Showing posts with label nostalgia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nostalgia. Show all posts

December 22, 2022

Memories of Milk Bars

 

The Aussie milk bar was, in its heyday, as ubiquitous in suburban Melbourne as pubs are in the UK. Conveniently situated within walking distance of your home, they provided families with the essentials - milk, bread, newspapers, cigarettes. They were also purveyors of the 20 cent bag of mixed lollies, wax paper wrapped trading cards with pink concrete sticks of nostalgia fuel, and a wide variety of ice-creams and icy poles - Sunnyboys, Two-In-Ones, Eskimo Pies, etc. For a brief period, some milk bars even attempted to cash in on the home video bandwagon; however, based on the amount of sun bleached clamshell tape covers collecting dust in the spinner racks, very few people actually rented them.


On a recent trip back to Melbourne I found myself searching for the milk bars of my youth; in some sad way hoping I could walk in and find cartons of Return of the Jedi trading cards on the counter, a freezer full of Buck Rogers and Flash Gordon icy poles, or flyers advertising the double features playing at the drive-in. Of course, most of the milk bars are now gone, superseded in the nineties by the big chain supermarkets.

To alleviate this nostalgia, I spent the better part of this week creating a milk bar illustration from several reference photographs, and populated it with paraphernalia and advertisements from the late 70s/early 80s - from overtly sexual depictions of meat and vegetables deep fried into pastry tubes, to ill-conceived and unfortunately branded children's confectionery. Despite its anachronisms, I find the images of Panini sticker albums and defunct newspaper logos strangely compelling. Maybe you will too. And yes, that is a daybill for Alby Mangels' World Safari II: The Final Adventure.



January 27, 2020

How To Make A Belated Sequel



It has become common practice for filmmakers to strip-mine the past for pre-existing IP with a ready made fan base. This has resulted in a slew of new 'first' sequels to movies from the 80s and 90s – movies that we never thought required a second outing. In 2020, sequels that may or may not be coming your way include:

I love a good dot-point list, so here's another one of belated releases from the past few years:

The fear of alienating those who are unfamiliar with the original has also precipitated the rise of the ‘soft reboot’ - films that are more remake than sequel. These films rarely adhere to a numbering system (for example, Rocky II, Rocky III, Rocky IV) but instead try to hide their numerical position in a larger franchise (Rocky Balboa, Creed). Every so often, though, a belated sequel will appear that proudly flaunts its sequelness. But does that always make for compelling viewing? Let's compare two recent examples...

July 08, 2017

Is Nostalgia Bad?


Nostalgia is defined as a longing for a time or place that no longer exists. This melancholia can manifest itself as a desire to own items from a specific time, or a need to promote and defend elements of that period as 'better than now'. Does that make nostalgia unhealthy, or is it merely a side effect of getting old?

January 07, 2016

1985 vs 2015: Were Films Better 30 Years Ago?


There has been a lot of negative talk recently about the state of the film industry (and by recently I mean the past 15 years). From fanboys and film geeks to skinny jean hipsters and wise old Gen Xs, many, including myself, have lamented the lack of original content in cinemas. It feels like every movie released today is an adaptation, sequel, remake or reboot. “Remember the 80s?” we'd cry, “when film makers told original stories that would spawn franchises and potentially achieve cult status?”

For illustrative purposes only.
We are quick to blame the corporations. If movies have taught us anything, it's to never trust the company stooge. Concerned only with brand recognition and profit margins, corporate bigwigs have been known to frequently treat the film industry like some kind of 'business', callously stifling creativity for the sake of a few dollars. 



What if we were to line up the movies of 1985 and 2015 side by side - would the statistics prove the mid-eighties to really be the halcyon days of cinema? Was 1985 truly the greatest year in film history, or are you looking at the past with nostalgia goggles?