Jaguar66
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The one movie that I would find hard to believe anyone in the US over about age 30 had not seen would be The Wizard of Oz.
How about movies you would be stunned if people have seen?
Laser disk? I remember the VHS/Betamax wars. Our local video store (boy, is that expression fading into obscurity) sold the machines as well as renting tapes. A guy came in and asked the owner his opinion on which system was better, and why. After saying that Betamax was "technically" superior and with an allegedly better picture, he reamed off the myriad advantages of VHS - longer recording times, four-head playback, re-winding without spooling the tape through the heads, and so on. Without saying anything the other guy turned around and left.
The store owner said "must be a Betamax owner".
That was 1983.
^ Apparently I blinked too long during the laser disc phase. Either that or they just didn't come to Texas. lol
They looked like an extra thick record and came in what looked like a sleeve for an album.
Wow, that was a dated description for a dated item!
This would be me because I've never seen just about ALL the movies mentioned here. Never saw The Godfather, Gone With The Wind, Casablanca, etc. None interest me. Tried to watch Citizen Kane, but gave up after 10 minutes. Never was a big movie watcher -- more into music.
But as for movies I'd be shocked if someone else actually saw -- JUST IMAGINE (1930)!! It's my favourite film! No one I've ever met has seen it and I doubt I'll ever meet anyone who has! lol And I'll admit I'm a bit of a "hipster" when it comes to classic film. I like the obscure 20s and 30s programmer movies over the big names. I often bypass the big names to spend time with the little ones -- which I know I'll enjoy more. Men Are Like That (1930) is a good one no one has ever seen. So is a cute Minna Gombel movie called Women Must Dress (1935) and another from 1935 called Convention Girl. Please tell me someone else on here has seen these?
I was working at NBC in NY back then. I remember buying an RCA VHS VCR with a remote control, a big deal back then, on a no-interest payment plan, for, are you ready - $400. This was a 1st generation top-loader - no stereo. That machine lasted almost forever.
The year before that I worked in a video store. They were everywhere back then. We rented movies in both VHS and Beta formats but VHS was dominant even in 1982.
My mother has never watched it, because of the scene where Zuzu says "Every time a bell rings an angel gets his wings." She said that scene in the preview makes her gag. Sometimes I wonder how we're related :eusa_doh:
This movie flopped at the box office when it came out and was appreciated by only a few for decades until it started being shown en masse on TV. It's one of our favorite movies of all time and both my husband and I cry buckets at the end of it, while my parents (in their 80's) are completely unmoved by it and don't understand why we love it so much. I don't get it.
I've not seen them ever. Well, not entirely true. I tried watching the first one when it came out. To me, it didn't live up to all the hype and I quit watching after an hour into it. I've avoided the rest entirely though.
Isn't that Gremlins? Which I incidentally never saw. Goonies is about a bunch of kids who muck about in some sort of caves/dungeon (all I remember; I saw it back in the '80s and wasn't impressed so here's one person who didn't like it): http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0089218/
I think The Goonies is one of those films that is a generational, moment-in-time things.....you had to be a 8 - 13 year old in the mid 1980's, in America, and have had to seen it at the movie theater when it came out, to appreciate its appeal.
For a current example, the movie Napoleon Dynamite from a few years ago. Everyone in a certain age group loved it and "got it", while people over that age group shook their heads and said, "Huh?" as to why anyone could think it remotely funny.
I've never seen Goonies, but then again I was quite a bit older than 13 in the mid '80s.
For a current example, the movie Napoleon Dynamite from a few years ago. Everyone in a certain age group loved it and "got it", while people over that age group shook their heads and said, "Huh?" as to why anyone could think it remotely funny.
I think The Goonies is one of those films that is a generational, moment-in-time things.....you had to be a 8 - 13 year old in the mid 1980's, in America, and have had to seen it at the movie theater when it came out, to appreciate its appeal.
For a current example, the movie Napoleon Dynamite from a few years ago. Everyone in a certain age group loved it and "got it", while people over that age group shook their heads and said, "Huh?" as to why anyone could think it remotely funny.
I think The Goonies is one of those films that is a generational, moment-in-time things.....you had to be a 8 - 13 year old in the mid 1980's, in America, and have had to seen it at the movie theater when it came out, to appreciate its appeal.
For a current example, the movie Napoleon Dynamite from a few years ago. Everyone in a certain age group loved it and "got it", while people over that age group shook their heads and said, "Huh?" as to why anyone could think it remotely funny.
ND appeals to a certain type, I think, rather than age group. My wife and I were in our late 30s when it came out, we LOVE it, own it, quote it, because, let's face it, it's SWEET!