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21 April 2013

Days of Wonder

It was the Saturday morning routine. We would go with our mother to the local shopping centre to visit the library; dropping off old books and picking out a few new ones for the week ahead. With our intellectual needs met, my brother and I got left in the video store whilst mam went grocery shopping. It was one of the few places we were ever allowed be on our own. That usually gave us a good 45 minutes to gaze at the seemingly endless walls of glorious VHS tapes. 45 minutes never seemed like long enough, though. Especially as Saturday was the one night of the week that our folks went out, meaning we had to pick out not one, but two videos to keep us entertained for the late afternoon and evening. The poor babysitter.



The 80's was an interesting decade for young, aspiring film buffs, especially if you were under the age of 12. As we had no access to film reviews, you had three ways of finding out what to rent. One; word of mouth from your school friends. This was always a fairly reliable source; we were all action and comedy junkies, whatever had the most explosions/killings/laughs got a guaranteed rental. Two; the trailers you saw on last weeks videotape. (remember when you actually enjoyed watching the trailers before your film started?) The more trailers before the film, the better. And three; by relying on the box art to sell the film to you. The latter was probably the most common method for sleuthing out our evenings viewing.  The wilder and more imaginative the artwork, the more likely you were to pick the film up. Having an major star like Steve Martin in the film was only an added bonus. And being a curious 9 year old, it was no surprise I was drawn to the more lurid looking teenage comedy and horror boxes. Who could resist the charms of such beauty?



Sadly for me, my mother was quite well aware of what was contained within these tapes. Sometimes she slipped up and we got through a 15 Cert if it didn't look too tawdry. Or sometimes we lucked out completely and my clueless father brought us to the video store instead, resulting in a copy of Aliens or something as equally unsuitable coming home with us. But even if we couldn't always get the ones we wanted, the artwork always stuck in my head, landing somewhere on that invisible list of films that I would continuously go back to when I was a bit older and allowed rent whatever I wanted. Those hours spent in front of the video shelves turned me into the horror junkie I was to eventually become in my early teens, as they were the most taboo ones for my folks to allow us to rent. Saying that though, I probably had enough nightmares as it was with the fantasy films I was watching; they REALLY don't make them like they used to. Kids have it too easy these days.


Horror and comedy tapes became a great past time for me and some of my friends in the early 90's. We had our own (limited) cash, so we were able to rent 2 or 3 tapes in the one night if we wanted to. It was during the peak of Xtra Vision and the death of the independent video store, but to us, it meant 50p for an old rental! Somehow, all the oldies we had wanted to see were still there on the shelves, though some were moving dangerously close to the bargain bin. Some of those films never left the bargain bin, and have sadly never made it to DVD.


These days, you walk into a video store and you are lucky to be able to find any films to rent. Xtra Vision, Chartbuster, and Blockbuster have shrunk away due to the rise in downloading and online streaming. Those that remain deal mainly in current releases, video game rental and mobile phone sales. If I want a film review, I just go online. There are hundreds of free access websites for reviews and previews, without having to go anywhere to stare at the boxes. Not that you would want to anyway; the art of film poster design is as dead as VHS itself.


But hey, times have changed, and in many ways, for the better. We no longer watch our entertainment on 21" screens. Digital technology is affordable, meaning I can pick up copies of Porkys II or Return of the Living Dead, in the proper aspect ratio, fully remastered, sometimes with 5.1 surround sound (!!!) for only a few quid. I would definitely take that over pan-and-scan with poor tracking any day. I guess what I miss most is that element of wonder. That childhood excitement about seeing a film. I still get it when I'm reminded of an old VHS cover, or that rare moment when you see Chevy Chase pop up on TV.

I look forward to re-living some of those moments on this blog. Feel free to stop and stare at the boxes; take as long as you need. Old releases are only 50p for two nights. Just make sure you bring them back on time or you will be fined. And always, ALWAYS, rewind your damned videotapes.

5 comments:

  1. Don't forget the movies you taped off the TV just cause of the name, you'd watch them endlessly even if for whatever reason you didnt start recording until 15 minutes minutes in. Remember I rewatched this movie called Megaforce non-stop. Has a great cheesy line in it "Remember, the good guys always win - even in the eighties! "

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  2. Oh don't worry, I didn't forget! That's a post for another day. And sure all those heavily edited versions of films we would have tapped of UTV, with all the swears edited out :-)

    Believe it or not, I was only shown some clips from Megaforce recently, never seen it before. The flying bike scene! But the line you mentioned above is what reminded me.

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  3. Flying bike scene was awesome. Would love to watch it again! Looking forward to the next post.

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  4. Thanks for coming by my blog - I like the looks of yours! I will be working my way through the posts in the coming weeks. I rented my first tapes on BETA from a combination TV/stereo store in my small town in Illinois. You had to put down a $50 deposit each time you rented - my parents made out a check which the store would hold but not cash, returning it when I brought the tape back safe and sound. I would have been 12 or 13 years old. Xanadu, Laserblast, and Halloween were the first three I rented. (One at a time, as there would have had to have been a $50 check written for each). I saw the rise of malls and videostores in my life - I truly never would have believed I would still be around and see their downfall.

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  5. Thanks Craig, am loving yours at the moment, so much stuff for me to dig through there. Thanks for sharing your memories on BETA, it was a format I never saw growing up, I just don't think it was very popular in Ireland. Although one of my friends recently found a BETAMAX player, with a collection of films including a few blue titles. It belonged to his uncle, apparently. I might see if he will lend me it so I can try it out myself.

    Wow, $50 for just a deposit, that's a fortune in old money! Three interesting titles to go with, too. It is sad to see the loss on videostores, nothing can replace that feeling of losing time walking through the shelves. DVD just doesn't feel the same, nor do retail outlets anymore. My last great memories of having that sense of awe in a retail store was when we had a two story Virgin Megastore in Dublin, in the mid-to-late 90's. They had some great horror films there, stuff I had never heard of before. I could spend hours browsing titles before dropping my hard-earned 10 pounds on a tape.

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