I have an extension that skips credits, and gets rid of that annoying "Continue watching?" bs. It's fantastic, and I get nothing done.
which extension is this
I thought the show was fantastic and the child actors nailed it perfectly. Not some teens pretending to be younger, but actual good child actors. Everything really brought it together from the atmosphere to the music to the story itself. Felt like a "page turner" with how much I wanted to watch what happens next.
So far my only complaints about it are just how ugly the toothless kid is and the fact that they say "douchebag" several times in something that I believe is taking place in the 80s.
Kids ARE supposed to be ugly and mishapen. >_> At least I was.
This. These are the loser kids in a rural (Indiana?) town. Kids playing DnD in 1983 doing 10 hour campaigns on a weekend. They aren't likely going to be attractive or athletic. Probably only have any athleticism purely through the biking necessities of that age. If anything I think the kids were a little too smart/mature, but that was probably a little on the necessary side.
I think the kids "cursed" a bit more than I would have expected. These are middle school kids with very little connection to upperclassmen and such. But I do believe mommy mentioning to him an offer of watching an R rated movie at some point, so I suppose they do have access to some of that terminology.
How do we get a hold of the electronic music?? Started last night and instantly fell in love with the series
Full soundtrack is on Spotify for free.
This show was fantastic. I thought the best part was how all of the kids and older teenagers were ugly AF. It would have been really easy for them to throw in attractive 21 year olds to play the highschool kids.
Well, I dunno where you can find 13 hours of recorded score for the show. o_o
Completely agree.
Also, the cast wasn't beautiful on purpose / for authenticity. They were trying to not only make a movie about the 80s, but make a movie that felt like it was also FILMED in the 80s. Can get a bunch more info about this from the new Rolling Stone article.
E.T. used the term, it was relatively common on Hill Street Blues (one of the more popular shows at the time); hell, in the 70s, SNL had a skit featuring Lord and Lady Douchebag. I don't see these three being either uncommon or rare in their consumption at the time. And these little nerds had *CERTAINLY* seen E.T.
I think we need to be careful when examining behavior and language from the 40s-80s in terms of media and literary usage. Censoring was a big thing, and even as legal barriers cracked, social barriers remained. I'm not of the opinion that people swear more today than they did in the 1950s-- or at least not substantially more so-- but its openness of portrayal definitely increases in the 80s as Cable TV became more common, accelerated in the 90s as Cable became almost standard, and by the 2000s, the Internet had stripped away centralized control of behavioral portrayal. You definitely have a segment of the population that avoids swearing (I try to be), but there's also always been that part that couldn't care less, and they aren't uncommon. They don't fit in the Mayberry white-picket-fences suburbia so many on the right like to idolize, but most of America didn't fit there, either; some did, some liked to pretend, but that was so white-washed it's ridiculous to think of most media from then as accurate portraiture of our society. Maybe of what our society (or some in our society) wanted to be or to believe, but not what it was.
E.T., SNL, and Hill Street Blues lived in that narrow band between G-rated and R-rated; your options were relatively limited. Drop an F-Bomb, you probably went R, and once R, well... let's just carpet bomb the movie with it. Even "damn" was relatively uncommon on television, and you can almost find that in G-rated things now. Things like the Comic Code Authority were super common, too-- even if it wasn't an official government censor, there was a ton of industry control on it. People still wanted that white picket fence feel.
For my own anecdotal, I know that douchebag was one of my favorite terms by 3rd grade, along with most of my class (just so long as the teachers weren't listening). That, and scumbag, piss, dick-- y'know, the "edgy-but-not-quite-even-the-b-word" tier stuff that showed you didn't care about authority, but weren't risking getting caught with the heavy stuff. Granted, that was '88, not early 80s, but I also remember the lecture our class got when we *were* caught using douchebag, about how that's not okay. I mean, we knew it wasn't, that's why we were using it, but whatever.
Fucking phenomenal series! Holy shit was I at the edge of my seat at the end of each episode. Only because of BG did I even give this show a chance.
Spoiler: show
If I have one complaint about the series is that it probably could've been done without the teenage angst. Even then the character Steve was such a breath of fresh air because he genuinely cared.
I'm kinda glad that they didn't go with a trope of Nancy ending up with lovable loser-outcast Jonathan and she actually gave Steve a chance to redeem himself. Which he did.