Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

Bad repro looks

jake431

Practically Family
Messages
518
Location
Chicago, IL
Flitcraft said:
Man, was that John Hillerman withthe monocle?
What's with the A2 jacket with handwarmers? Yikes!
A Samurai in full armor in the jungle??
Wow, what a mish-mash.
What the heck are those scenes from?

Not to mention the bi-swing back on that "A-2", as well as the blood chit.

-Jake
 

Matt Deckard

Man of Action
Messages
10,045
Location
A devout capitalist in Los Angeles CA.
godsave021.jpg
That tales of the gold monkey show actually looks pretty darn cool.

pilot034.jpg
pilot158.jpg
 

Vladimir Berkov

One Too Many
Messages
1,291
Location
Austin, TX
The Great Escape was on last night. Somehow the last time I saw it the movie didn't strike me as horribly inauthentic but seeing it now some of the characters and scenes were almost painful. The funny thing is that some of the characters looked really good while some others (mostly the Germans) looked terrible.
 

GoldenEraFan

One Too Many
Messages
1,164
Location
Brooklyn, New York
In A Christmas Story, Ralphie's mother looks completely out of place. The movie takes place in the late-1930's to early 1940's (even though a postwar Chevrolet is seen) but her hair looks straight out of 1983.
 

AmateisGal

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,126
Location
Nebraska
Hogan's Heroes. Oh boy. The women always look straight out of the 60's - hair, dresses, shoes. Drives me nuts when I watch it.
 

Dr Doran

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,853
Location
Los Angeles
Ugh. Bonnie and Clyde's chubby kid sidekick in the Mia Farrow film. He had long hair in back under his cap. Painful. Just painful. I would post a pic, but it's too horrible to behold.
 

Hugh Beaumont

One of the Regulars
Messages
171
Location
Fort Wayne, Indy-ana
Happy Days except the first season.

The rest was horrible, especially Potsy.

I think Hollywood does a terrible job portraying the 50's. They end up making everyone look like a caricature.
 

flat-top

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,772
Location
Palookaville, NY
Hugh Beaumont said:
Happy Days except the first season.

The rest was horrible, especially Potsy.

I think Hollywood does a terrible job portraying the 50's. They end up making everyone look like a caricature.
This doesn't look 50's to you?:
Scott_Baio_320x240.jpg

:eek:
 

Fletch

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,865
Location
Iowa - The Land That Stuff Forgot
Folks, bad repro looks occur because they work. They save money, they keep producers happy, and in many cases, they keep the audience happy, because they see what is familiar plus a little "flavor" of a period.

We are not the British, who are an ancient civilization and can afford to be anoraks and wallies about any number of things. We are a young country that remakes everything in the image of Now. It is part of who we are, and it has done us much good, even as it limits us.

(Great big hint: The internet, the web, and the electronic bulletin board were not invented by the kind of civilization that values the past.)

Here only obsessive specialists care, and to most folks, we are party poopers - more of a pain than the bad styling.

Does anyone here really want to be a party pooper? And what can we do about it?
 

Elaina

One Too Many
This is why I haven't posted pictures of me in vintage on here, because I am not a specialist, and I wear things I like versus being authentic, and don't always worry about it being right on target, and with several comments made about bad hair on websites, forget it. I realize it's shows, but I also know that I'd be blasted for the 30s suit and the 70s shirt and shoes and the 50s hair.

I do enjoy all of you tho.:D
 

Gene

Practically Family
Messages
963
Location
New Orleans, La.
This is an interesting question that I always wondered about. Will the period films of today look just as bad as some of these 70's movies in about 30 years? It just seems like in our modern eyes, it's okay to have a character's hair a little more modern than period, because we don't really notice. I say that because we don't have any distance from it yet.

Maybe to those guys in the 70's, it looked perfectly normal because that's what was all around them (i.e. feathered hair). Films like "The Notebook" and "Benjamin Button" and others with these heartthrob actors seem to all be a little "modernized."
 

Hugh Beaumont

One of the Regulars
Messages
171
Location
Fort Wayne, Indy-ana
All I can say is thank God for John Hughes.

When the 80's become nostalgic (it already has for many), John Hughes will be credited for capturing it exactly the way it happened and looked.

No one can do it better than he did.
 

Dr Doran

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,853
Location
Los Angeles
Gene said:
This is an interesting question that I always wondered about. Will the period films of today look just as bad as some of these 70's movies in about 30 years? It just seems like in our modern eyes, it's okay to have a character's hair a little more modern than period, because we don't really notice. I say that because we don't have any distance from it yet.

Maybe to those guys in the 70's, it looked perfectly normal because that's what was all around them (i.e. feathered hair). Films like "The Notebook" and "Benjamin Button" and others with these heartthrob actors seem to all be a little "modernized."

All true and well-thought out; but it seems to me that period films have become more accurate as time has gone by. More attention. (It still bugs me how few hats were worn in L.A. Confidential, though.)
 

YETI

A-List Customer
Messages
439
Location
Bay Area, CA
I guess the only ones who take issue with those discrepancies are folks who collect vintage. I'd rather appreciate the ones who make that extra effort to stay true to form. Devil In A Blue Dress, Tucker: The Man And His Dream , and The 2 Jakes come to mind. I can't think of any t.v. shows. However, on Discovery there was a show about an incident involving numerous shark attacks off the Jersey shore in 1916. The re-enactments looked quite convincing as far as the attire. Then again, I'm no expert in Edwardian era fashion.
 

ShoreRoadLady

Practically Family
AmateisGal said:
Hogan's Heroes. Oh boy. The women always look straight out of the 60's - hair, dresses, shoes. Drives me nuts when I watch it.

I love that show, but it's a given that I'll make a comment on one of the totally '60s outfits at least once per episode! However, I think the actresses had to supply their own wardrobes, so at least I can't blame the costumer. ;)
 

GoldenEraFan

One Too Many
Messages
1,164
Location
Brooklyn, New York
YETI said:
I guess the only ones who take issue with those discrepancies are folks who collect vintage. I'd rather appreciate the ones who make that extra effort to stay true to form. Devil In A Blue Dress, Tucker: The Man And His Dream , and The 2 Jakes come to mind. I can't think of any t.v. shows. However, on Discovery there was a show about an incident involving numerous shark attacks off the Jersey shore in 1916. The re-enactments looked quite convincing as far as the attire. Then again, I'm no expert in Edwardian era fashion.

The show Mad Men is probably the most period correct TV show ever made. I heard the creator strives to get everything period correct. I haven't seen anything in the show that was period incorrect. It's the best show on TV in my opinion. Another example of bad repro looks was the TV show Quantum Leap. It's understandable that Scott Bakula had long hair because the people he leaped into looked the same to everyone else. But in certain episodes that took place in the '50s I noticed some men and women sported '80s-'90s haircuts.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
107,316
Messages
3,033,900
Members
52,770
Latest member
green_entrails
Top