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Koshmarov's avatar

"I thought that there would always be a steady flow of cinema, music, fashion and fiction, which were absolutely central to life until a decade or two ago."

Some trivialities:

- Absurd as it may sound, one of the pleasures I derived from watching old films as a lad was the ability to *date* a picture by its mise-en-scène; the clothes the actors wore, the cars they drove, lighting, camera angles, etc. Without any prior knowledge, one can easily discern that e.g. VERTIGO is late 1950s and THE FRIENDS OF EDDIE COYLE is mid-1970s. I first experienced severe aesthetic dissonance around this issue when I saw L.A. CONFIDENTIAL (1997); the set dressing is impeccably early 1950s, but the cinematography and pacing are echt 1990s.

- Re fashion: The male business suit has remained utterly static for 20 years. Double-breasted jackets made a brief comeback in the 1990s and three-buttons around the turn of the century, but both have since vanished from the racks. The baroque trends of the 1970s -- wide lapels and flared trouser cuffs -- are oft-mocked, but they were at least distinctive.

- If shown a random scene from a contemporaneously set Hollywood film with which I have no prior familiarity, I will be hard pressed to identify it as being from any particular year between 2000 and 2020. There's a flat nullity to mass popular culture now, a sense of being stuck in time, recycling over innovation.

- It's not as if period costume drama ever fell out of fashion, exactly, but the subgenre now seems to dominate especially longform television (e.g. MAD MEN and its successors/imitators). It may be that it's foisted on the viewing public for reasons unknown, but it seems possible also that people are desperate to see anything different from what is around them, something with a concrete sense of time and place.

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Mark Alastor's avatar

Interesting thoughts here- I would say there's always good books, music and video being made somewhere, but it's both buried in subcultures and ubiquitous at the same time, making it really hard to sift through all the crap. And even subcultures (or especially them in some cases) are poisoned by politics and ideology as well, if not in the art then at least in the conversations and writing that surrounds it. It's all so suffocating

And there's definitely something to permanence that gives you the space to make art, especially music. When I was in high school, having a band was easy, we were all stuck together! But then college and the idea we all had to disperse as far away from our hometowns as possible just threw wrenches into all that. It's only been in the last couple years being settled down and lucky enough to have like-minded friends nearby that I've been able to pick that up again. Of course being a one-man solo project is easier than ever...but that's so much less fun

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