How many of you were actually around in 1986?
-
andersb-36022 — 9 years ago(May 09, 2016 12:52 PM)
I turned 13 over the summer it was released and was quite affected by the movie. I remember leaving the innocence of elementary school behind to start junior high that fall and what Dreyfus said in the movie was so true: "Friends come in and out of your life like busboys in a restaurant". Some of the people I was close to in elementary school (including my best friend at the time) became just another face in the hallway once I moved on to 7th grade.
-
TheArtfulDetective — 9 years ago(August 22, 2016 03:46 PM)
I also was about their age when the movie came out so it had a similarly large impact on me too. I remember thinking back then how I would never lose touch with my group of friends at the time and that happened with all of them!
"Yeah, well, you know, that's just, like, your opinion, man." -
daverindone — 9 years ago(January 04, 2017 12:43 PM)
I was 18ish when my gf (now wife of 27 years) saw it. I remember that line from the book and the movie, it stays with you. I got an email about an hour ago from a guy I met in Jr. High (1980) and it was as if nothing changed. We still call each other stupid nicknames and I asked him when middle age is suppose to kick in.
-
GirlwonderReturns — 9 years ago(May 09, 2016 03:21 PM)
I'm close in age to all four of the leads (younger than Phoenix, Feldman and Wheaton, older than O'Connell). For some reason I didn't see it in the theater, but my friends and I rented it for a sleepover when it first came out and we all dreamboated out on River. (We loved the movie too, we weren't purely hormonal.) Although my childhood happened almost 30 years after the time period in the movie, it wasn't a whole lot different - I grew up in a small town (though only an hour north of New York City) and we used to explore the woods for hours on end and hang out way past dark. Parents rarely checked up on us as long as they had some idea where we were - and we all made it to adulthood alive. It's a shame things are so different now, I had a great childhood in the sense of how my friends and I spent our time.
The further a society drifts from the truth, the more it will hate those that speak it. -
sonofbeach-sheet — 9 years ago(May 12, 2016 07:57 PM)
ACTUALLY around? 32 is the median age in America and this came out almost 30 years ago. Late summer to be exact that I remember. I was 18. I liked it, but disappointed that Richard Dreyfuss and John Cusack barely appeared and almost everyone else was an unknown at the time.
-
Burning_Sosobra — 9 years ago(May 25, 2016 06:22 PM)
32 is the median age eh? That's something, I'm 32 myself. Yeah I was only about 3 when this film came out. Suffice it to say I didn't see it until a few years after it came out.
"Oh my God! You is becoming a werewilf!" -Werewolf -
TheArtfulDetective — 9 years ago(August 22, 2016 03:53 PM)
Well said. My friends and I were about their age too and we also watched it at a sleep over while hearting over River - and probably fighting over which one of us would be his girlfriend if given the opportunity. This movie brings nostalgia in many ways.
"Yeah, well, you know, that's just, like, your opinion, man." -
TwoThousandOneMark — 9 years ago(June 15, 2016 07:03 PM)
I was probably around 8yrs old when I first saw it. It was hilarious, to see boys curse so much for kicks.
It wasn't until about 10yrs later when I truly lost myself in its greatness.
top 50 http://www.imdb.com/list/ls056413299/ -
doug1967_1 — 9 years ago(July 11, 2016 04:52 PM)
I was nineteen when the film hit theaters and saw it when it went into wide release. Big Stephen King fan and the reviews of the film were all stellar. It was a matinee show and, unfortunately, some idiot kid in the back of the theater kept "mock crying" whenever someone wept on screen. Just making fun of the film for no other reason than for being a creep.
This little jerk, who has undoubtedly forgotten all about his boorish behavior, totally spoiled the experience of what was (and still is) an exceptional movie.
Sadly after all these years I still remember this wanker kid and his immature conduct affecting the experience of seeing this.
Thanks a lot, d***head. -
restlessminds — 9 years ago(July 28, 2016 05:00 AM)
I was 7 at the time and at some point, my parents stopped carrying about me watching rated R movies. Although in retrospect, it's funny how bad movies like Robocop looked. Nevertheless, The 80's are a nostalgic decade for me, especially the music. I just hated big hair rock bands. I mostly listened to Pop and R&B. The Cure was to weird for me at the time, but I eventually grew out of that closed mindset that I had. New Order was good, but I never had any of their albums on cassette tape, or vinyl. My Bloody Valentine, The Pixies, now those are bands that I didn't appreciate until I learned that my favorite bands in the 90's looked up to them. As for VHS, my family preferred Betamax. We didn't switchover until we had to. You know, as convenient as things have become, I miss renting movies, & going to the record store. Searching through the endless shelves of cassette tapes. Those were the good old days.
-
DaxTony — 9 years ago(July 29, 2016 06:48 AM)
Not me. I came around slightly afterwards. I saw this movie on TV and instantly fell in love with it. My aunt actually bought me the movie on DVD several years after I saw it, and it remains to this day as my favorite film of all time.