My access point to the '70s is films from that time, and they all have that paranoiac quality.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
The '50s and the '70s are sort of similar in that they're both times of major paranoia in America.
I am a big fan of movies from the '70s.
Experimental film by the '70s had become much more mainstream after 'Bonnie and Clyde' and stuff in the late '60s, when you were seeing bigger movies where people were exploring the medium a lot more.
Strange how paranoia can link up with reality now and then.
A lot of these types of films - the vigilante or revenge drama - were so popular in the '70s because there was a feeling in the culture of loss of control.
I did love horror films from the '70s and '80s. That was my sweet spot.
I don't think a movie today that captured all the things that we did in the seventies could come close, because it's like asking to recreate the seventies and the audience sensibilities and that's impossible.
'Paranoia' was pretty awesome because it was the cast of 'Air Force One,' Gary Oldman and Harrison Ford back together, pitted against each other again, so that was pretty neat.
Everyone loves the seventies because that's when movies were character-based, and you saw great characters and you saw very interesting filmmaking. There are interesting movies being made now, but it's harder and harder to make them.
I know what I miss as a cinemagoer is that balance of films that actually scare me; they're so few and far between.
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