Page 40 of 49
Posted: Sun Jul 27, 2008 5:23 am
by cdnchris
Reds looks so hip and fun now!
Posted: Sun Jul 27, 2008 5:34 am
by domino harvey
I can't wait for the reaction Children of a Lesser God gets at the 80s slumber party
Posted: Sun Jul 27, 2008 3:18 pm
by dx23
That's synergy for you!! Paramount and VH1 working together so that you remember the 80's for what it was: poorly designed things!
Posted: Sun Jul 27, 2008 4:37 pm
by LQ

Seeing all these awful dvd covers in the thread is extremely funny...but unearthing this particular cover in a friend's collection? Priceless.
Posted: Sun Jul 27, 2008 4:41 pm
by Quot
I wonder if they even realize that there's a ton of people out there (apart from myself) who are saying "no way in hell would I desecrate my DVD collection by adding one of those "I love the 80's" monstrosities"? What kind of market research yields this trend? (see Cult Classics series) What the hell are these people thinking?

Posted: Sun Jul 27, 2008 5:11 pm
by Tom Hagen
I am usually not a grammar fascist, but for some reason I find the most irritating thing about those '80s covers to be the use of "80's".
Posted: Sun Jul 27, 2008 5:48 pm
by swo17
Tom Hagen wrote:I am usually not a grammar fascist, but for some reason I find the most irritating thing about those '80s covers to be the use of "80's".
I was thinking the same thing...
And the only one of those covers that comes even close to working is Pretty in Pink.
Posted: Sun Jul 27, 2008 6:04 pm
by Kinsayder
Tom Hagen wrote:I am usually not a grammar fascist, but for some reason I find the most irritating thing about those '80s covers to be the use of "80's".
I think what they're saying is that they love the 80s'
King David as opposed to the 90s' version with Spock as Samuel:

Posted: Sun Jul 27, 2008 8:09 pm
by myrnaloyisdope
George Carlin in a biblical epic? Sweet.
Posted: Sun Jul 27, 2008 8:53 pm
by HerrSchreck
kidc85 wrote:
On top of being a stupidly boring cover that looks like it was assembled Clip Art-style, the advertising text in the scroll is the icing on the cake.
"Full-Length Classic Original Film" translates into the ground-breaking practice of "We've Included The Movie"
"Lyric Book" translates into "We've Printed The Subtitles And Stapled Them Together"
With extras like that who hasn't rushed out to buy "Disney's 31st Animated Classic"? That's the text on the back cover incidentally, for those people who didn't realise that every single movie Disney have ever produced is a certifiable "Animated Classic"?
Well in all fairness,
Aladdin, and most of their animated films up to (but not including)
The Lion King, are pretty damned awesome and indeed classics. Especially vs the glop that comes out nowadays. Each Cartoon, from
Little Mermaid, Great Mouse Detective, Aladdin, Beauty & the Beast, Jungle Book, Pinnocchio.. christ you could just go on & on--
Dumbo, Bambi, Sleeping Beauty, not to mention mixed-action features like
Poppins-- all the way back to
Snow White, these are all bona fide classics with brilliant song books and composing and animation. They truly were indeedy.
Today, however, starting w
Lion King and working thru to today,
Pocahontas, Hunchback, so many of the disgusting pieces of sequeldom, signaled a change in corporate ownership & ideology so profound it's practically not even the same company. Toon's like
Aladdin, Beauty /Beast, Jungle Book, etc, they (perhaps all did) integrated lily-whiteness and contemporary themes & dialog into the characters, narrative, and songs, stemming from source material that had a specific ethnic origin (thus Aladdin talking like some upper east side Brad-dy prep-in-training) and this was of course inevitable. But the drek they make today is indeed utterly vapid, as totally formulaic as a squirt following a stroke. Whereas the older feature toons were utterly independent of one another, thematically, visually, and aesthetically.
Aladdin absolutely
is an animated classic.
Posted: Sun Jul 27, 2008 10:16 pm
by whaleallright
...
Posted: Mon Jul 28, 2008 1:11 am
by Oggilby
Posted: Mon Jul 28, 2008 2:11 am
by jesus the mexican boi
All right -- THAT one was funny.
Posted: Mon Jul 28, 2008 4:18 am
by Svevan
HerrSchreck wrote:Aladdin absolutely is an animated classic.
I thought Aladdin's fourth-wall breaking and silly gags put it quite a few notches below Beauty and the Beast, or The Little Mermaid, which sustain a more serious tone while integrating the humor into the story. Better than the modern stuff? Maybe, but put next to The Jungle Book, Snow White, Peter Pan, Pinocchio...meh.
Posted: Mon Jul 28, 2008 2:14 pm
by dx23
Posted: Mon Jul 28, 2008 2:24 pm
by Antoine Doinel
Well, the tagline is accurate.
Posted: Mon Jul 28, 2008 4:03 pm
by pianocrash
Posted: Mon Jul 28, 2008 6:41 pm
by domino harvey
dx23 wrote:
I don't know why exactly, but I feel oddly compelled to see this film
Posted: Mon Jul 28, 2008 8:33 pm
by kidc85
HerrSchreck wrote:Well in all fairness, Aladdin, and most of their animated films up to (but not including) The Lion King, are pretty damned awesome and indeed classics. Especially vs the glop that comes out nowadays. Each Cartoon, from Little Mermaid, Great Mouse Detective, Aladdin, Beauty & the Beast, Jungle Book, Pinnocchio.. christ you could just go on & on-- Dumbo, Bambi, Sleeping Beauty, not to mention mixed-action features like Poppins-- all the way back to Snow White, these are all bona fide classics with brilliant song books and composing and animation. They truly were indeedy.
Aladdin absolutely is an animated classic.
Fair enough that you think that (personally, I love
Aladdin but possess wild hatred for every other Disney movie I've ever come across, save perhaps
Fantasia) and if they quoted
your opinion to advertise their movies then that would be absolutely fine. But they're not giving it as opinion: they're stating as fact that every single one of their movies is an "Animated Classic" and this is just arrogant bollocks.
Posted: Wed Jul 30, 2008 9:41 pm
by Floyd
Posted: Wed Jul 30, 2008 11:11 pm
by fiddlesticks
I'm glad that box specifies that Kurupt and Spyder are rappers. That way, people who think the film stars the Nobel-prize winning microbiologist Kurupt, and Spyder, the three-term mayor of Escalante, Utah won't have an unpleasant surprise when they get home.
Posted: Thu Jul 31, 2008 4:27 am
by myrnaloyisdope
What the hell does "domed" mean?
Posted: Thu Jul 31, 2008 6:03 am
by SoyCuba
myrnaloyisdope wrote:What the hell does "domed" mean?
This.
Or actually it apparently doesn't mean that in the movie but causing head injury or something, or at least someone in the IMDb message board for the movie said something like that. Must be pretty funny for someone who is familiar with the slang word to see the title.
Posted: Thu Jul 31, 2008 6:08 am
by Cold Bishop
SoyCuba wrote:Must be pretty funny for someone who is familiar with the slang word to see the title.
No... No it is not.
Posted: Thu Jul 31, 2008 7:09 am
by miless
accidental fellatio is the best kind.