A manic and knife-wielding Glenn Close attacks Michael Douglas in one of Fatal Attraction s most thrilling and disturbing scenes.
In a decade overflowing with tank topwearing action heroes, Bruce Williss John McClane managed to stand out in Die Hard.
Meanwhile, producers such as Don Simpson, Jerry Bruckheimer, and Joel Silver more or less invented the modern action movie, proving that you didnt need to shoot aliens to thrill people, and cemented the high-concept thriller as a cultural mainstay with movies such as Lethal Weapon, Die Hard, and Top Gun. However, the more adult successes of the 1970s lingered, too, allowing for great horror, from The Thing to Fatal Attraction, and modern morality tales, from Wall Street to Scarface .
Over in Chicago, John Hughes almost single-handedly saved the teen movie from irrelevance, while a fallow period of creative stagnancy at Walt Disney Animation led to a new and wider explosion of talent as trained animators sought opportunities elsewhere (Tim Burton, Don Bluth, and John Lasseter struck out from Disney with great success), while a few hardy souls fought to revive the Mouse Houses animation legacy by the decades end with The Little Mermaid and Who Framed Roger Rabbit.
It was a time of change, of innovation, and of something like hope. While many cinema purists will still argue for the supremacy of the art form in the 1970s, with its reputation for taking risks and gritty realism, the wild, populist experimentation of the 1980s has had more effect on what most of us watch now, for good or bad. These big, brash movies changed the world, influencing Hong Kong cinema, Japanese animation, and Bollywood as well as directing and shaping the making of Western movies.
So, this is a celebration of those daysand the movies that still inspire fond memories. But before you read further, a few caveats. Youre bound to disagree with at least some of the movies Ive chosen, especially because Ive focused on mainstream American movies. I faced some difficult choices when trying to balance contemporary success at the time of release, enduring influence, and importance to the genre. I rejected a few movies on the basis that they didnt feel sufficiently 1980s. That meant saying goodbye to favorite period dramas such as The Untouchables and Amadeus ( Chariots of Fire survives almost entirely on the basis of that Vangelis theme). But it also meant turning down movies at each end of the decade that felt more properly part of the 1970s or 1990s. Raging Bull feels like a piece of Scorseses earlier work, while (at the other end of the decade) Bill & Teds Excellent Adventure feels quintessentially 1990s. I knowmost heinous.
The British are coming Chariots of Fire s tale of athletes in search of Olympic glory turned out to be an Academy darling.
The list is also overwhelmingly male, straight, and white. For the most part, there was little other choice in a book designed to cover the most widely loved and influential movies of the decade, because white male leads and creators predominate the movies that were seen to such a huge degree. I have tried to call out the worst cases of sexism, racism, and other prejudices in their plots, but the list itself is a testament to privilege. Hopefully, the selection at least shows that society has moved on since then, although a similar selection of the past ten years would feature many of the same stars and directors.