{"id":757997,"date":"2020-04-24T20:11:39","date_gmt":"2020-04-24T17:11:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/?p=757997"},"modified":"2020-04-24T20:11:39","modified_gmt":"2020-04-24T17:11:39","slug":"the-21-best-80s-movies-to-rewatch-now","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/?p=757997","title":{"rendered":"The 21 Best \u201980s Movies to Rewatch Now"},"content":{"rendered":"<article class=\"article main-content\" lang=\"en-US\">\n<div class=\"ArticlePageLedeBackground-JMVDp bIwRjk\">\n<header class=\"ContentHeaderWrapper-cqMZiN dpFFBS content-header article__content-header\">\n<div data-testid=\"ContentHeaderContainer\" class=\"ContentHeaderContainer-cMdHiZ kudXzI\">\n<div class=\"ContentHeaderHedAccreditationWrapper-WaWBW jedkOX\">\n<div class=\"ContentHeaderTitleBlockWrapper-cyIGwg cJEEZu standard\" data-testid=\"ContentHeaderTitleBlockWrapper\">\n<div data-testid=\"ContentHeaderRubric\" class=\"ContentHeaderRubricBlock-aIcNK crdqPy\">\n<div data-testid=\"ContentHeaderRubricDateBlock\" class=\"ContentHeaderRubricDateBlock-kvxmSu hgtOGu\">\n<div class=\"RubricWrapper-dZIqzO Bbbvv rubric ContentHeaderRubricContainer-fiPRfk fRUoUB\"><span class=\"RubricName-gkORYq fCauaT rubric__name\">TV &amp; Movies<\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<h1 data-testid=\"ContentHeaderHed\" class=\"BaseWrap-sc-gzmcOU BaseText-eqOrNE ContentHeaderHed-SVoJX deqABF hRonzj ieGCQS\">The 21 Best \u201980s Movies to Rewatch Now<\/h1>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"ContentHeaderAccreditation-fcyiw eapNIS content-header__accreditation\" data-testid=\"ContentHeaderAccreditation\">\n<div class=\"ContentHeaderByline-jXtKQj ewRfIW\">\n<div class=\"ContentHeaderBylineContent-dkwwFS AGKSo\">\n<div data-testid=\"BylinesWrapper\" class=\"BylinesWrapper-vmGrt cZzmZD bylines ContentHeaderBylines-cTXqro ljGzhW\"><span class=\"BylineWrapper-jRoBEm jCAOou byline bylines__byline\" data-testid=\"BylineWrapper\"><span class=\"BylineNamesWrapper-jrdaOa fXeqQN\"><span data-testid=\"BylineName\" class=\"BylineName-kqTBDS cTWJYW byline__name\"><span class=\"BaseWrap-sc-gzmcOU BaseText-eqOrNE BylinePreamble-itSxDZ deqABF kOfzTl jcgMlx byline__preamble\">By <\/span>John Ortved<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/div>\n<p>November 28, 2025<\/p><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"ContentHeaderLeadAsset-hVxhYG jufnla lead-asset ContentHeaderLeadAssetWrapper-gQBTSl kHFqoV lead-asset--width-fullbleed\" data-testid=\"ContentHeaderLeadAsset\">\n<figure class=\"ContentHeaderLeadAssetContent-kyKlgP CBMQs\">\n<div class=\"ContentHeaderLeadAssetContentMedia-bwiUDr keSRCn lead-asset__content__photo\"><span class=\"SpanWrapper-zEXFr koTknX responsive-asset ContentHeaderResponsiveAsset-cgZUtS coCHna\"><\/p>\n<div data-testid=\"aspect-ratio-container\" class=\"AspectRatioContainer-bEozCe koFDOd\">\n<div class=\"aspect-ratio--overlay-container\"><source media=\"(max-width: 767px)\" srcset=\"https:\/\/assets.vogue.com\/photos\/6928b3473aeb55a4e0ebd5a3\/master\/w_120,c_limit\/MCDDIDA_VE003.jpg 120w, https:\/\/assets.vogue.com\/photos\/6928b3473aeb55a4e0ebd5a3\/master\/w_240,c_limit\/MCDDIDA_VE003.jpg 240w, https:\/\/assets.vogue.com\/photos\/6928b3473aeb55a4e0ebd5a3\/master\/w_320,c_limit\/MCDDIDA_VE003.jpg 320w, https:\/\/assets.vogue.com\/photos\/6928b3473aeb55a4e0ebd5a3\/master\/w_640,c_limit\/MCDDIDA_VE003.jpg 640w, https:\/\/assets.vogue.com\/photos\/6928b3473aeb55a4e0ebd5a3\/master\/w_960,c_limit\/MCDDIDA_VE003.jpg 960w\" sizes=\"100vw\" \/><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p><\/span><\/p>\n<div class=\"CaptionWrapper-jYrTxZ jNLyNY caption ContentHeaderLeadAssetCaption-ifsaEE eMUXhE standard\" data-testid=\"caption-wrapper\"><span class=\"BaseWrap-sc-gzmcOU BaseText-eqOrNE CaptionCredit-eowWKH deqABF mdLVF gxwcqg caption__credit\">Photo: Courtesy Everett Collection<\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/header>\n<\/div>\n<div data-attribute-verso-pattern=\"article-body\" class=\"ArticlePageContentBackGround-dcEtzE dRBcvG article-body__content\">\n<div class=\"ArticlePageChunksContent-enJWmu ilcJfn\">\n<div data-testid=\"ArticlePageChunks\" class=\"ArticlePageChunks-fwcPjP cAlDKu\">\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>In the 1980s, if you wanted to ask someone on a date, you had to pick up the receiver of a landline telephone, hope that your prospective date was near their own landline, choose a place to meet, show up somewhere near the predetermined time, and engage with that person for the entirety of the date. And don\u2019t even get me started on maps.<\/p>\n<p>Yes, the world has changed since then\u2014but that doesn\u2019t mean the movies made in the 1980s are any less significant in 2025. What we were thinking up four decades ago was wild, wonderful, woolly, and rather chauvinist, but it was also violent, aspirational, moneyed, and a calculation of noise. The world was beginning to change very rapidly, and directors, actors, producers, and audiences were taking note. The films made for Gen X and their boomer parents wanted to discuss inequality, spirituality, commercialism, and what it meant to be young. And they had help: from Stanley Kubrick, Penny Marshall, Nora Ephron, Rob Reiner, and Spike Lee. They had something to say. And we should still listen.<\/p>\n<p>Here\u2019s a guide to the best 1980s movies you should not miss:<\/p>\n<h2><em>The Shining<\/em> (1980)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>Stanley Kubrick\u2019s adaptation of Steven King\u2019s novel\u2014about a paterfamilias (and failed writer) who descends into madness while looking after a very spooky empty hotel during its off-season\u2014established a new standard for horror. Really, <em>The Shining<\/em> often feels too smart, visually stunning, suspenseful, and deeply frightening to be lumped in with Jason and <em>Saw<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Jack Nicholson and Shelley Duvall work brilliantly together, giving a masterclass in restraint and measure. Meanwhile, Kubrick\u2019s imagination and technical proficiency in visual storytelling not only fit the material, but augment it to new critical heights. It works. And the ultimate proof is in the pudding: nearly half a century later, <em>The Shining<\/em> is still scary.<\/p>\n<h2><em>Diva<\/em> (1981)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<p>Perhaps the chicest example of cin\u00e9ma du look, <em>Diva<\/em> is a weird and exhilarating romp through the streets of Paris as a young postman\u2019s recording of an opera star lands him in a world of hired killers, corrupt cops, bohemians, and Taiwanese gangsters. This film is worth a watch for its epic chase scene alone\u2014on a moped through the Paris M\u00e9tro\u2014but there\u2019s so much beauty, intrigue, comedy, and suspense, and gorgeous music packed into these two hours, it\u2019s really a marvel this movie isn\u2019t better known. While the picture helped draw French filmmakers out of their realist rut, it\u2019s also valuable as a quintessential cult film, and, not for nothing, a great date movie.<\/p>\n<h2><em>Reds<\/em> (1981)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>First, the bad news: It\u2019s a three-hour portrait of an American leftist and the failure of his movement (John Reed, played by Warren Beatty\u2014who also co-wrote, directed, and produced this film). The good news: it\u2019s Diane Keaton at her absolute best, as she\u2019s swept away by Beatty and his ideals, only to end up in the arms of Jack Nicholson (as playwright Eugene O\u2019Neill). This movie is all about the performances, as three mega-stars give their absolute all in constructing a love triangle worthy of the setting\u2019s tumult. Not so fun fact: between Beatty\u2019s all-consuming passion, re-writes, and retakes, the experience of making this movie helped derail his and Keaton\u2019s personal relationship. You can see the passion, and you should.<\/p>\n<h2><em>The Verdict<\/em> (1982)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>Sidney Lumet, an icon of American film whose masterworks (<em>12 Angry Men<\/em>, <em>Serpico<\/em>, <em>Dog Day Afternoon<\/em>, <em>Network<\/em>) spanned half a century, hit something special when he teamed up with Paul Newman (playing a down-and-out lawyer looking to the bottle and taking on Boston\u2019s archdiocese), Charlotte Rampling (as Laura Fischer, his love interest and, spoiler alert, a spy for the other sode), and writer David Mamet. In one of the era\u2019s great salvation tales, you get to see Newman\u2014no fading giant but entering the twilight of his career, and with his own tricky relationship to alcohol\u2014beat the odds and play off actors, dialogue, and direction to deliver a rendition of justice and redemption for the ages.<\/p>\n<h2><em>Trading Places<\/em> (1983)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>You cannot talk about the 1980s without mentioning Eddie Murphy, who came to symbolize the big-budget comedy which helped define the era. The youngest-ever cast member of <em>Saturday Night Live<\/em> (joining in 1980 at just 19), Murphy made a series of phenomenally successful and funny films, including <em>48 Hours<\/em>, <em>Beverly Hills Cop<\/em>, <em>Coming to America<\/em>, and this one, about an unhoused quick-talker who, through a twist of fate and his own wiles, scales the parapets of high finance. There is perhaps no more rapturous or better-sharpened sword than Murphy\u2019s wit and atypical wholesomeness, wielded with brilliantly plotted glee against the (amoral, elitist) powers that not only populate this movie, but also defined so many ambitions of the time.<\/p>\n<h2><em>Risky Business<\/em> (1983)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>Every era has its iconography, and if there\u2019s something from the 1980s more obligatory than Tom Cruise, in and Oxford and his tighty-whities, dancing to Bob Seger in his parent\u2019s living room, you\u2019re going to have to convince me (and maybe fight me). This is the kind of madcap teen romp (TLDR: a handsome boy\u2019s parents leave town, so he naturally hires a sex worker\u2014a sly and simmering Rebecca De Mornay\u2014and then must figure out how to pay her bill) that can, and should, produce eye-rolls. But it\u2019s also so quintessentially and admirably \u201980s that we need to give it its due. It\u2019s a silly, sensual take on the decade\u2019s version of teenagedom, independence, capitalism, and Cruise. Yep, this was his catapult, and it\u2019s a ride worth taking.<\/p>\n<h2><em>Nausica\u00e4 of the Valley of the Wind<\/em> (1984)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>The unassailable giant of anime that would become Studio Ghibli was still taking shape in the 1980s, but <em>Nausica\u00e4<\/em> is an early example of the wonders that Hayao Miyazaki would unleash on the world of cinema. Based on his own manga, and containing many of the auteur\u2019s recognizable themes of environmentalism, pacifism, and technological incursion, <em>Nausica\u00e4\u2019s<\/em> namesake princess fights for her community, enlisting the aid of magical, giant insects to keep at bay the industrial and colonizing forces that threaten their valley.<\/p>\n<p>Part of the pleasure here is the film\u2019s delicate balance between universal notions of heroism, sacrifice, and understanding with Japanese animism, history, and spirituality. And it\u2019s gorgeous at every turn.<\/p>\n<h2><em>Once Upon a Time in America<\/em> (1984)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>What happens when Sergio Leone, godfather of the spaghetti western, decides to tell an epic story of Jewish gangsters in New York? The results of the director\u2019s final film are polarizing, but between Robert DeNiro and James Woods\u2019s gripping performances as pals Noodles and Max, simmering against a background of tradition, violence, ambition, and sex (it must be added that there is a horrific\u2014and, some argue, egregious\u2014rape scene, after which we are somehow supposed to feel for DeNiro\u2019s rapist) and you get a final product that\u2019s worthy of its scope. This movie is at once a teen romp, a revenge narrative, a mob movie, and an upside-down, rags-to-redemption fairy-tale that takes on all of the complexities its title suggests.<\/p>\n<h2><em>Stop Making Sense<\/em> (1984)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>Far from the documentary category\u2019s best era (no disrespect to Claude Lanzmann\u2019s <em>Shoah<\/em> or <em>Burden of Dreams<\/em>, which introduced many of us to the wonder of Werner Herzog), the 1980s yielded a fantastic rock doc in <em>Stop Making Sense<\/em> from Jonathan Demme (the director behind the fantastic <em>Something Wild<\/em> from this decade, and <em>Silence of the Lambs<\/em> from the next). From David Byrne\u2019s oversized suit to his and Demme\u2019s postmodern play with notions of songwriting, storytelling, and music, this film\u2014stitched together from three Talking Heads performances at Hollywood Pantages\u2014demonstrates just what you can show with sound.<\/p>\n<h2><em>This Is Spinal Tap<\/em> (1984)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>Christopher Guest\u2019s feature mockumentary debut (the story of a British thrasher band that never quite made it going back on the road) is not only uproariously funny, but the improv genius and former <em>SNL<\/em> castmember laid the code for an entire genre with this film. Without it, there\u2019s no <em>The Office<\/em> (either version), <em>Parkss and Rec<\/em>, <em>Modern Family<\/em>\u2026the list goes on. His follow-ups, like 1996\u2019s <em>Waiting for Guffman<\/em> and 2000\u2019s <em>Best in Show<\/em>, may even be improvements\u2014with their expanded and unparalleled comedic ensembles\u2014but this movie, with Rob Reiner in the director\u2019s chair, is the bedrock.<\/p>\n<h2><em>Pee-wee\u2019s Big Adventure<\/em> (1985)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>The wonderful amount of <em>weird<\/em> that Paul Reubens brought to mainstream comedy with Pee-wee, in all his forms, was undercut by a tabloid scandal (utterly innocuous by today\u2019s standards)\u2014one of comedy\u2019s great injustices. But the work remains, and the gay, punk, absurdist-coded fantasyland that was Pee-wee\u2019s world stands out in Hollywood\u2019s iconography. Tim Burton\u2019s take on Pee-wee, notionally a mission to reclaim the title character\u2019s stolen bicycle, is a meandering hike through what remained of American counterculture during a decidedly conformist decade. It\u2019s silly; it\u2019s anti-heroic; it\u2019s bliss.<\/p>\n<h2><em>Aliens<\/em> (1986)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<p>A female-led action movie that\u2019s as smart and critical as it is suspenseful, action-packed, and horrifying? Yes, please! While Hollywood\u2019s yen for the sequel kicked off in the 1970s, with results in categories good (<em>The Godfather Part II<\/em>), bad (<em>More American Graffiti<\/em>), and ugly (<em>The Shaggy D.A.<\/em>), the 1980s is when the form really exploded. When James Cameron took the wheel from <em>Alien<\/em> auteur Ridley Scott, expectations were all over, but Cameron not only delivered a phenomenally plotted and performed sequel, but also moved the entire genre forward with special effects and production design that holds up to this day. And it\u2019s fun!<\/p>\n<h2><em>Children of a Lesser God<\/em> (1986)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>The romance between a new teacher at a school for the deaf and a former pupil who is now a custodian is the premise for this film, but what it\u2019s actually about\u2014and what it accomplished\u2014is much bigger.<\/p>\n<p>With <em>Children<\/em>, director Randa Haines managed to break new ground for representation and set new standards for authentic filmmaking, while tackling deeply complex issues of identity and the differently abled\u2019s place in society. She did it hand-in-hand with deaf actress Marlee Matlin (who won an Oscar for her efforts) and William Hurt, whose sensitive, committed, and impassioned performances make space for the difficult issues at play.<\/p>\n<h2><em>Ferris Bueller\u2019s Day Off<\/em> (1986)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>While many saw themselves reflected in the four high school archetypes of John Hughes\u2019s <em>The Breakfast Club<\/em>, others will argue that that film is simplistic trash, and the far more enjoyable, less didactic <em>Ferris Bueller\u2019s Day Off<\/em> is where we find echoes of the real. Is this movie great? I think so, but cannot say for sure. What I <em>can<\/em> say is that if there were a measurement for fun on film, the units would be expressed in Buellers.<\/p>\n<p>While the film\u2019s irrepressible title character can be too energetic, too smug, or just too much, his counterweights in Jennifer Grey\u2019s snarling sister, Alan Ruck\u2019s depressive Cameron, and too-bad-to-be-true Principal Rooney balance out Ferris\u2019s go-for-it flavor. In the funland that Hughes made of the Chicago Suburbs, <em>Ferris<\/em> is the roller-coaster of choice.<\/p>\n<h2><em>Dirty Dancing<\/em> (1987)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>This movie is dumb, but gloriously so, and you should immediately be suspicious of anyone who doesn\u2019t like it. Baby, played by a delectably bored Jennifer Grey, is the younger sister in a upwardly mobile \u201960s family spending their summer at a lodge in the Catskills where dancing seems to be incredibly important\u2014to the staff, to the guests, to their professional futures, to the world. You just have to accept it; then, you can become besotted with the romance between Grey and Patrick Swayze\u2019s bad-boy dance instructor. There\u2019s much rump-shaking, assignations, some \u201980s neo-liberal abortion politics, and Jerry Orbach as the world\u2019s best dad. As heels kick and clothes come off, this movie manages to capture both the hopeful exuberance of youth and an entire era. It\u2019s also a funny time capsule of what Hollywood considered \u201csexy\u201d and \u201cunsexy\u201d in the \u201980s, which is wild and a great deal of fun.<\/p>\n<h2><em>Big<\/em> (1988)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>If this list is suspiciously short of female directors, that\u2019s because Hollywood in the 1980s was too (and, with all respect to Amy Heckerling and Joe Piscopo, <em>Johnny Dangerously<\/em> is not making this list). One giant exception was Penny Marshall, an absolute force whose <em>Big<\/em> (co-written by Anne Spielberg) showcased Tom Hanks\u2019s pure charm and surprising depth, setting him on the path to national treasurehood. The story of a picked-on kid whose wish to be \u201cbig\u201d is made literally true overnight\u2014launching him out of his bunk bed and into the world of corporate executives\u2014is as sweet, simple, and moving as \u201980s comedies come.<\/p>\n<h2><em>Heathers<\/em> (1988)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>A middle finger to <em>The Breakfast Club<\/em>, <em>Sixteen Candles<\/em>, and other aggressively positive \u201980s teen movies (a number of which are on this list), <em>Heathers<\/em> is a cynical yet clever stab at that hoary genre. When Wynona Ryder\u2019s Veronica decides to align with her new boyfriend (played with delectable sangfroid by Christian Slater) against the popular girls\u2014all named Heather\u2014things get a little out hand, and some cool kids end up dead. For a movie with a fair amount of teenage murder and sexual assault, <em>Heathers<\/em> also brings a delightfully surreal suggestion to teen flickdom, and an important rejection of the genre\u2019s most pervasive tropes. In other words: watch the cool kids get theirs.<\/p>\n<h2><em>Working Girl<\/em> (1988)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>The hair alone is enough of a reason to watch this glorious, female-first crystallization of the go-go \u201980s. Melanie Griffith plays Tess, a sweet and sexy secretary on Wall Street, who can\u2019t seem to get ahead. \u201cI have a head for business and a body for sin,\u201d she says at one point, before a seemingly sympathetic Sigourney Weaver, her new boss, steals her million-dollar idea. While Harrison Ford gets first billing, women rule this absolutely rollicking flick (with nods to its screwball forebears) that is at once a riot, a smart exploration of the era\u2019s frivolity, and an interrogation of class, power structures, ambition, and loyalty. It\u2019s a movie about breaking into the boys\u2019 club, but manages\u2014while laughing, flirting, and cajoling\u2014to show just how broken those clubs can be.<\/p>\n<h2><em>Do the Right Thing<\/em> (1989)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>Spike Lee burst onto the scene with his remarkably original rom-com <em>She\u2019s Gotta Have It<\/em> in 1986, but <em>Do the Right Thing<\/em> was his volta. The comedy-drama, which takes place over a single day in a Brooklyn neighborhood\u2014bringing class and racial tensions to the fore\u2014shifted Lee\u2019s power from that of an upstart to a major new voice in Hollywood (via NYC). The opening credits, wherein Rosie Perez dances to Public Enemy, is one of the greats in modern cinematic history; her brisk, sexy hip-hop choreography ushered in a new era of film, and filmmaking.<\/p>\n<h2><em>Say Anything<\/em> (1989)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>Cameron Crowe\u2019s directorial debut (he\u2019d follow it with <em>Singles<\/em>, <em>Jerry Maguire<\/em>, and <em>Almost Famous<\/em>) gave the world Lloyd Dobler, a digestible teenage anti-hero who was willing to be an outsider, speak for the marginalized, and stand outside the home of his crush, boombox held overhead, in a scene worthy of imitation ad nauseum. While Dobler became an archetype for off-beat teenage Romeos, and John Cusack (matched up against love interest Ione Skye) gave us a striver we can root for. Moreover, this film paved the way, and made a market for, the class of teen films that followed. If you like <em>Dazed and Confused<\/em>, <em>Juno<\/em>, <em>Ladybird<\/em>, <em>Booksmart<\/em>, or really any underdog coming-of-age story since 1987, this is the lodestar.<\/p>\n<h2><em>When Harry Met Sally\u2026<\/em> (1989)<\/h2>\n<figure data-testid=\"IframeEmbed\" class=\"IframeEmbedWrapper-sc-ldQZQl ejqOZZ iframe-embed\">\n<div data-hasconsent=\"true\" data-testid=\"IframeEmbedContainer\" class=\"IframeEmbedContainer-hkaqNE bkCxJd\">\n<div class=\"IframeEmbedAspectRatioWrapper-hLozwN bAXJOK\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"GridWrapper-cFSKbf cxzKYj grid grid-margins grid-items-2 ArticlePageChunksGrid-hkPQhP lnoYVP grid-layout--adrail narrow wide-adrail\" data-journey-hook=\"grid-wrapper\">\n<div class=\"GridItem-beYvyV kCPYUp grid--item grid-layout__content\">\n<div class=\"BodyWrapper-kzyFNv nCpFP body body__container article__body\" data-journey-hook=\"client-content\" data-testid=\"BodyWrapper\">\n<div class=\"body__inner-container\">\n<p>The world of \u201980s rom-coms ranged from the hopelessly absurd (<em>Blame It on Rio<\/em>, <em>Splash<\/em>) to the absolutely perfect in this blueprint for the form, written by Nora Ephron and directed by Rob Reiner. This will-they-or-won\u2019t-they love story, spanning decades, boasts all-time charming turns from stars Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal, iconic fall fashions, and a masterclass on negotiating relationship boundaries (and faking an orgasm, for extra credit). The lasting power of this movie is a testament to the talents involved, but also to its complex dynamics, which continue to plague friends, lovers, and everyone in between to this day. Both onscreen, and in real life, that\u2019s this movie\u2019s power.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/article>\n<p> Source URL: http:\/\/vogue.com\/article\/best-80s-movies-to-rewatch-now<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>TV &amp; Movies The 21 Best \u201980s Movies to Rewatch Now By John Ortved November 28, 2025 Photo: Courtesy Everett Collection In the 1980s, if you wanted to ask someone on a date, you had to pick up the receiver of a landline telephone, hope that your prospective date was near their own landline, choose [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":757998,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[2],"tags":[50],"class_list":["post-757997","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-politics","tag-vogue-com"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/757997","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=757997"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/757997\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/757998"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=757997"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=757997"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=757997"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}