Originally posted by Loz#1
What the fuck? What's a typical 90's film?
yeah, sounds like non-film buffs shouldn't apply to threads they don't understand (not to sound superior or nothin'.)
because of my age i grew up watching a lot of films from 1990 onwards. i reckon the 90's was a time where Hollywood was embracing the 'event film' (ie: the huge 100million+ film). back then there were only a few per year, whereas nowadays we have a shitload more. (eg: last month saw 4 films released that cost well over $100million). this is really important as it was huge films from Spielberg, Zmeckis and Cameron that resulted in our current cinema situation.
more importantly the 1990's was when computers began to reach out into areas we could only dream of. hence the follwoing films are what i believe to be the archetypal 90's flicks.
Terminator 2: Judgement Day (CGI leaps forward)
Jurassic Park (CGI again)
Forest Gump (a film for the baby boomers to use as a basis for reminisence)
then there were the flms from the 90's that were kinda anti-hollywood and focused on feelings of alienation a lot more...
Fight Club (everyone's lost, identity is harder to determine)
American Beauty (same as above)
Sex, Lies and Videotape (independent film that cause a few waves)
Pulp Fiction (tends to lean towards previous decades in terms of style, but the laid back approach was so refreshing that it spawned more and more tarantino impersonators)
there are heaps more, i just can't think of them now.
might revisit the thread if i gets some decent replies