Site icon Caught in the Act

1980s Movies Ripe for Rediscovery

“The Outsiders” isn’t the first (or second or third) title that usually comes to mind when the subject of films directed by Francis Ford Coppola is mentioned.

Everything Coppola has made that isn’t “The Godfather,” “The Godfather Part II” or “Apocalypse Now will find little space left in a limelight shared with those giants.

The Outsiders,” though, is a worthy entry in Coppola’s catalog. It bears his one-of-a-kind visual style, albeit in a film markedly smaller than his 1970s masterpieces. The same could be said of “Rumble Fish,” which Coppola filmed back-to-back with “The Outsiders” and which featured much of the same cast and crew. Both films were based on novels by S.E. Hinton.

The Tony®-winning musical The Outsiders will be presented Dec. 27-Jan. 4 in Morsani Hall. For tickets and more information, click here.

The 1980s saw studios focusing on blockbusters, which took away dollars and attention from any film not expected to set box-office records.

However, the concurrent rise in home video sales as well as premium cable channels such as HBO forged a new trail that brought independent, foreign and arthouse films – as well as movies the major studios hung out to dry – to viewers, minus the movie theater.

A lot of the best underrated 1980s movies found their audiences this way.“E.T.,” “Back to the Future” and “Top Gun” may be the most familiar film titles of that decade, but much was going on just a bit outside the spotlight.

If you haven’t seen these, see them. If you have, tell someone who hasn’t:

Exit mobile version