MovieChat Forums > Neon City (1992) Discussion > a soft spot in my heart for movies like ...

a soft spot in my heart for movies like this


ok ok, it's low budget, it's predictable and it's pretty much a clone of the road warrior, but for some reason i have a soft spot for these late 80s/early 90s straight-to-video b movies. neon city,steel dawn, american cyborg/steel warrior. granted none of these movies are exactly epic film making, but i still have a soft spot for them, i kinda thought i was the only one for the longest time, anyone else here feel the same? or have any others to recomend of the same type?

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[deleted]

yeah, same here, i wish it could finally come out on dvd

i made a dvd-r of it from my vhs tape but it's still vhs quality unfortunitly

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Although movies like this are kind of suited to video tapes. They're the kind you maybe used to rent on the weekend in small local video rental places, before the big chains like Blockbuster came along. Then you would return it in the drop box. All very 80s!

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Count me in for a DVD sale if it ever gets released. I love this movie.

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[deleted]

Yeah, it is kind of a Road Warrior rip-off, but it sure is a fun flick. Any movie with Michael Ironside nekkid in a hot tub is OK by me.



"I prefer to remember things my own way ... not necessarily the way they happened."

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On another message board I mentioned how I found the tape for this movie at a video rental store that was going out of business, but I would definitly replace with a DVD if it ever came out

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I totally feel the same. First post-apocalyptic movie I saw was probably HARDWARE (alas M.A.R.K.13, by Richard Stanley). The imagination of a post-apocalyptic future was absolutly new to me. That 'scenario' never came to me, it was exciting in an extremly thrilling and depressing way. Same with CYBORG. I was a kid then, so when the family was slaughtered without some law system handling this, it was like the worst horror imagination that later some real horror movies delivered. The Thing and such.

There's cool literature around with the same themes and a B-movie-vibe.

'48 by James Herbert
blood virus bomb attack during WW2, one survivor still lives in dead London, being pursued periodically by the Nazis that want his immune blood. Meets up with other survivors and stuff. Full of action in the beginning, some pessimistic world views and relationships in the middle and a great explosive showdown right out of a cheap action movie. Though very well written, I feel.

The Afterblight Chronicles by various authors.
The Cull virus has wiped out civilisation, armies and cults now roam the dead lands. Very gory, lotsa action, cool one-liners, and still interesting troughtout. The series is still growing. Go google "Abaddon"

Almost any stuff by Brian Keene (Though I'm no fan of his)

There's more books without the b-movie-vibe, which come along much more thoughtful or stylish:

SWAN SONG by Robert MacCammon
before and after Day X. MadMax-style, armies lead by crazies kill and recruit etc. A little supernatural, but it's brutal, thrilling entertainment, very sad also in some spots. Like a real Hollywood flick with all the emotions it needs. Very well written and woven together.

THE ROAD by McCormac
Very lyrical and artsy. I love it. Bleak and pretty hopeless. More of a "what do you do when all's dead and lost?". More realistic about everyday survival and land-roaming, food-searching and all.

MALEVIL by Robert Merle
An old castle was renovated by a french ex-teacher who survives armageddon with some friend who all lost family and friends in the nearby town. They have to re-organize themselves in the castle and build a real fort over the years. It's a local story, takes place mainly in the castle and the nearby, burnt lands as well as in the ruins of a town with some few survivors that are opressed by a religious fanatic. Very depressing story, especially regarding the ending...

ALAS, BABYLON by ehm... Frank something...
Well, not a 'brutal' story. This is more about how some survivors in one of the few 'save zones' get along whilst electricity and a lot of external sources are cut down and the rivers waters are poisoned. It's still a dark tale, but very nice too.

POSTMAN by Niven
The movie is a different thing than the book. I liked it. Not my favorite, but still a good read. Has a good depressing over-tone.



"D-E-S-T-R-O-Y : E-V-E-R-Y-T-H-I-N-G"

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Of COURSE there are other people out here who enjoy the straight-to-video and B-movies, especially anything the label "post apocalyptic" could be applied to. I grew up in the 70s/80s, and while there wasn't much I appreciate about the 80s, crappy futuristic movies are one thing I do love. Even if they came out in the 90s. Isn't it great how the internet brings like-thinking people together? LOL...see you at the next sci-fi con!

I like this movie because Ironside actually plays a HERO, not the devious BAD GUY he is almost constantly pigeonholed as. Although he does play a great bad guy...I especially love him as "Revok" in Scanners!

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Actually, this movie is more a clone of the 1939 John Wayne classic "Stagecoach", right down to much of the plot elements and to the characters. One could even argue that the Mad Max pictures themselves (especially "Road Warrior") are derivatives of "Stagecoach".

While not in the league of "Stagecoach", this movie was thoroughly enjoyable. The script was a cut or two above the usual for this genre, mainly because it was derived from "Stagecoach". The post-apocalyptic world was adequately explained and done (as long as you didn't demand too much) and I got a kick that the cause of the apocalypse was the hole in the ozone layer -- the bogeyman of the day -- and not global warming as it would be today. Where it fell down was in the acting of some of the supporting cast.

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Also try Radioactive Dreams it's a cool 80's movie .

After an atomic war Phillip Hammer and Marlowe Chandler have spent 15 years on their own in an bunker, stuffed with junk from the 40s and old detective novels. Now, 19 years old, they leave their shelter to find a world full of mutants, freaks and cannibals. They become famous detectives in the struggle for the two keys that could fire the last nuclear weapon.

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Hop on Wikipedia and find the list of apocalyptic future movies... Then buy them on DVD/VHS off Amazon and eBay. That's what I did!!
1970s-1990s is a good period.

Check out also the Sci-Fi movie lists. There's a lot of crossover and many have plot synopses available.

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Well, I have a big soft spot in my heart for THIS movie, which I think stands out somewhat from the pack in some ways.

Ozy

And I stood where I did be; for there was no more use to run; And again I lookt with my hope gone.

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