Why 70s Movies Look and Feel Different

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  • Опубликовано: 21 июл 2024
  • The 70s were a time where the people were more cynical, and movies from that decade have a certain look and feel to them. Why do movies from the 70s look different? Why do 70s movies FEEL different? Is it just nostalgia or is there something tangible behind it?
    In this video, we dive into the topic of why 70s movies feel like 70s movies.
    If there are reasons you think we missed, make sure to leave a comment. We'll be sure to join in on the conversations.
    If you like this video, don't forget to like and subscribe!
    If you have any other ideas for videos, leave a comment and we might make a video with your idea.
    StudioBinder Steadicam Blog Post: www.studiobinder.com/blog/wha...
    Chapters
    00:00 - Intro
    00:28 - Types of Movies
    03:55 - Tone and Look
    05:45 - Pacing and Motion
    08:51 - Technology
    11:30 - Fashion
    Twitter: / realfilmstack
    Instagram: / realfilmstack
    #70sMovies #70sFashion #70s #moviechannel
    Why do 70s movies feel different? / Why do movies from the 70s look different? / The Godfather / Mean Streets / Taxi Driver / A Clockwork Orange / Robert DeNiro / Steven Spielberg
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Комментарии • 644

  • @Oblivionburn
    @Oblivionburn Год назад +254

    A big thing I've noticed about movies in the 70s compared to later decades is that they often [intentionally] showed the characters travelling from Point A to Point B instead of just cutting to them arriving at a destination, because movies in the 70s were more about the journey than simply what was happening at the destination. They have a very different form of storytelling than later decades. The longer cuts just add to that more grounded-in-life feel to them.

    • @lostcat9lives322
      @lostcat9lives322 Год назад +10

      The opening shot of every movie from the early 70s was the underside of a jetliner coming in for a landing. Every one of those movies ended with the death of the hero.

    • @LarryFleetwood8675
      @LarryFleetwood8675 6 месяцев назад +2

      Now it's all happy endings and neatly explained plots, no more downbeat or open endings where it's up to the viewer what happens next. About the going from Point A to Point B, in American films you saw the guy go to his car enter it and next he's at his destination, in a European film you see him driving there all the way. Well, being sarcastic there but it's kind of true.

  • @matman000000
    @matman000000 Год назад +233

    One thing I love about 70's movies is the extensive use of zooms. These days zooms are often unfairly judged as lazy and inferior to dolly shots, but it's just a different technique. Early 60's and 70's movies used them very effectively to add dynamic to a scene, build tension or connect several shots into a single take.

    • @FilmStack
      @FilmStack  Год назад +9

      Very interesting. Thanks for commenting! Any movies or shots that come to mind? I'd love to check them out to get a better idea.

    • @matman000000
      @matman000000 Год назад +21

      @@FilmStack Pretty much the entirety of The Graduate and The Conversation, especially the opening shots. Kubrick used them to great effect in Barry Lyndon and The Shining

    • @FilmStack
      @FilmStack  Год назад +5

      Awesome thanks!

    • @alesdvorak7485
      @alesdvorak7485 Год назад +8

      @@FilmStack There are even some nice zooms in The Godfather, in the beginning when Don Corleona listens to Bonasera, when Micheal says he will kill Solozzo and McCluskey and also when he shoots them later.
      I would say that it always seem a bit weird but also entertaining how often (and really well) they used zooms in 70's movies

    • @jakublulek3261
      @jakublulek3261 Год назад +5

      Hand camera was also popular, especially after French Connection, to add grit and documentary-style, realistic look.

  • @TheDefeatest
    @TheDefeatest Год назад +104

    The people in these movies looked like real people that we see and interact with everyday. These days , every actor is dressed too perfectly. Every hair and every article of clothing is perfect...even if it's supposed to be a person , let say on the fringes or not "normal" Everyone is a caricature of a person. No one looks like the kid on my street, only a theatrical fake wanna be version of the kid on my street. The 70's and 80's had it right, because people for the most part looked like everyday people, making it more believable. Me thinks anyway.

    • @JK_Clark
      @JK_Clark Год назад

      Gotta love The Goonies!

    • @jefftakesdscakes30
      @jefftakesdscakes30 Год назад +1

      🤓

    • @LarryFleetwood8675
      @LarryFleetwood8675 6 месяцев назад +5

      I agree, actors in the past all looked their part because back then they were already characters to begin with oozing with charisma, often why they became actors in the first place, whereas actors today all look the same all pretty boys who must disguise themselves behind make-up to appear differently, say Depp or DiCaprio. They aren't interesting enough on their own personally, as human characters.

    • @BasketballJones48021
      @BasketballJones48021 23 дня назад +4

      @@LarryFleetwood8675Exactly! Back then, actors had living experience, let’s call it. Made them seem real(er), more human, more charismatic. Most of them had been through the grind, and weren’t even getting fame or great roles while being very young. And those were different times ofc.
      While the 1980’s was an AMAZING decade for movies still, I believed it started mostly there.. that change; leading to what we have now.
      The Al Pacino’s, the Jack Nicholson’s, so on.. of the 70’s… wouldn’t have been the same in the 80’s. And you had more younger stars, picked while they were fresh and not nearly seasoned enough.
      I mean, look at someone like Mickey Rourke.. had all the talent in the world, all the “tools”!! In the 70’s he would’ve been in the best and most popular movies.. but in the 80’s it was a bit different already. He wasn’t your clean cut type, your do as you’re told type, your fresh from being a teen type, that whole sugar coated stuff…..

  • @objectiveperspective777
    @objectiveperspective777 Год назад +384

    1:01 A little thing to mention but the 70s also had a huge crime wave and crime was discussed more on TV than ever before. Top this off with the coverage of the Vietnam war and film started to reflect the realities of the dangerous world we live in.

    • @suzygirl1843
      @suzygirl1843 Год назад +6

      Why do American men love bringing up Vietnam? Didn't they lose?

    • @Humanophage
      @Humanophage Год назад +44

      @@suzygirl1843 Because it was the last war with mass conscription in the US. Protracted wars with non-professional armies tend to attract a lot of public attention.

    • @suzygirl1843
      @suzygirl1843 Год назад

      @@Humanophage Last war? Afghanistan isn't still happening? Iraq? Ukraine is definitely funded by USA

    • @thomashanson9173
      @thomashanson9173 Год назад +14

      ​@@suzygirl1843 Thats probably the exact reason they talk about it.
      It was a time of despair but also reflection. What to do now? Theres no glory unlike that of WWII since they didnt really win.

    • @juicelg8766
      @juicelg8766 Год назад +7

      ​@@suzygirl1843 he mentioned its television coverage during the 70's.. not randomly brought it up with no context? tf lol

  • @DarthHater100
    @DarthHater100 Год назад +100

    One of the biggest things that makes 70s films different was the emergence of light-sensitive Eastman Kodak color film, subverting Technicolor, which needed huge amounts of light, often in a studio. It was grainier and desaturated, but you could shoot in much lower light, giving movies like the French Connection their signature look, and allowing filmmakers to shoot on the fly, in real settings, and just made shooting faster and required much lower budget, allowing a different type of movie than one shot on a stage with a massive 2 ton Technicolor 3-strip camera.

    • @Elitist20
      @Elitist20 Год назад +7

      Godfather II was the last major film to use the old-style Technicolor film processing.

    • @fuzzballzz36
      @fuzzballzz36 7 месяцев назад +2

      Is that why films went from bright and shiny in the '60s to brown and grainy in the '70s? I've wondered about that for years. I love the look of Technicolour.

  • @foljs5858
    @foljs5858 Год назад +1021

    The 60s made movies for families. The 70s made movies for adults. The 80s made movies for teenagers. The 2010s onwards make movies for man-childs

    • @JoDee172
      @JoDee172 Год назад +31

      You're not wrong 🤔

    • @wayfaring_stranger1413
      @wayfaring_stranger1413 Год назад +70

      "man-childs"

    • @barrybarnes96
      @barrybarnes96 Год назад +60

      Hollywood has been making movies for manboys longer than that...Kung Fu movies for example, certain war themed movies like Top Gun etc.

    • @Tink2k
      @Tink2k Год назад +3

      pretty good summary!

    • @Reub3
      @Reub3 Год назад

      and now... Hollywood is only focused on what white women want.

  • @conmereth
    @conmereth Год назад +52

    Personally I generally prefer the slower pacing of older movies because in addition to the plot and the characters I'm oftentimes really interested in the world they inhabit and in a slower movie it can be a lot easier to stop, smell the roses, and appreciate the world building.

    • @davidmcmaster2083
      @davidmcmaster2083 Год назад +3

      Me, as well. Just checked out The Long Goodbye, and the first ten minutes is hilarious. Gould spends the first ten minutes trying to find a can of Curry brand cat food to feed his cat. What movie in 2023 would devote the first ten minutes to a PI trying to find a brand of cat food his cat will eat.

  • @parallaxview2143
    @parallaxview2143 Год назад +15

    Gritty and visceral. The French Connection is the ultimate 70s movie.

  • @aliensoup2420
    @aliensoup2420 Год назад +179

    The rise of independent film and technology are probably the greatest influences for the 70's "look". The independents broke production out of the confining studio system, and encouraged free expression. Smaller cameras, faster film stock and lenses broke filming out of the studio and into the raw, gritty environment of the real world. Once the new technology and techniques were mastered, the gloss went back on in the 80's and 90's.

    • @jamesbrice6619
      @jamesbrice6619 Год назад +10

      My favorite films are the foreign and independent movies from the 70s. Especially the horror movies.

    • @hiimgamerspruzzino5804
      @hiimgamerspruzzino5804 Год назад +8

      Let's remember blaxploitation was one of the genre that really helped Hollywood get on its feet

    • @jp3813
      @jp3813 Год назад +1

      Independent cinema really took off during the 90s.

    • @jamesbrice6619
      @jamesbrice6619 Год назад +1

      @@jp3813 really? I didn't know that. I thought by then that Hollywood pretty much had a lock on all the theaters.

    • @jp3813
      @jp3813 Год назад +2

      @@jamesbrice6619 In 1990, TMNT actually became the highest-grossing independent film at that time. Independent filmmakers such as Quentin Tarantino, Robert Rodriguez, Kevin Smith, etc... further opened those floodgates. Backed up by the likes of Miramax, Lions Gate, & New Line.

  • @xandercruz900
    @xandercruz900 Год назад +18

    The 70s was the last era where virtually all films were indy or experimental. There was a real sense that you were going to get something you simply didnt think was possible to put on film, so they all had this "sharpness" to them as well as being rough around the edges as they were all redefining genres into more gritty versions of themselves (westerns) from the golden age of Hollywood, or building whole new ones from the ground up (sci-fi), and even reviving old favorites with less spectacle and more "frankness" (musicals). So many had no real money compared to today that they improvised all over the place, which also just made them seem more "real".
    And most were done on budgets that were close (or less) to some adult films, which were basically now mainstream releases in some cases! I still love how many 70s films just had these moments with no music playing, likely because they didnt have the budget, but it just makes those movies seem more in the moment.
    That is why so many of the movies from then became cult classics or all-time defining movies of cinema.

  • @michaelfontana2865
    @michaelfontana2865 Год назад +60

    The 70's also had a strong independent movie scene with John Cassavetes, Melvin Van Peebles and Elaine May were standouts of the time continuously experimenting and making films better.

    • @mrkitty777
      @mrkitty777 Год назад +1

      Are you meowing to me? ....
      ....
      Just kitten you 😸🤷

  • @PolishGod1234
    @PolishGod1234 Год назад +27

    70s was the best era for movies : A Clockwork Orange, 2 Godfather films, Taxi driver, one flew over cuckoo's nest, Apocalypse now, Star Wars, Alien, Mad Max, Jaws, the Exorcist, Halloween, Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Chinatown, Rocky, Barry Lyndon etc.
    So good

    • @GameyRaccoon
      @GameyRaccoon Год назад +2

      Have you ever seen the Sting?

    • @thomsboys77
      @thomsboys77 Год назад

      @@GameyRaccoon yeah, it’s boring as shit

    • @GameyRaccoon
      @GameyRaccoon Год назад +2

      @@thomsboys77 lmfao based

    • @Robert_Daniel
      @Robert_Daniel 6 месяцев назад

      The Shining was released in 1980 but it really is a 70s film.

    • @chizorama
      @chizorama 3 месяца назад

      Also had a lot of great "drive-in movies", aka B. Just recently watched Vanishing Point & Dirty Mary Crazy Larry, fun movies that kick in the balls at the end.

  • @robclark3095
    @robclark3095 Год назад +13

    The increase in pace is probably why I haven't liked many movies I've seen in the last decade or two. Nothing but non-stop action, flashing from scene to scene, and not really much of any story.

    • @OgamiItto70
      @OgamiItto70 Год назад

      You forgot shaky-cam.

    • @chizorama
      @chizorama 3 месяца назад

      All substance with little style...

  • @artirony410
    @artirony410 Год назад +29

    I remember in one of my film classes we had a whole lesson on how the Steadicam changed moviemaking forever

    • @DarthHater100
      @DarthHater100 Год назад +3

      It still took a long time to catch on though. The inventor of the Steadicam, Garrett Brown, was also the camera operator, and he thought he'd get a ton of work. But aside from The Shining and Rocky, and a few sequences or shots in other movies, so he could barely find a job for about a decade. But eventually by the late-80s, it took off. Garret talked at length in an audio commentary that I listened to, maybe from the Shining Blu-ray.

  • @AScreenwritersJourney
    @AScreenwritersJourney Год назад +6

    70s fashion pieces I recall were T-shirts with iron-on decals, usually from favorite films (Star Wars, Grease) or TV shows (Charlie's Angels/Farrah Fawcett).

  • @justinsteinweiss666
    @justinsteinweiss666 Год назад +50

    The 70's may be my favourite decade for movies, particularly as a fan of crime drama and the horror genre. In addition to some darker themes and brutal reality becoming an inspiration for various filmmakers, I also like the gritty atmosphere captured in some films of the era (which also appears in some genre movies of the early 80's).

    • @jamesbrice6619
      @jamesbrice6619 Год назад +3

      Same here. Independent movies, Italian giallo and horror movies, Filipino films, etc...

    • @veiserexab1428
      @veiserexab1428 Год назад +1

      While 80s is best for action movies

    • @chizorama
      @chizorama 3 месяца назад +1

      Same, I'll add that the lack of accessibility made them more special as well, you literally had to catch them or you missed them. Maybe I'm sentimental because I was young back then, but I'm glad I'll never shake my love for that era of film making, it just hits different.

    • @justinsteinweiss666
      @justinsteinweiss666 3 месяца назад +1

      @@chizorama I totally agree. I was an 80's kid, so there was VHS of course, but it was still a matter of finding physical copies and still very different to the modern/online era. As I grew up, I dicovered many of my favourite films that were made in the 70's.

  • @mrsbluesky8415
    @mrsbluesky8415 Год назад +14

    My brother loved the martial arts movies back in the 70s. The local channels used to run them every weekend, badly edited and scratchy copies, but he still watched. Miss you brother ❤

  • @lisathuban8969
    @lisathuban8969 Год назад +68

    The first time I actually watched a film on a VHS machine was 1984. NO ONE I knew had a VHS player in the 1970's. They were a luxury item. We weren't poor, but we were not in the class of people who started buying those machines in the LATE 70's. It came in on the tail end of the decade.

    • @careyatchison1348
      @careyatchison1348 Год назад +12

      Yes, I definitely associate tape machines with the 1980's. I remember renting tapes in that era. Movie rental shops would usually have a section for VHS tapes and a separate one for Beta.

    • @JoDee172
      @JoDee172 Год назад +15

      I agree. Gotta say, this kid totally got that part wrong. Even among the families I knew who were wealthy - one of them whose father was even in the home entertainment business - didn't own video players yet. Wasn't a thing at all til the early 80s.

    • @JoDee172
      @JoDee172 Год назад +3

      ... and in the early 80s, you still also rented the VHS or BETA machines along with the movie cassettes at the video rental.

    • @samanthab1923
      @samanthab1923 Год назад +5

      You’re absolutely right. My best friends dad was a big ophthalmologist in NJ/NYC. He used get gifts from optometrists because he would send his patients there for glasses. One year in was a VCR another year the full arcade game Asteroids you would see in an arcade. Free sunglasses of course.

    • @bttrflygal
      @bttrflygal Год назад +6

      Right on .no one had vcrs in The 70s .

  • @modernpolitics
    @modernpolitics Год назад +7

    Method acting. People did it in the 50s and 60s, but films like the Godfather and Kramer vs Kramer were really defined by it. A lot of the pacing is about letting an actor be the character, and letting interactions play out at a natural pace, as opposed to thinking about keeping the audience entertained. Making the characters and their interactions seem real and complex.

  • @JimCoder
    @JimCoder Год назад +8

    "Earthtone" colors were popular. I even had an early Rockwell calculator in earthtone colors. Browns, tans, amber, dull greens.

    • @Mick_Ts_Chick
      @Mick_Ts_Chick Год назад +2

      Yeah who can forget all the appliances in harvest gold, rust, and avocado green! I always wore the brighter colored clothes because they looked better on me.

  • @Marcus-xt9zh
    @Marcus-xt9zh Год назад +8

    What I love about them:1) their artictic honesty 2) rarely "happy endings" (probably because life rarely "ends" in a happy way.)

    • @brucetucker4847
      @brucetucker4847 Год назад

      They went for the other extreme, though. That was another way Star Wars changed Hollywood - up until then 70s SF was incredibly bleak and depressing. Our vision of the future was Clockwork Orange, Rollerball, Soylent Green, Silent Running... the future was going to be a nightmare of overpopulation, pollution, crime, and repression. In other words, like the real world 70s but more so.

    • @BaseballPlayer0
      @BaseballPlayer0 Год назад

      @@brucetucker4847 soylent green ws set lst yr

  • @miked1869
    @miked1869 Год назад +13

    One of my favourite Spielberg movies is the relatively little-celebrated Munich.
    Set in the early seventies, of course, part of its genius is that it looks like a thriller from that era even though it was made in 2005. Most noticeable are lots of big zoom and dolly shots, but there's also filming of actors through car windows, vintage blocking techniques and even old-looking film stock.
    It really helps to sell the movie.

  • @teeing9355
    @teeing9355 Год назад +7

    I have said this for a while, most current day videos and movies have a cut about every 3 to 5 seconds, and it can get annoying after a while, hell this video does it.

  • @THX-C
    @THX-C Год назад +25

    I love the graininess of 70s films. One of the things that bothers me about contemporary movies is the lack of grain - how slick it appears. Everything looks washed out whereas in films from the 1960s, colors just pop, especially when Raoul Coutard is the cinematographer.
    The 1970s, in terms of fashion covered a great deal, though there was a lot of earth tones, browns, avocado green, rust. It was an interesting decade that not only looked back to an entire 30 year period from the 1920-50s but also another Egyptomania craze swept the fashion world. The late 70s was saw a lot brighter colors in clothing than was the case for most of the decade - it began to feel like the 1980s, especially because of bands like the Talking Heads. Whit Stillman’s film, The Last Days of Disco (1998) was set “in the very early 1980s) - it was the period when people started wearing preppy clothes.
    The directors from the 1970s like Scorsese or Coppola are giants who really struggled to bring about a body of mature work.

    • @davidmcmaster2083
      @davidmcmaster2083 Год назад +2

      Could not agree more. CGI has that sheen. It's a dead giveaway. What's cool is when I come across a 70s flick that has all the scratches and what not on the print. Amazingly, many 70s prints look pristine. How is that possible, I wonder. Scorsese struggled for a few years cuz King Of Comedy was such a bomb, but he hit his stride again with Goodfellas. But to me, he didn't struggle at all. King of Comedy, After Hours and Temptation were all sensational, I thought. But Coppola, boy howdy, Apocalypse was his Swan song.

  • @AbrasiousProductions
    @AbrasiousProductions Год назад +111

    this is my favorite era, I've seen more 70s films than any era, I've you looked closely at a lot of my reviews I typically review more 70s films, this era just speaks to me, everything about this time fits me, the music, the cinema, the culture, the beautiful fashion, why did I have to be born in 2003?..

    • @jamesbrice6619
      @jamesbrice6619 Год назад +6

      My favorite films are the foreign and independent movies of the 70s.

    • @andersdottir1111
      @andersdottir1111 Год назад +6

      I was a teenager in the 70s, it was a fantastic time.
      There were so many more individuals and characters then; not so homogenous as today.

    • @MamadNobari
      @MamadNobari Год назад +8

      Because then you would've been dead by now and wouldn't've watched whatever 70s movies you like with a simple click and have all the movies of history in your computer.
      If anything, I would have loved to be born in the 2100s so I could finally play a complete version of Cyberpunk 2077 and many other games that came out broken and every movie from this century.

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape Год назад +4

      Well, it wasn't all good. At least you don't reek of cigarette smoke every time you walk into a restaurant like we all did back then. But the cars were cooler, at least the early 70s pre-gas crunch cars. No stupid electronic shit although they did rust out quicker.

    • @robertodell9193
      @robertodell9193 Год назад +9

      If you had lived through the 70s, you wouldn't be so fond of them. You're only familiar with the sanitized version.

  • @michaellavender
    @michaellavender Год назад +9

    You should do one as to why 70s music albums feel and sound different.

  • @SimonLacey-MySleekDesigns
    @SimonLacey-MySleekDesigns Год назад +9

    I was born in 75 after Bruce Lee passed away. My dad introduced me to Bruce when I was 3 or 4. My neighbor was Chinese and had all his movies. I watched them all back to back in the order they came out. I loved them. I remember watching game of death and even then so young I could tell something was off with the movie. Afterwards I asked my dad what was next. He said there were no more movies and that he passed away. That bummed me out. What an icon that over 40 years later and it's one of my youngest memories.

  • @119hulkify
    @119hulkify Год назад +13

    The 70s is one of my fav eras of movies. Especially blaxploitation movies like superfly, shaft, cotton comes to harlem etc

    • @jamesbrice6619
      @jamesbrice6619 Год назад +2

      Cleopatra Jones, Blackula, Black Momma, White Momma, Sugar Hill, Coffy, Foxy Brown, etc...

    • @adewilson132
      @adewilson132 Год назад +1

      @@jamesbrice6619The Mack.

  • @kdcndw1
    @kdcndw1 Год назад +6

    Some 70 film makers were known for documentaries before doing features which had an influence on the look.

  • @C.DWoods
    @C.DWoods Год назад +67

    I absolutely love these videos, it helps me to learn more about film history, since I was born in the late 2000's. I can't wait for the next videos. Wishing you the best.

    • @FilmStack
      @FilmStack  Год назад +7

      Thank you! We're glad you like them ☺️

    • @Dayvit78
      @Dayvit78 Год назад +2

      You have a lot of catching up to do! Good luck.

    • @C.DWoods
      @C.DWoods Год назад +2

      @@new-lvivNot really I grew up with the shows and movies of the early 2000s despite being born in the late 2000s and Shrek was just a movie I didn't like.

    • @mrkitty777
      @mrkitty777 Год назад

      You will however experience WW3 very likely, sorry for the sad news.

    • @BaseballPlayer0
      @BaseballPlayer0 Год назад

      r u a girl

  • @relativityboy
    @relativityboy Год назад +6

    Love how you included shots from Boogie Nights (1997) in this as illustrating the look of the 70's. Just goes to show they did a good job on that film.

  • @gokhanersan8561
    @gokhanersan8561 Год назад +7

    70s is my favorite era. From Sting to Superman the Movie; from the French Connection to Jaws; from 3 days of the Condor to Star Wars. It was awesomeness. Frankenheimer, Spielberg, Friedkin, Donner, Lucas, Pollack, Lumet….entertained, intrigued, awed, edutained

  • @tedwojtasik8781
    @tedwojtasik8781 Месяц назад +1

    Malcom McDowell flanked by the future Darth Vader on one side, and a dead ringer for old Palpatine himself on the other, just gets me in the feels.

  • @shawn6669
    @shawn6669 Год назад +2

    You know, I usually get angry when I watch youtube videos like this, but you did the work. A cursory glance into the topic, but from someone who was there, there were no mistakes. Goodonya!

  • @jchow5966
    @jchow5966 Год назад +1

    This is a excellent episode. Great info & explaination. I love classic movies.

  • @BasketballJones48021
    @BasketballJones48021 23 дня назад +1

    Great stuff, thanks!
    I would also add the fact that foreign directors/movie-makers had more access to older movies (many American ones) much more than ever before, while growing up and whatnot… and what’s funny is that they ended up influencing American directors/movie-makers that we’re doing their stuff in the 70’s (like you’ve stated)!
    Anyway, the 1970’s, really that whole New Hollywood era.. is definitely the best ever for film! Everything culminated into it and it peaked right there.
    You also had the highest combination between popularity and quality. Plus, the variety was also crazy; a vast majority of genres, styles, higher or lower budgets… and SO MUCH amazing stuff being made!

  • @labmaterial
    @labmaterial Год назад +3

    man i've been on a real 70s movie kick. i can't watch anything that isn't from that decade and i feel like it'll be a 70s summer all around for me. this video couldn't have come at a better time

  • @flow2333
    @flow2333 Год назад +2

    Incredible video again!!! :) I hope it explodes like your other videos from the 80s or 90s... You deserve it mate

  • @waynemcauliffe2362
    @waynemcauliffe2362 Год назад +3

    Loved growing up in that decade

  • @PhatLvis
    @PhatLvis Год назад +2

    Nice work. One thing, though: Home video systems dudn't actually become ubiquitous until the 80s; they existed, but were quite expensive, in the 70s - very rarely seen in homes. However, cable TV, which played fairly recently-released movies, did start becoming popular by the late 70s, and exploded in popularity beginning in the early 80s - with channels like MTV and ESPN, and also movie channels - which cost extra - like HBO, becoming mainstream staples, until by the mid-late 80s practically everyone had cable (and home VCR machines).

  • @andylindsey
    @andylindsey Год назад +1

    Awesome video! I love how comprehensive you were of the decade. I like to describe the 70's as the wild west of cinema. For the first time since probably the 1920's, directors weren't held back by production codes on what they could do or show and what stories they could tell. There's some crazy stuff that came out of the 70's and I love it. It's also a time where young, exciting new directors would become household names (Scorsese, F.F. Coppola, Ridley Scott), especially the rise of George Lucas and Steven Spielberg, who were HUGE contributors to the film industry. In terms of animation, while Disney wasn't doing so hot, Ralph Bakshi started to become a thing, with his very adult animated movies. And last but not least, I believe this decade would begin the work of Siskel and Ebert's TV programs; reviewing and recommending the latest movies that had come out. While not directly related to the making of film, I think their unique chemistry helped shape people's attitudes and interest towards the cinema.

  • @TwoBs
    @TwoBs 9 месяцев назад +1

    My goodness … the pacing and story-telling in 70s movies is just phenomenal.
    So many classics that I’ve watched numerous times that I will undoubtedly watch many more times throughout the remainder of my life.
    I believe Dog Day Afternoon will be my most memorable solely because I snuck and watched the VHS when I was about 7-8 (so 1993-1994) and would watch it at night. I thought the cover looked cool and couldn’t find The Terminator.
    I was outside playing with some of my cousins and we were acting out a bank robbery. My mom overheard us and pieced it together when I started yelling “Attica! Attica!” lol … I tried to act as if I heard it at school, but she wasn’t stupid.
    I continued to sneak movies, but looking back, I’m pretty sure my parents knew I was watching them. I wasn’t exactly subtle with quoting them.

  • @TheInfectiousCadaver
    @TheInfectiousCadaver Год назад +3

    they used actual practical FX, unlike how all movies are made now.
    "we could build a contraption that would be significantly cheaper, but naaaaaaaa id rather spend 28 million for cgi artist to do it instead, and make it look worse" - every single director from the 80's onward.

  • @Honest_Grifter
    @Honest_Grifter Год назад +1

    When I think 70's cinema, I think blaxploitation... the greatest film movement that never truly left the decade of it's inception... the styles, the themes, the grittiness. It was a slice of life not really seen before or after... there was something so pure about it that very little has shown me since...

    • @adewilson132
      @adewilson132 Год назад

      What are some of your favorite blaxploitation flicks from that era? I like Cooley high, and Claudine.

  • @hrvojeprpic6176
    @hrvojeprpic6176 Год назад +6

    I would also add several additional things regarding 70s fashion and lifestyle differences vs today. Different or less makeup, more facial and body hair, different nutrition and exercise standards, resulting in different body types and more mature skin appearances. People also tend to speak more seriously in older movies. I believe at least some of the listed factors made people look and appear more mature in 70s movies (and in general). Apologies for my bad English...

  • @yensid4294
    @yensid4294 Год назад +3

    In the 70s movies still had actual costume & wardrobe designers. Film influenced fashion for that reason. Period films like Bonnie & Clyde or even 2001 & Saturday Night Fever had a huge impact on the street fashions of the day at the same time as the technological innovations in fabric manufacturing. Soooo, yeah, a lot of synthetic fibres in 70s clothing that didn't exist in the decades before (polyester mostly) that allowed more variety/less expensive clothing options.

  • @jpwaitforit5801
    @jpwaitforit5801 Год назад +5

    I discovered your channel a few weeks ago and I've been enjoy watching these videos about the different decades of cinema.
    The information is succinct and the graphics create an immersion for the viewer.
    Also "A year in film history" series is great.
    it's really interesting to know the best movies/series/songs and style of each year. and each year also has its own graphics.
    great job so far. keep it up🍿📼🎞️👍

    • @FilmStack
      @FilmStack  Год назад

      Thanks for the comment, it means a lot! Hopefully you’ll enjoy our upcoming videos as well!

    • @jpwaitforit5801
      @jpwaitforit5801 Год назад

      @@FilmStack thank you! Its time really well spent. Love móvies and this channel provides a lot of information about it

    • @suzygirl1843
      @suzygirl1843 Год назад

      @@FilmStack It was also a misogynistic time

    • @cinemaretrospective
      @cinemaretrospective Год назад

      @@suzygirl1843 this is true but it was also a great time for powerful female roles. Think Sally Field as Norma Rae or Faye Dunaway in Network. It was better than the 60s where female roles were often objectified.

    • @suzygirl1843
      @suzygirl1843 Год назад

      @@cinemaretrospective Don't know any of those movies

  • @MarkPierro
    @MarkPierro Год назад +3

    Watching films set in the 1970s always feels exactly that, a modern film set in the 1970s. What those films do not have is the actual feel of a film in the 1970s. Now if you could recreate that you’d add an extra dimension to a film set in that time.

  • @MarcWard
    @MarcWard Год назад

    Another great video! Keep it my man!

  • @PopCultureguy
    @PopCultureguy Год назад +2

    Hello FilmStack just discovered your channel great video on Why 70s Movies Look and Feel Different it's great loved it keep up amazing work so excited when you do 60 decade have awesome day keep up the incredible content.

    • @FilmStack
      @FilmStack  Год назад +2

      Thank you! We appreciate your support! 😊

  • @sarahcristina4656
    @sarahcristina4656 Год назад +3

    Nice video as always!You should do one about 2010s :)

  • @jasonblalock4429
    @jasonblalock4429 Год назад +25

    I'm surprised that American Graffiti didn't come up. I see it as being pivotal in opening the doors for later-70s sentimentality and more "old fashioned" filmmaking. Lucas recognized early on (probably due to THX flopping) that audiences were getting burned out on cynicism. Grafitti made rose-tinted nostalgia cool, and in some ways, Star Wars was an extension of that core idea: escapism through nostalgia.
    (And then the hugely popular TV show Happy Days, partially inspired by it, kept that nostalgic flame burning for years.)

    • @careyatchison1348
      @careyatchison1348 Год назад +3

      True but compared to the later decade's movies American Graffiti still had a very 1970's gritty look, an era-specific meandering plot and naturalistic dialogue.

    • @matthewrouge
      @matthewrouge Год назад +1

      @C45rpm Yep, even as a little kid, I was listening to 50s rock. They sold collections on TV, and I got one for Christmas. You mention PotP (one of my faves!), in which Swan was said to be responsible for kicking off "the nostalgia wave of the 70s." It was a thing!

    • @judsongaiden9878
      @judsongaiden9878 Год назад +3

      THX could be interpreted as having an optimistic outlook, at least because Thex escaped at the end. So the individual triumphed over the collective. Didn't destroy or alter the whole system, but SEN set out to do that and failed. In the commentary, George mentions that the society of that world is so far gone into the domain of oppression that it can't be changed for the better, only surrendered to or escaped from. I guess that could be interpreted as defeatist and fatalistic. But if an individual succeeds in escaping, as Thex did, then that's at least a little bit optimistic.
      Death to slave morality!

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape Год назад +1

      @@judsongaiden9878 It's not clear that THX survives though. To me it appears he winds up in the wilderness with no way to provide for himself and no human contact. If it is a "happy" ending, it's still pretty bleak.

    • @judsongaiden9878
      @judsongaiden9878 Год назад +2

      @@RCAvhstape No argument there. Maybe he became like Robert Neville from 'The Omega Man'.

  • @beefymcskillet5601
    @beefymcskillet5601 Год назад +2

    With the slow vs past debate. I feel that action scenes are meant to be fast past however when there need to be standout part in the action that’s when you slow it down because you’re literally looking at that shot for longer.

  • @grarghov1
    @grarghov1 Год назад +3

    I can't believe that no one mentions (not just the video, the comments too) the holy grail of the 70s.
    DISASTER MOVIES.
    With an all-star ensemble cast.
    They were the same thing Marvel movies do now.
    And almost all of them had a bleak or outright sad ending.

  • @somerando1073
    @somerando1073 Год назад +4

    There are quite a few 70's movies that don't have the typical happy ending that we are used to. I think this goes back to the less decisions by committee that was mentioned in the video. Individual directors/screenwriters were willing to take bigger risks.

  • @Foxrich99
    @Foxrich99 Год назад +1

    regarding the cuts question i can only recommend the movie Athena
    it uses 12 minute shots without cuts while in constant action
    absolute masterpiece

  • @jamesbrice6619
    @jamesbrice6619 Год назад +3

    I like the foreign and independent films of the 70s. There were some good Hollywood pix as well, like The Exorcist, The Sting, Jaws, etc... but it was the independent and foreign movies that really rocked.

  • @lunarmodule6419
    @lunarmodule6419 Год назад

    Great analysis. Thx

  • @EdgarsLS
    @EdgarsLS Год назад +2

    I love movies that have a more dynamic range of speed for the pacing of scenes. Movies that are always going fast are tiring, same with movies that always go very slow.
    But when you have the right balance of both, it truly can move an audience. Since nothing in live is one speed.

  • @GlennDavey
    @GlennDavey Год назад +11

    I was adopted by parents in their 30's, so my 80's experience was actually pretty 70's when I look back. I got snapped into the present day when I went off to school in the 90's, and even then was the weird 60's music listening kid. It wasn't until i was older that I really discovered the 80's properly. Anyway, where was I. Oh yes. The 70's. Burnt orange tiles in the kitchen, playing records in the lounge and crock pot dinners.

  • @image30p
    @image30p Год назад +2

    To me films from the 70s look the way music from the 70s sound. Sort of soft. Analog. I really like it!

  • @andersdottir1111
    @andersdottir1111 Год назад +3

    I was a teenager in the 70s and even though I regularly went to the drive-in (cinemas or ‘pictures’ as we called them were too far away), I hardly saw any of these films mentioned.
    Ones I do remember are: airport, Poseidon adventure, grease, rocky horror picture show, Monty python and the holy grail, women in love, apocalypse now (as a young child I saw this- no ratings in those days) I remember seeing Star Wars and my mother asked me to take my 9 year old brother- I hated that movie.
    70s fashions were amazing; yes guys mostly wore open necked shirts, jeans and t - shirts, some wore tweed type jackets and ankle leather boots.
    It was a fantastic time to be a teenager- much less pressure on girls to fit a beauty standard; there was more individualism.

  • @supathechest
    @supathechest Год назад +13

    you should do the 60s or 2010s next!

    • @drewo.127
      @drewo.127 Год назад +4

      Yes!!!

    • @FilmStack
      @FilmStack  Год назад +5

      Well then... we know what we're going to work on in a coming video 😊

    • @lancehoward3990
      @lancehoward3990 Год назад +1

      @@FilmStack Dude, you've got to put the name of the films on screen though! I'm glad to say I know most of these films, but there are a few I'd love to look up. Like the ones from 5:11 to 5:27.

  • @KolozII
    @KolozII Год назад +2

    What I notice about style in the 70s is the hair: early-mid 70s had some holdovers from the “hippie” look. A lot of long hair. Guys had “mop heads”, for lack of a better term. Girls had typically shoulder-length hair that curled inwards at the end. Then of course there’s the iconic Afro in the disco scene. There’s most likely more iconic hairstyles from the 70s, but the point remains that hair is a big indicator of the style of the decade

    • @brucetucker4847
      @brucetucker4847 Год назад

      70s hairstyles were a lot more styled than 60s hippies. Long hair wasn't anti-establishment any more, the only point was to be cool. The extremely authentic hairstyles in Dazed and Confused are a great example - no actual hippie would have put 1/4 the care into his hair that Wooderson did. Political consciousness of any kind was out and life being about nothing more than being cool and getting high and laid was in.

  • @youtubeis...
    @youtubeis... Год назад +1

    I just love the old sound in movies especially leather shoes walking

  • @kurtissexton3801
    @kurtissexton3801 3 месяца назад

    What I love most about the 70s movies. is when a specific scene is running. you can hear the outside of the house that they are in. You hear the different birds chirping a gust of wind or specific cars driving by. It makes you feel like it’s really happening, but in today’s time the outside noises they use, it’s just a loop track. So you always feel detached from the scene. It seems the only time I ever see movies that use real background noises. They seem to always be Sundance films and hardly anyone has seen them except movie buffs

  • @rebeccassweetmusic4632
    @rebeccassweetmusic4632 6 месяцев назад

    Don't forget some amazing underrated, "flew under the radar" gems that we got from this decade too. Some small 70s films like, The Late Show, The Turning Point, Three Women, Badlands, The Prisoner of Second Avenue, etc. The 70s is one of my favorite retro decades for film and music. Plus, the 70s didn't just have earth tones and suits. There were also some softer and more pastel colors and tones too. It's kind of interesting to see how everything looked so washed out and grainy compared to today's super clear and sharp/crisp films

  • @witteafval
    @witteafval 9 месяцев назад +1

    When I think of the 70s, I think of Barbra Streisand walking down the hallway of the hotel in "What's Up, Doc?" She's wearing a red blouse, bell-bottomed pants, and the carpet has these bright garish colors and busy patterns. Every time I see that shot in the movie I think, "That was the 70s!"

  • @tumslucks9781
    @tumslucks9781 Год назад +4

    11:18 'Betamax was technologically superior'.
    It certaninly was. Under laboratory conditions its picture & sound were 20% better than VHS...

    • @zeltzamer4010
      @zeltzamer4010 Год назад +1

      But that’s just the beginning of the tragic story of Beta!

  • @OFWelsh
    @OFWelsh Год назад +1

    omg thank you for opening my eyes

  • @hadara69
    @hadara69 Год назад +1

    Your “blown mind” was my reality, bub! Lol! I grew up in the 70s/80s and I’ve often pondered how much movies have changed since then. For one thing, we don’t really have “Blockbusters” for the same reason we don’t have “The Album”, there’s just too many choices now and it's all TOO accessable.
    It was SPECIAL to see a movie then because of the format. Now they’re so disposable, it’s why the quality (not film quality, ACTUAL quality) suffers. It’s also why Hollywood doesn’t take many risks. We’ve basically traded convenience for competence when it comes to the movies we watch now. From "Jaws" to "Sharknado"....
    There’s a GOOD reason all the best Horror stuff comes from that era, and all years before CGI ruined everything…
    Nice summation of what makes 70s flicks look 70s!

  • @Xaxtarr_Neonraven
    @Xaxtarr_Neonraven 4 месяца назад +1

    For me, the 70s were the blossoming of the counterculture. Everything became disputable. Without questioning everything, nothing would ever change. No other decade captured this confluence of angst, adventure, newness, openness, danger and horror. Things weren't working and the prior stories told often lies; something had to change and one thing the powers that be hate is change.
    Life had to find a way, and the films reflected the longing, the successes and the failures. The "box" was killing us, and we had to break the mold.
    Too many films to name. The era quickly left with only the fear that our new stories too would need to eventually be questioned and reinvented. Stories both free us and imprison us anew. The one thing we did learn though: there is always another way.

  • @jessquinn6106
    @jessquinn6106 Год назад +5

    Maybe because the 70's and 80 movies were not all sequels, prequels and remakes???? Maybe they had an actual stories and scripts that were performed by actors instead of plot holes with pretty sparkly people standing around pretending they know how to act. Maybe because you could actually HEAR the dialogue and not have your ears blow out but explosions every other second. Maybe because in the 70's and 80 they made sets and props, and did not depend on CGI and green screening every thing.

  • @HarrisonFitzgerald
    @HarrisonFitzgerald Год назад +3

    The definitive car chase decade 😎

  • @awesomedallastours
    @awesomedallastours Год назад +4

    A really good overview, however, you left out Blaxploitation and Grindhouse films.

  • @9bettytall945
    @9bettytall945 Год назад +3

    I don't know about that this whole "myth" I would say about a grey 70s my mother would totally contest differently she remembers everything been psychedelic colourful I believe that it's just the quality of camera but didn't really capture the sheer vividness of the 70's but if this video proves anything it proves how underrated and how game-changing the 70s were

    • @derdritte7957
      @derdritte7957 Год назад

      It's honestly the most colourful decade. The 80s don't even come close.

  • @scottgillespie8011
    @scottgillespie8011 Год назад +2

    Tarintino owes his career to the ‘70s.

  • @jchow5966
    @jchow5966 Год назад +3

    I love slowe paced movies - it makes me think more. As someone who grew up in the 70s i like the slowe paces mivies as they are more thought provoking. Most of todays movies seem boring & shallow with too much action and not thoughtful.
    My favorite 70s movies were the Godfather JAWS anything Woody Allen

  • @gmg9010
    @gmg9010 Год назад +116

    VHS man those were great and I hate to be that guy being that I was only born in 2001 but most kids today wouldn’t understand how a VHS tape works.

    • @LethalForceEngaged1700
      @LethalForceEngaged1700 Год назад +9

      Same here I’m only 3 years younger than you and I remember when we were still using those heavy box tvs with a built in vhs player and that was when flat screens were still expensive

    • @gmg9010
      @gmg9010 Год назад +5

      @@LethalForceEngaged1700 yeah but do you remember the floppy disks ?

    • @MoisesHernandez-sw5pt
      @MoisesHernandez-sw5pt Год назад

      @@gmg9010 yeah

    • @surfingbrrrd
      @surfingbrrrd Год назад +4

      @@LethalForceEngaged1700lmao you may remember it but you're an exception for people your age, not the norm. By the late 2000's the vasssttttt majority of household living rooms had flat screens

    • @gmg9010
      @gmg9010 Год назад

      @@surfingbrrrd they remember it so they know how it works that’s good enough for me.

  • @derekseven1647
    @derekseven1647 Год назад +2

    I AM MENTALLY STUCK IN THE 70'S AND I AM NOT LEAVING.

  • @theartfuldodger3987
    @theartfuldodger3987 Год назад +3

    I really enjoyed the 80s, 90s, and 2000s videos, and I liked this one a lot too, but I found it distracting and unfortunate that the vid showed so many modern films rather than actual period films. Especially that last section that spoke about the fashion -- there were almost exclusively modern period films that took place in the 70s and were designed to look that way. But the video is about actual 70s films, so why not show the examples in the actual films of the era, instead of showing clips from Good Fellas, Boogie Nights, et all? Sure, the video mentioned modern period films that emulated the old ones -- that would be the only time to show modern films. Shame that the rest of it had so many missed opportunities to show real 70s film clips. That aside, I did think the information and overall structure of this vid was well-done. Looking forward to when you get to the 60s and 50s. (:

    • @FilmStack
      @FilmStack  Год назад +2

      Hey! I'm glad you enjoyed the videos and thank you for the feedback. Our goal is to make each video better than the last and this kind of feedback is amazing for us! Cheers!

    • @jefftakesdscakes30
      @jefftakesdscakes30 Год назад

      He did

  • @nameprivate2194
    @nameprivate2194 Год назад +3

    The big city Cops & Robbers Crime Dramas of the '70s were very topical, as Urban street Crime was way up in those days.
    Also, that then-new genre mostly replaced the Western, which had been very popular in movies (& TV) since the Silent Era of film (c. pre-1930s).

  • @robinstevenson6690
    @robinstevenson6690 Год назад +1

    I lived through the 70's, and the "suits" thing didn't start until the mid-70's (e.g., '75), along with Disco, which started up at about the same time. Styles were very different in the early 70's. Yes, some men wore suits then, but the style between '70 and '74, in particular, was largely affected by the rock/folk/hippie movement among younger men.

  • @orangecounty2033
    @orangecounty2033 Год назад +1

    The French Connection, 1971, William Friedkin stole the scene in the subway when Gene Hackman plays cat & mouse with Frog One .... before the steady cam was invented, his DP held the camera and sat in a wheel chair, and an assistant pushed him around. Practical solution

  • @Poppaea-Sabina
    @Poppaea-Sabina Год назад +3

    Stanley Kubrick was filming in the 70s so that was better. Barry Lyndon or the Shining would never win over modern audiences. I'm glad I was there.

  • @mikeholmes621
    @mikeholmes621 8 месяцев назад

    I think the way audio captured the natural sound of the environment plays a big part too. I modern movies you get very crisp audio that has no echo or wind over it regardless of the environment
    But in 80's 70's movie etc they captured the accustics of the environment which Imo addeded to the immersion.
    Think about the town meeting scene in Jaws and how natural all the vouces in sound to the room, it would be so clean today I'd find it distracting

  • @SamuraiAkechi
    @SamuraiAkechi Год назад +2

    12:20 I think, the most stylish "daily outfit" kind of clothes in cinema was the kind of clothes worn by the neofascist protagonists of Carlo Lizzani's "San Babila, ore 20" - leather jackets and trench coats, casual and classy indoor clothes worn under them, bell bottoms, and this all comes in pack with authentic hairstyles that look stylish and not goofy at all, Aviator glasses, and, of course, Maniago switchblades.
    Another kind of cool character outfit from the era would be various assassin attires from gialli (as in Profondo Rosso or Nuda Per l'Assassino) or clothes worn by cool detectives (played by guys like Henry Silva, Tomas Milian or Maurizio Merli).

  • @davidmcmaster2083
    @davidmcmaster2083 Год назад +1

    Such a crackup that the steadycam was invented in the 70s. We've got a device invented 50 years ago that allows for smooth camera operating, and yet people seem to prefer nausea cam. Just hysterical.

  • @impalaman9707
    @impalaman9707 Год назад +2

    Yeah, everyone wore a suit everywhere they went back then. People even used to dress up in suits to go eat at McDonalds, back in the days when people actually went out to eat at a fast food restaurant and fast food places were actually respectable places to be seen at

  • @gastonphalange
    @gastonphalange Год назад +4

    90s was the last real great decade for great cinema. It knew how to really touch the soul. 70s was start of modern cinema

  • @theaussiebaron
    @theaussiebaron Год назад +3

    Seems no-one is old enough to remember this period. Seeing these films now doesn't compare with seeing them on first release in a proper cinema.
    Quite the experience.

    • @Mick_Ts_Chick
      @Mick_Ts_Chick Год назад +1

      I'm old enough. Born in the early 60s. I can't explain what it was like seeing Jaws on the big screen to my 29 year old daughter. Especially when the head rolled out of that boat, lol. The first few rows almost jumped out of their seats.🤣

  • @betsyduane3461
    @betsyduane3461 Год назад +1

    You used a shot of Barry Lydon to show light and grain issues? It was shot with natural light with super high sensitivity cameras gotten from NASA.

  • @bombarded15
    @bombarded15 Год назад +1

    3:11 a lot of this footage is from the Phantom Menace in 1999, Darth Maul lightsaber aside the cars and fashion should have been a give away lol

  • @bobcobb3654
    @bobcobb3654 Год назад +1

    Home video didn’t become a facet of most people’s lives until the 80s. During the 70s, the vhs vs beta wars were still largely confined to professional use (tv stations and such), vcr’s were very expensive, costing upwards of a thousand dollars when they first came out ($4,000 today), and studios were hesitant to release movies on tape. The first U.S. movies released on VHS didn’t come out until 1977 and sold for a hundred bucks a tape. As such, home video didn’t take off until the early 80s, when vcr prices dropped and there were finally enough movies available to kick off the first video rental stores. With the exception of the rich, home video wasn’t part of 70s culture at all.

  • @TheeManWIthNoLife
    @TheeManWIthNoLife Год назад +2

    Shit yeah! Great video! So many great horror movies in the 70's! Weird how people seem to overlook that. The greatest Christmas movie ever made, Black Christmas, came out in that decade! I personally like slow paced movies, but there are a lot of movies that don't do it right and its painful to watch! At least annoyingly fast paced and quick cut movies are... fast... Both speeds are great when done right, but when slow is done wrong it's the worst!
    The 70's were a great and this video is awesome!

  • @Xegethra
    @Xegethra Год назад +1

    A lot of 70's films, and even some early 80's films, both American and UK make me feel like I'm in a school/hospital corridor/room on a damp morning. Sort of cold and stark? Porridge is an example of this.

  • @JohnSmith-hn6kv
    @JohnSmith-hn6kv Год назад +2

    It's true about fashion in the 70s, my theory is that as personal photography transitioned to colour, people went a bit crazy with colours in their clothing. I certainly saw that in old family photos. Also magazine adverts started appearing in colour.

    • @davidjames579
      @davidjames579 Год назад +3

      It was also mainstream appropriation of 60's Psychedelia. Or Woolworths and JC Penney catching up.

  • @KravKernow
    @KravKernow Год назад +2

    There were a lot of gritty documentaries and reportage in the 70s. So I wonder if that played into the almost hyperreal documentary style of some of the major films.

  • @triskelion2056
    @triskelion2056 Год назад +1

    An interesting historical point is also that the idea of business itself being a profession only took off in the 70's- Prior to that there were white collar workers of course, but the middle-class businessman only really emerged on a broad scale by the 1970's.

  • @milascave2
    @milascave2 Год назад +1

    Something has gone wrong with Hollywood movies. I trace the origin to the 1990s, when "The Adam's Family" movie came out. Suddenly, instead of creating something new, every mainstream movie was about recreating something old. Every movie was either based on an old TV show, or a sequel, or a remake of an older movie, or based on a comic book. There have been exceptions. But it is as if Hollywood has had a creativity shortage. Instead of "Everything.old is new again," it has been more like "everything new is old yet again."