the nightclub… too '80s' for 1992?
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eddieinportland — 12 years ago(October 14, 2013 05:34 PM)
Grunge music was on the rise. But back in the early 90's, hair bands were still being hired to perform in nightclubs. Nightclubs would hire hair bands because they knew who they were. At the start of grunge, outside of Nirvana and Pearl Jam. Nobody knew one grunge band from another.
My problem with the nightclub was they had a great bar with rock music playing. And in another part of the club, it was a high end restaurant. Maybe that part of the club was the VIP section. -
travinitrav — 12 years ago(March 03, 2014 01:53 PM)
The strung up babies and barbed wire and such was more 90's than 80's.
My problem is its 10 bucks to get in, which would have been relatively expensive cover at the time, even in a big city club, and it connects to a real classy restaurant next door. But plenty of times I saw people running walking around in jeans and plain cotton sweatshirts. Any club that thinks its that exclusive would probably not let in bluejeans and sweatshirts. -
Herreken — 11 years ago(April 10, 2014 08:56 AM)
Good point, DesperateHouseboy. I thought it looked very "90s" actually. It had that blend of late 80s & early 90s like you said.
The thing I thought was weird about it waswell, did they really have huge rock clubs like that back then? Maybe it's a stupid question but I was a teenager in the mid to late 1990s and pop & hip hop were the biggest things. It's hard for me to imagine rock being popular enough for a huge club like in this movie.
DISPLAY thy breasts, my Julia! -
hurricanehorton — 11 years ago(January 20, 2015 01:01 AM)
Am I the only one who thinks the fact that they had babies on the wall with barbed wire round them was the weirdest bit?
If I went into a club and they had that, my first thought wouldn't be; "My god, the music they're playing is a few years old."
