. "Breath" Pearl Jam 3. "Seasons" Chris Cornell 4. "Dyslexic Heart" Paul Westerberg 5. "The Battle of Evermore" (live Led Zeppelin cover) The Lovemongers 6. "Chloe Dancer/Crown of Thorns" Mother Love Bone 7. "Birth Ritual" Soundgarden 8. "State of Love and Trust" Pearl Jam 9. "Overblown" Mudhoney 10. "Waiting for Somebody" Paul Westerberg 11. "May This Be Love" The Jimi Hendrix Experience 12. "Nearly Lost You" Screaming Trees 13. "Drown" The Smashing Pumpkins 1. "Just Another Victim" Helmet and House of Pain 2. "Fallin'" Teenage Fanclub and De La Soul 3. "Me, Myself & My Microphone" Living Colour and Run DMC 4. "Judgment Night" Biohazard and Onyx 5. "Disorder" (Medley of 3 Exploited songs: "War", "UK '82", and "Disorder") Slayer and Ice-T 6. "Another Body Murdered" Faith No More and Boo-Yaa T.R.I.B.E. 7. "I Love You Mary Jane" Sonic Youth and Cypress Hill 8. "Freak Momma" Mudhoney and Sir Mix-A-Lot 9. "Missing Link" Dinosaur Jr. and Del the Funky Homosapien 10. "Come & Die" Therapy? and Fatal 11. "Real Thing" Pearl Jam and Cypress Hill Dinosaur Jr. and Del Tha Funky Homosapien kicks major rear end.
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# ? Apr 13, 2017 04:01 |
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# ? May 14, 2024 06:03 |
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evobatman posted:The 90est of superheroes got the 90est of soundtracks I always thought that the Spawn soundtrack was a direct ripoff of the Judgement Night soundtrack. Judgement Night was Rap artists collaborating with Hard Rock bands wheras Spawn was Techno collaborating with Metal. A small difference, but an important one to teenaged me.
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# ? Apr 13, 2017 05:06 |
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magikid posted:How many loving 90s bands were there A shitload.
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# ? Apr 13, 2017 09:55 |
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Wet Tie Affair posted:Two other very 90s soundtracks: Strangely this does not include the Radiohead song that was written explicitly for this move: Exit Music (for a film)
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# ? Apr 13, 2017 10:10 |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vygQZ9hYqyE
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# ? Apr 13, 2017 10:17 |
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whiteyfats posted:NIN's cover, while not terrible, is noticeably inferior to Joy Division. Should have just used the original. I did prompt me to go out and find out who joy division was. The 90s was a real time for Soundtracks to be bigger than the movies they were for. A Band could become an over night success because they made it onto a soundtrack album that sold well. The Cardigans were probably the most well known for their song on Romeo and Juliet in North America. There was also the Trainspotting soundtrack that probably was a kickoff of the brief domination of UK house and techno on the charts as well and what was known as Britpop. 1. "Lust for Life" (Iggy Pop, David Bowie) Iggy Pop 2. "Deep Blue Day" (Brian Eno, Daniel Lanois, Roger Eno) Brian Eno 3. "Trainspotting" (Bobby Gillespie, Andrew Innes, Robert Young, Martin Duffy) Primal Scream 4. "Atomic" Sleeper 5. "Temptation" (1987 version) New Order 6. "Nightclubbing" Iggy Pop 7. "Sing" Blur 8. "Perfect Day" Lou Reed 9. "Mile End" Pulp 10. "For What You Dream Of" (Full-on Renaissance Mix) Bedrock (feat. KYO) 11. "2:1" Elastica 12. "A Final Hit" Leftfield 13. "Born Slippy (NUXX)" Underworld 14. "Closet Romantic"
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# ? Apr 13, 2017 11:09 |
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The lady from the Cardigans did a nice cover of the Bluest Eyes in Texas, a country song that's also good, for the Boys Don't Cry soundtrack.
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# ? Apr 13, 2017 11:14 |
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I forgot about the Trainspotting soundtrack. That's a great one.
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# ? Apr 13, 2017 15:49 |
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Mallrats and Baseketball had a pretty good soundtracks, too.
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# ? Apr 13, 2017 18:26 |
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talking about 90s movie soundtracks? Grosse Pointe Blank "Blister in the Sun" - Violent Femmes (2:08) "Rudie Can't Fail" - The Clash (3:31) "Mirror In The Bathroom" - English Beat (3:09) "Under Pressure" - David Bowie and Queen (4:03) "I Can See Clearly Now" - Johnny Nash (2:46) "Live and Let Die" - Guns N' Roses (3:02) "We Care a Lot" - Faith No More (4:03) "Pressure Drop" - The Specials (4:18) "Absolute Beginners" - The Jam (2:50) "Armagideon Time" - The Clash (3:53) "Matador" - Los Fabulosos Cadillacs (4:34) "Let My Love Open the Door (E. Cola Mix)" - Pete Townshend (4:58) "Blister 2000" - Violent Femmes (2:58) the first soundtrack CD released was so popular they actually released a second one "A Message to You, Rudy" - The Specials (2:53) "Cities in Dust" - Siouxsie and the Banshees (3:49) "The Killing Moon" - Echo & the Bunnymen (5:44) "Monkey Gone to Heaven" - Pixies (2:56) "Lorca's Novena" - The Pogues (4:35) "Go!" - Tones on Tail (2:32) "Let it Whip" - Dazz Band (4:24) "The Dominatrix Sleeps Tonight" - Dominatrix (3:40) "War Cry" - Joe Strummer (5:58) "White Lines (Don't Don't Do It)" - Grandmaster Flash & Melle Mel (7:24) "Take On Me" - A-ha (3:46) "You're Wondering Now" - The Specials (2:37)
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# ? Apr 13, 2017 19:04 |
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whiteyfats posted:A shitload. Having recently dusted off that for some reason, I made an amateur analysis on 90's Alternative music. In the beginning of the 90's the airwaves were still haunted by the remnants of the 80's, and were fairly set on trucking along in that manner. Then the success of Nirvana's Smells Like Teen Spirit happened. After that, the record companies scrambled to put out more of that to varying success. The Peak of "new" alternative on the radio was about 1995, (1994, and 1996 are second and third respectively) with a heavy drop in 1997. Most of the 90's alternative being put out during that time were small bands that didn't quite fit anywhere, they were distorted to metal levels, mostly simple tunes, but more skilled than punk, and often influenced by album oriented rock. Vocals ranged from harsh to melodic, basically these were your average garage bands with a minor record contract. The bands that had put out a couple of albums (most of them had at least one album prior to 1993), and would have called it a milestone to be the first opening act on a local leg of a large band's tour. Around 1997-1998, the initial wave was fairly mined out by the airwaves, and were starting to release follow-up albums. The problem is, with the record companies were putting a lot more production onto these albums, and they almost unanimously were lackluster compared to the previous ones, for that very reason. 90's alternative was best when it was relatively unpolished, and those that did survive either became nu-metal, or pop-punk. I think that this was also why the record companies attempted to push ska onto us. They mined out all the "new" alternative, and needed more to fill that gap, of course no one really liked ska.
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# ? Apr 13, 2017 19:41 |
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I've read that one overlooked factor in the alternative rock boom in the 90s was Dan Aykroyd et al. setting up the House of Blues chain, because that allowed a new string of mid-sized concert venues to spring up in a very short space of time which gave a lot of new bands somewhere to play where they'd get attention. On Nirvana, one of the things everyone remarks on is how Nevermind displaced Michael Jackson's Dangerous from the number-one spot on the album chart. One of the things people don't tend to talk about is how Nevermind was itself replaced by a Garth Brooks album which stayed there for ten weeks straight. You look at the music that defined the decade and it's all the alt rock guys and the golden age hip-hop guys, but the artists who sold the most records were Garth Brooks and Céline Dion. Wheat Loaf has a new favorite as of 20:58 on Apr 13, 2017 |
# ? Apr 13, 2017 20:56 |
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Wheat Loaf posted:I've read that one overlooked factor in the alternative rock boom in the 90s was Dan Aykroyd et al. setting up the House of Blues chain, because that allowed a new string of mid-sized concert venues to spring up in a very short space of time which gave a lot of new bands somewhere to play where they'd get attention. And the Archie's got a number one hit in the country when some of the greatest rock bands of the 60's were still performing. Doesn't really mean anything except record sales don't actually equal good music. The 90's were no different, most week's top five were an undifferentiated string of bland, popular R & B singles or primordial frat-country if you were stuck in the midwest.
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# ? Apr 13, 2017 21:38 |
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Eh, Garth's first few albums were pretty good.
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# ? Apr 13, 2017 23:46 |
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This was a mainstay of the oversized CD wallet I kept in my backpack so I could listen to my favorite tunes on the school bus:
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 00:55 |
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magikid posted:How many loving 90s bands were there Only 90's kid will know this
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 01:34 |
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magikid posted:How many loving 90s bands were there You'll find out in 10 years when 90s style music makes a minor resurgence.
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 02:08 |
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The 90s was also sadly the reason Rock Radio died. Rock Radio was pretty quick in larger markets to start playing Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, Stone Temple Pilots and the others, but as the 90s wore on the popularity of these bands lessened, and New Metal started to become popular, so they were replaced by Limp Bizkit, Linken Park and a whole host of bands that had poorly spelled names. This was so sudden and popular, that it completely pushed 90s rock and Grunge off the air, but as the rise was as fast as the fall, as people quickly turned on this bands because listeners seemed to wake up and realize "wait, this music is for assholes" and listeners dropped for the radio stations, which caused their ad revenues to drop, and they ended up getting bought up by Virgin or the other radio stations that are basically just long google play lists that are made up of random music from the last 40 years. That's not really that much the 90s, but I always want to bring more hate for New Metal as it really was the biggest pile of poo poo every hoisted onto the listening public. Though I think that the Grosse Point Blanke soundtrack is probably the earliest catalyst for the resurgence of 80s music. Anyways, I was watching one of my favorite Angry Video Game Nerd episodes, Nintendo Power https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eegQI9WM6mk And I came to wonder, why was all marketing to kids weird and gross in the 90s? Like their would be some random things happening, or it would have a line like "more fun that picking your friends nose!". Yea i know marketing is always trying to get peoples attention, but there was a really specific time when the grossness and weirdness was really turned up. "Don, our sales for toys are slipping, what do you think we should we should do?" "Lets make kids think of barfing when they see our products!" "Double your salary!"
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 06:20 |
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That whole thing feels like middle-class soft-core rebellion. You need to sell your children-focused product but you know, you can't outright alienate the parents. Check out our 'tude maaan! Your parents will hate this GROSS stuuuufff whoooooa!
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 07:57 |
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toadies: possum kingdom screaming trees: nearly lost you spacehog: in the meantime cracker: low meat puppets: backwater if you want to get froggy there's always third eye blind: semi charmed life, a song specifically about methamphetamine addiction.
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 09:27 |
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Out of Band II posted:toadies: possum kingdom Not that that's a bad short playlist, but I think Toadies is the only one on that list that has stood the test of time in the public simply because it's the only one I've heard in the wild in the last 10 years. You're more likely to hear Alice in Chains: Rooster, or Cake: The Distance.
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 12:41 |
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https://youtu.be/COMWwwv_MTk
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 12:53 |
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When it comes to soundtracks, I doubt any performed as well as the Titanic soundtrack. They even made a second part ("revisited "or something) that mixed songs with dialog from the film. I owned both. I'm a straight guy.
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 14:25 |
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Croccers posted:That whole thing feels like middle-class soft-core rebellion. You need to sell your children-focused product but you know, you can't outright alienate the parents. There is a book called the Console Wars that details the fight between Sega.and Nintendo in the 80s and 90s. It goes into detail about Sega's marketing. They were the cool older kid/college console, whereas Nintendo was for little kids. The ads are so 90s it hurts. Leon Einstein has a new favorite as of 14:32 on Apr 14, 2017 |
# ? Apr 14, 2017 14:29 |
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So much '90s soundtrack discussion, and not one mention of Go? 1. New - No Doubt 2. Steal My Sunshine- Len 3. Magic Carpet Ride (Steir's Mix) - Philip Steir 4. Troubled By The Way We Came Together - Natalie Imbruglia 5. Gangster Tripping- Fatboy Slim 6. Cha Cha Cha ('Go' Remix)- Jimmy Luxury & The Tommy Rome Orchestra 7. Song For Holly - Esthero 8. Fire Up The Shoesaw (LP Version)- Lionrock 9. To All The Lovely Ladies (Radio Mix) - Goldo 10. Good To Be Alive - DJ Rap 11. Believer - BT 12. Shooting Up In Vain (T-Ray Remix) - Eagle-Eye Cherry 13. Talisman - Air French Band 14. Swords - Leftfield
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 14:56 |
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Did they really credit Air as "Air French Band"?
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 15:00 |
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Leon Einstein posted:Did they really credit Air as "Air French Band"? It was a thing for a bit. I've never seen this movie and I never will, but this soundtrack is top-notch: 1. Sho' Nuff (05:10) Performed By Fatboy Slim 2. Shine (Splendiferous Locust Mix) (04:24) Performed By Slowdive 3. The Chemistry Between Us (Lionrock Remix) (06:02) Performed By The London Suede 4. Before Today (Chicane Remix) (06:23) Performed By Everything But The Girl 5. I Don't Know Why I Love You (7" Drip Of Rockman Mix) (03:32) Performed By The House Of Love 6. Kelly Watch The Stars (Moog Cookbook Remix) (05:39) Performed By Air 7. The Jag (Radio Edit) (03:34) Performed By The Micronauts Featuring Joyce Sims 8. Elektrobank (Radio Edit) (03:54) Performed By The Chemical Brothers 9. Beetlebum (Moby's Mix) (06:40) Performed By Blur 10. Mesmerise (The Mesmerising Vocal Mix) (04:18) Performed By Chapterhouse 11. Only The Strongest Will Survive (James Lavelle Remix) (05:29) Performed By Hurricane #1 12. Sweetness & Light (The Orange Squash Mix) (05:27) Performed By Lush 13. Flowerz (Radio Edit) (04:08) Performed By Armand Van Helden Featuring Roland Clark 14. Bizarre Love Triangle (Stephen Hague Remix) (03:54) Performed By New Order
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 15:09 |
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Pastry of the Year posted:It was a thing for a bit.
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 15:11 |
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I forgot just how prolific Fatboy Slim was.
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 15:24 |
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Pure moods is on Spotify if anyone is curious
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 15:26 |
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Alaois posted:talking about 90s movie soundtracks? A 90's soundtrack that is predominantly 80's music.
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 15:54 |
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In retrospect, my favourite soundtrack when I was little was probably:
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 15:59 |
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Something I was thinking about the other day is how in the nineties, the eighties felt like ANCIENT HISTORY. The "Grosse Point Blank" soundtrack might as well have been the Forrest Gump soundtrack. When Billy Idol made his appearance in "The Wedding Singer," it was only 8 years after his most recent big hit, yet it was treated as a completely wacky and crazy gag. That would be like someone from 2009 appearing in a current movie as a funny "retro" gag.
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 16:12 |
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Transistor Rhythm posted:Something I was thinking about the other day is how in the nineties, the eighties felt like ANCIENT HISTORY. The "Grosse Point Blank" soundtrack might as well have been the Forrest Gump soundtrack. When Billy Idol made his appearance in "The Wedding Singer," it was only 8 years after his most recent big hit, yet it was treated as a completely wacky and crazy gag. That would be like someone from 2009 appearing in a current movie as a funny "retro" gag. I think generations sometimes get skipped in the makers and shakers division of the entertainment industry, so maybe people in power back then still thought Billy Idol was "outrageous" or something. Grosse Point Blank brings up something I've always wondered about the whole "classy hitman" genre that popped up a lot in the 90's. Started with Leon I guess? There seemed to be a bunch of movies that aped it, and then you had Boondock Saints which parodied it (poorly). But just a whole lot of "Killing people is a good thing if you have good reasons" films.
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 16:44 |
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ryonguy posted:I think generations sometimes get skipped in the makers and shakers division of the entertainment industry, so maybe people in power back then still thought Billy Idol was "outrageous" or something. It's always been, for lack of a better term, a trope. The classy, well-dressed hitman and all that. It just came back in fashion in the 90s resurgence of crime movies (See also; the many movies that aped Tarantino during that decade).
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 17:50 |
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Ferrule posted:A 90's soundtrack that is predominantly 80's music. It fits the theme of the movie.
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 17:54 |
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Wheat Loaf posted:I've read that one overlooked factor in the alternative rock boom in the 90s was Dan Aykroyd et al. setting up the House of Blues chain, because that allowed a new string of mid-sized concert venues to spring up in a very short space of time which gave a lot of new bands somewhere to play where they'd get attention. The 90's had so many musical genres going around at once, all being extremely popular, it was sort of crazy.
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 19:07 |
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ryonguy posted:Grosse Point Blank brings up something I've always wondered about the whole "classy hitman" genre that popped up a lot in the 90's. Started with Leon I guess? There seemed to be a bunch of movies that aped it, and then you had Boondock Saints which parodied it (poorly). But just a whole lot of "Killing people is a good thing if you have good reasons" films. Boondock Saints was in no way a parody. Don't believe me, watch Overnight, the documentary about its making. DrVenkman posted:It's always been, for lack of a better term, a trope. The classy, well-dressed hitman and all that. It just came back in fashion in the 90s resurgence of crime movies (See also; the many movies that aped Tarantino during that decade). Film critic Amy Nicholson spent some time as a screener for Sundance in the late 90s, watching all the submissions they got. According to her, every third movie was basically someone who thought "Pulp Fiction obviously needs a sequel, and me and my college friends are just the people to make it!"
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 19:09 |
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Alaois posted:It fits the theme of the movie. No poo poo. It's a movie about a high school that graduated in the 80's. All those songs and bands are from the 80's. There's nothing remotely 90's about it - especially the loving music - was my point.
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 19:15 |
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# ? May 14, 2024 06:03 |
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Ferrule posted:No poo poo. It's a movie about a high school that graduated in the 80's. All those songs and bands are from the 80's. There's nothing remotely 90's about it - especially the loving music - was my point. It was the soundtrack to a movie made in the 90s. Calm down. 80s nostalgia was a very 90s thing.
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# ? Apr 14, 2017 19:31 |