90s Movie Review: Blank Check

90s moviesIt’s easy to gaze into the past and see things that you used to love as a child and to cherish them into adulthood because of your previous association and affection for them, but sometimes looking backwards in time through rose colored glasses doesn’t work. Maybe there are just some pieces of consumable media that, for whatever reason, you loved as a kid, but you grow up and realize that they’re absolute trash. Disney’s Blank Check is a perfect example of this duality of taste.

Blank Check, at its most stripped-down definition, is a film about a 12-year-old boy named Preston is given a blank check after his bike is destroyed. After doing the good, honest thing and forging the check to read $1,000,000, Preston has a ball spending the money until the gangsters he ripped off come looking for him.

However, what seems like a somewhat original premise is executed in the most paint-by-numbers, obscenely trite way onscreen.

The characters make absolutely no sense and their motivations are so muddled. Preston’s dad, for instance, is incredibly hard on the boy for not being an entrepreneur at 12 years old. His two older, meathead brothers have started their own business, but they don’t even know how to use a computer. Preston’s father lays on plenty of guilt for his lack of business savvy because, y’know, 12 year olds should be trading on Wall Street and shit.

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90s Movie Review: Space Jam

90s moviesThroughout the 90s and most of his career, Michael Jordan was (and continues to be) an icon of epic proportions. From the Olympic dream team to his success as a Chicago Bull to his endless merchandising, MJ was born to be a worldwide superstar. His influence knew no bounds and, after tapping out seemingly ever other avenue of revenue, he crossed over into the cartoon realm with his starring role in Warner Brothers’ very own cash cow crossover, Space Jam.

90s moviesSpace Jam is, by all accounts, a fictional retelling of Jordan’s retirement and subsequent reprisal of his role in the NBA. Released in 1996, the film utilizes the famous Looney Tunes characters like Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Wile E Coyote, and a vast array of other memorable cartoon characters to give an alternate reason for Jordan’s return to basketball.

A success in merchandising opportunity, video game adaptations, as well as box office sales, the film grossed over $230 million worldwide.

90s moviesOn a faraway planet, a group of aliens called the Nerdlucks must answer to their boss Mr. Swackhammer regarding the failure of his amusement park, Moron Mountain. As a means of increasing sales and exposure for his faltering investment, Mr. Swackhammer comes up with the brilliant idea of abducting the Looney Tunes to serve as a brand new attraction at Moron Mountain.

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90s Movie Review: American History X

90s moviesIn the 90s as well as today, racism is seen as a social evil and a plague upon society. Agreed upon almost universally, racial prejudice is a very, very bad thing. However, it exists and it deserves to be talked about, if only for the sake of finding a way to work through it and move forward. It’s not often that an intolerant, violent individual is studied and analyzed objectively, especially in the medium of film. Tony Kaye’s American History X takes a look at Neo-nazism in Venice Beach, California and pulls no punches when it comes to exposing both sides of the issue.

90s moviesDisturbing in its grit and realness, American History X tells the story of Derek Vinyard, one of the most respected members of the Venice Beach White Supremacist movement. If you’re not a white Protestant, he has issue with you. At the top of the hierarchy, Derek’s influence spreads to his surrounding cohorts as well as his younger brother, Danny. His lover, Stacey, and his fat friend, Seth, are his other closest companions. Derek’s own mother, Doris, is one of the only voices speaking against her son’s fervent racial hatred and fears for his safety as well as his soul.

After an attempted break-in and car theft, a group of black youths are confronted with Derek’s anger in the form of deadly force. In one of the most disturbing scenes in film history, Derek stomps one of the assailant’s jaws on the curb in front of his house. As a result of his unnecessary force, he ends up serving a three year prison sentence.

90s moviesWhile serving time, Derek is betrayed by a white supremacist prison gang and ends up being brutally raped while showering. Afterward, Derek is visited by the principal of his old high school. With the principal serving as a bit of moral guidance, Derek begins to learn slowly from his new mentor. Also, within the walls of the prison laundry room, Derek is forced to work alongside a black man who teaches him some harsh truths about the other side of the racial coin. Emerging from his jail stint with a changed attitude and the desire to spread his new message, he finds that changing people’s minds is not as easy as it seems.

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90s Movie Review: My Girl

My home state of Pennsylvania is not featured terribly often as the setting for Hollywood films. However quaint, hick-ish, and boondocky the rest of the state may be, I hold much love for Philadelphia and the surrounding suburbs. Frankly, the rest of the state can go fuck itself with a rusty pair of toenail clippers.

Anyway, while Pennsylvania may not provide the most sought-after areas for exciting, hundred million dollar films, it gives filmmakers a humble, hometown feel that works well in certain contexts.

90s moviesSet in Madison, Pennsylvania in the summer of 1972, My Girl is a film about growing up and coming to terms with death. Vada Sultenfuss is an atypical 11 year old girl. Her only friend is an allergic-to-everything geek named Thomas and her father, Harry, is a socially inept funeral director and widower.

90s moviesBecause the Sultenfuss residence doubles as a funeral parlor, Vada is faced with death and its mysteries from a very young age. On top of the funeral stuff, Vada is also dealing with the guilt of her mother’s death during her childbirth.

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A 90s Movies.net Editorial

90s moviesSince the creation of 90s Movies.net, the goal of the site has been to entertain and elicit the sentiment associated with all things pop culture from the forgotten decade. It’s important to recapture that essence to combat the growing apathy and cynicism regarding our current state of existence.

The 90s always had an overwhelming feeling of intangible perfection. This was a decade of grunge rock, slick two-timing presidents, unforgettable sitcoms, colorful and nutritionally-devoid snack foods, and endless amounts of fun. Those days, before cell phones and social networking, were part of the last generation of children who discovered and appreciated life on their own terms.

90s movies When you heard a dirty word on the schoolyard, in movie theaters, or from your parents, you didn’t go home and google it to find out what it meant. You were forced to ask older kids, older siblings, or creepy homeless men outside of the local 7-11 what it meant. This overabundance of readily-available information is a detriment to society.

90s moviesKids don’t go outside anymore. As a child, I almost never spent the days indoors. Our summers were filled with neighborhood-wide games of manhunt and I knew every backyard on my street as if it were my own. Kids were allowed to be kids. I’d only come back inside for lunch, dinner, and when 9 o’clock rolled around.

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