I Will Never Understand The Love For GREASE (1978)

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  • čas přidán 27. 06. 2021
  • Website: www.deepfocuslens.com
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  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 372

  • @eeriedragonjiheun838
    @eeriedragonjiheun838 Před 2 lety +72

    I see that we decided to choose violence today

  • @aSuspiciousPete
    @aSuspiciousPete Před rokem +10

    Just watched it yesterday for the first time. Fun, lighthearted, silly, colorful. It’s clearly not taking itself too seriously. Please don’t judge the film for what it’s not.

    • @yournamehere6002
      @yournamehere6002 Před měsícem +2

      I'm here from the future to agree with you. It's a campy spoof and she takes it way too seriously.

  • @robcop993
    @robcop993 Před 2 lety +16

    Here's my take: We were not so fractured as a nation back then, and some cultural touchstones we made were as a group. Grease was one of them. Nearly everybody went to see it in its first run--young AND old. Grease, the movie, was the final shot of nostalgia for that era of the 1950s. There was a revival of interest in this period of time, stretching from Sha Na Na performing at Woodstock in 1969 to the opening of Grease, the film, across the country in 1978. I saw the original musical (I still have the ticket stub) at the Royale Theatre on Broadway back in the 70s. I was thirteen and I loved it. Some of the songs from the original show were cut, including my favorite, Those Magic Changes. At the time, I preferred 50s rock'n' roll to the easy listening and hard rock sound prevalent in the early to mid 1970s. I saw Grease (twice) on a big screen--not on a television--in that long ago summer of 1978. I think maybe you had to be there (at the time) to understand it. It's just one of those things.

  • @lacrimatorium
    @lacrimatorium Před 2 lety +20

    I was on a transatlantic flight in 1978 for the first time in my life. I had no idea how these things worked. They announced the movie for the day, that we all had to watch, a film I thought was called Greece. I thought 'Oh a documentary on Greece could be good.' I was wrong. It was indeed Grease. I am still waiting to see the documentary called Greece. I'm sure it would have been better. Thanks Maggie!

    • @Suite_annamite
      @Suite_annamite Před 2 lety +3

      Fascinating and funny! I didn't even know they had the convenience back then to project a film on a plane.

  • @chandumanoj2656
    @chandumanoj2656 Před 2 lety +34

    Have you seen Martin Scorsese’s After Hours (1985)? If you’ve seen it I would love to see your review on it. If you haven’t I highly recommend it.

    • @loganmoore8394
      @loganmoore8394 Před 2 lety +4

      Yes! There is not much on CZcams about After Hours.

  • @ElectricShark
    @ElectricShark Před rokem +6

    The original Grease was a play that came out in 1971 that wasn't just about Danny and Sandy but the lives of working class teenagers in the 1950s trying to find their ways in life. The reason I like Grease is because of the characters. Rizzo has a lot of character depth to her. She was complex and even though she presented as tough, she had vulnerability and a soft side. Marty was multi dimensional, a teenage girl trying to pass as an older woman and yet when with an older man, ends up not being ready. Jan with her secret insecurity over her lack of beauty and yet still finding love and acceptance. I can relate to these characters. Grease is not without it's flaws though.
    Some of the messages are bad (Change yourself for a man,etc)
    But the characters make it worthwhile. Fun fact: my late pet toad would sit and watch Grease with me. Only movie he would ever watch.

  • @ttcc5273
    @ttcc5273 Před 4 měsíci +3

    I was a kid of the 70s… it was a relatable musical… Beauty school dropout, Sandy D lousy with virginity, Greased Lightning, Travolta, Rizzo, and Olivia Newton John sewed into spandex… it’s just fun.
    Like Bye Bye Birdie meets American Graffiti meets a S. E. Hinton novel (Outsiders, Rumblefish). Take those in a darker direction and you get Streets of Fire.
    Grease doesn’t have serious dramatic conflicts or serious consequences… it’s kind of cartoony. We were saturated with 50’s nostalgia at the time, and John Travolta was all over tween magazines like Dynamite… the 50’s was part of so many shows and movies: Peggy Sue Got Married, Back to the Future, Porky’s, Happy Days, Laverne and Shirley…
    what I remember about Grease was it took elements of 70s culture and blended it in with the 50’s nostalgia… like the T shirts they wore with the lettering were very 70’s.
    It kind of made parents more relatable as kids that went to high school too… not all Leave It To Beaver but kids with cliques and stereotypical roles and dress, which was a still a big thing in the 70s and 80s (Breakfast Club)

  • @atimtg
    @atimtg Před 2 lety +18

    I disliked it also until I discovered ONJ and her wonderful music. Then I watched like the first time again and loved it because of her.

  • @gaberodriguez4023
    @gaberodriguez4023 Před 2 lety +26

    I think the appeal of GREASE is that many of us first saw it as children. When you're in grade school, this feels like an idealized depiction of what high school will be like, and John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John are such larger-than-life presences. It was a movie that everyone just knows and songs from, but is usually never analytical of. I think most people look back on the movie again later in adulthood and realize how dopey it is. Sure, the plot is stupid. But it's not a movie worthy of getting angry over.

  • @GrandSlamSilver
    @GrandSlamSilver Před 2 lety +5

    Grease is my favourite musical, and one of my favourite films.

  • @thoth8784
    @thoth8784 Před 2 lety +16

    John Carpenter's CHRISTINE is my kinda GREASE. Nothin like watchin a bike shop loser being chased down an alleyway by a possessed Plymouth Fury.

  • @tmountain1
    @tmountain1 Před 2 lety +6

    As a kid at summer camp a million years ago, my age group put on a production of Grease for the Parents' Day. I refused to have anything to do with it, so I sat backstage and read Tolkien. My family fully supported that decision.

  • @zakrowe1301
    @zakrowe1301 Před 2 lety +17

    I absolutely love grease, mainly because of my mom, it’s one of her favourite movies and growing up it always felt like a big deal watching it.
    It definitely has its flaws but for what I love about it, it’s just a fun watch. The nostalgia, not even just for my childhood but also for the 50s, i just find it really immersive. I love all of the songs, except for one. It’s got good humour and The charchters are pretty good too.

  • @bobbyokeefe4285
    @bobbyokeefe4285 Před rokem +5

    If it wasn't a musical,I would agree,the meat in a musical are the songs,plot and character development is secondary,it's like watching "Debbie does Dallas" and being upset that Debbie is a one-dimensional character,the reason why people remember this film is for its catchy songs,heck even the people who never watched the film know them for the most part.

  • @Apesedits
    @Apesedits Před 2 lety +5

    Grease is the word, baby.

  • @marcossolanilla3792
    @marcossolanilla3792 Před 2 lety +32

    Now review GREASE 2. The true masterpiece!

    • @fritzidler9871
      @fritzidler9871 Před 2 lety +7

      No need. It's cultural impact or presence is ZERO. Thank God.

    • @cinema_recall
      @cinema_recall Před 2 lety

      Grease 2 is so much better that it should be released under a different title

    • @fritzidler9871
      @fritzidler9871 Před 2 lety +3

      @@cinema_recall Sorry, but, yeah, right. I remember all the hit songs it had so fondly. Not that I thought the songs in the first one were all that great, at least they were hits. But if this helps, as I recall Grease 2, it did have a more coherent storyline. But that's it. Not a high bar compared to the original. Grease 2 still lacks everything else the stupid original had that gave it such impact. No hits, no stars, no nostalgia. It has absolutely zero 1950s vibe. It evokes no era whatsoever in America that I am aware of. Please just listen to the review again, and whenever she says..... wait a minute. What I am doing? I am sorry. You're right. Grease 2 is much better than the original.
      Just one thing. I am not going for the theory that Grease 2 would have done any better with a different title. No, it wouldn't. It would not have even been made if not for the horrible original.

    • @MrJimbojamez
      @MrJimbojamez Před 2 lety +2

      Disasterpiece

    • @catspaw3092
      @catspaw3092 Před 2 lety

      Michael was way hotter & more of a gentlemen than Danny & Stephanie was was tougher & smarter she knew what she wanted & didn't put up with bullshit that's why she broke up with Johnny. Johnny kept trying to get back with Stephanie but she shot him down every time which is something I wish Sandy did I mean she already started to date another guy but she went back to trying to get back with Danny. She was dating Lorenzo Lamas who went on to play "Renegade" down the road she had a hot guy right there.

  • @stanleyrogouski
    @stanleyrogouski Před 2 lety +6

    Another reason to see Pablo Larrain's film Tony Manero. There's a key scene where the anti-hero goes to a theater expecting to see Saturday Night Fever and they're playing Grease instead and he flies into a murderous rage.

  • @DarthJ1977
    @DarthJ1977 Před 2 lety +14

    The original stage musical was, I believe, mounted as a critique of 1950s nostalgia - but the movie became a celebration of it. This change of perspective changes the context of every moment in the story. My guess is the writers of the stage play would agree with your assessment of the movie in a large part.

  • @MakeMeCare89
    @MakeMeCare89 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Maggie this film worked because of the visual style and in addition to the fact that it's celebrating a bygone era. The film just naturally works whether you get it or not. But that goes for any movie honestly.

  • @pwarner184
    @pwarner184 Před 2 lety +7

    *Because it's so much fun, Jan*

  • @cavemanspacemanfl
    @cavemanspacemanfl Před 2 lety +2

    Growing up, my Grandma only had two movies on vhs: Scarface and Grease. A guilty pleasure and one of the only musicals I can tolerate haha

  • @anthonymartensen3164
    @anthonymartensen3164 Před 2 lety +4

    I loved it as a kid because it has a sense of fun and I think Summer Nights is a great song, and there are a few catchy ones in my opinion.

  • @samuelwills4637
    @samuelwills4637 Před 2 lety +4

    Being Australian, Olivia Newton John is considered one of our darlings. Grease as a result, despite being vapid nostalgia bait, I believe has just been continuously filtered through our culture ever since the late 70s. Original viewers of the film would have been watching for the 50s nostalgia, then the children of the 70s who would have seen the film as a child would then show it to their eventual kids - much like me. So when I watch the film I associate it with my childhood where I enjoy it for its silliness and the songs. Much of the same can be said for Xanadu. If I’m looking for a much deeper film with better filmmaking, I’d watch Saturday Night Fever instead. Grease is just one of those films where being objective isn’t a priority for me, although, I totally agree with your analysis :)

  • @thepoetrysalon3422
    @thepoetrysalon3422 Před 2 lety +3

    I can just add my own love of the film. I'm in no way nostalgic about the fifties. I'm nostalgic about Grease. I was taken by the camp counselors one Saturday night. Money from my mom, I guess. And I literally bounced out of that theater. Watching it do its thing was electrifying to my young brain. I was at the perfect age to get it and fall for its "magic". Now, its ridiculousness makes me laugh. Multiple students are in their thirties; they have a school year with no actual school year; they spend that year wrapped in self-absorption; they have a full carnival take place outside their school last day of classes. I love rewatching it and it makes me happy. I also think everyone misrepresents the final scene that all they remember is her changing.

  • @stanleyrogouski
    @stanleyrogouski Před 2 lety +20

    They're all saying goodbye to their youth but every one of the actors (except Travolta) in this movie is 30 years old. LOL. It sends a subliminal message that Boomers never grew up. They just kept larping as teenagers.

    • @stanleyrogouski
      @stanleyrogouski Před 2 lety +3

      @Adolf Hitler Sorry Adolf. I know you're dating Cha-Cha DiGregorio and I don't want to be the one to break it to you, but she's not a teenager.

  • @MrJimbojamez
    @MrJimbojamez Před 2 lety +4

    "I loathe Grease!"
    Me : "Tell me more, tell me more..."
    I find no peace with this movie being brought into existence, Footloose is another horror

    • @avanishdutta2658
      @avanishdutta2658 Před 2 lety

      I don't love it for other reasons. That i won't say here.

    • @phoenixrich5542
      @phoenixrich5542 Před rokem

      @@avanishdutta2658 why would you reply if you have nothing to add?

  • @raoulmontefiore4803
    @raoulmontefiore4803 Před 2 lety +2

    Grease is the apogee of unselfconscious kitsch. It goes far beyond The Rocky Horror Picture Show as supreme 70s kitsch because the grotesquerie (super-annuated teenagers, bizarre sexual mores etc), and vaudeville 1950s anachronism are all matter of fact and surface, apparently entirely unconscious of the obvious subtext in the film: our obsession with arcadian distortions of the past, even of our own childhood and adolescence. Specifically the American teen rite of passage myth. The past is a dream. . .
    It is maybe the only example of an unintentionally Lynchean film. In fact both Grease and Eraserhead are summer romances and were released the same year. The two stars are memorable as archetypes in this weird vapid universe and it has LOTS of great songs! I love it and I loved hearing you slag it off!

  • @king_supreme1102
    @king_supreme1102 Před 2 lety +1

    New sub here, you’re awesome :)

  • @martinavila7401
    @martinavila7401 Před 2 lety +1

    its called nostalgia and its a powerful thing , for example i see hocus pocus as a really bad film however i loved it and feel a connection because i remember watching it when i was a kid with my family

  • @NEELSAN76
    @NEELSAN76 Před 2 lety +2

    I've never been into musicals except for Little Shop of Horrors but I actually love Grease and it's not because I think it's a great movie or musical. What the hell do I know about musicals? Danny Zuko still cracks me up 'til this day. Watching him trying to look cool while learning how to play baseball or adding some extra swag while he's running on the track trying to impress Sandy. I still think it's hilarious.

  • @nunyabizness9787
    @nunyabizness9787 Před 2 lety +4

    It's one of those things you had to experience in the 70's and grow up with it, I think. I did... but I'm still not overly fond of the film. A lot of my friends are, though. It's kind of like E.T. A lot of people love it 'cuz it's part of their childhood. I can't stand the damn thing...

  • @firecrackerheart
    @firecrackerheart Před 10 měsíci +1

    ha!...ok, for once we disagree. 'twas inevitable. and, you are probably correct-because it's part of my culture and my childhood, as is "wizard of oz" and "sound of music", which were all on rotation on network TV back in the 70s and 80s, it still resonates with me-and-it is sooo offensive upon rewatching it nowadays. but, i must say, it still holds a soft spot in my heart.

  • @Tim_Raths
    @Tim_Raths Před 2 lety +2

    I've never seen Grease and I have no desire to ever watch it.

  • @hawkwhirlwind
    @hawkwhirlwind Před 2 lety +6

    As an older fellow, I'd like to state that we've been ripping on this movie for decades.

  • @astrogallotron
    @astrogallotron Před 2 lety

    Have you considered doing live premieres on these videos?

  • @taykitrleevitt4314
    @taykitrleevitt4314 Před 2 lety +15

    The feel-good factor, coupled with catchy tunes and a dose of nostalgia...we live in a different time nowadays, where sentiment has become less and less tolerable...God help us.😕☺️

    • @deepfocuslens
      @deepfocuslens  Před 2 lety +18

      Everything is a dose of nostalgia nowadays. Major movies nowadays are nothing but remakes and sequels. It would be nice to see something different.

    • @PretentioFilms
      @PretentioFilms Před 2 lety +1

      @@deepfocuslens we need an anti-climactic nostalgia piece that's critical of romanticizing the past.

    • @deepfocuslens
      @deepfocuslens  Před 2 lety +4

      @@PretentioFilms I don't mind romanticism of the past, when it's done well. I don't think everything has to be a critique of something else.

    • @nerychristian
      @nerychristian Před 2 lety +2

      It was the first high school musical.

    • @Misericorde9
      @Misericorde9 Před 2 lety +2

      @Tom Ffrench Juliet: “Romero oh Romero, wherefore art thou Romero...”
      Romero: “Brraainsss...”

  • @65g4
    @65g4 Před 2 lety +1

    Great bringing up that Sopranos remember when line

  • @nathanslay6342
    @nathanslay6342 Před 2 lety +1

    This is a very good video. Very interesting take.

  • @bloodhound9638
    @bloodhound9638 Před 2 lety

    One of your best rants yet

  • @eternaldoorman5228
    @eternaldoorman5228 Před 2 lety +1

    I saw it at a cinema in England when it was released there, and it was really different! I had not seen that many movies at the time, ...

  • @brentulstad3275
    @brentulstad3275 Před 2 lety +3

    Even thinking about this movie makes me graciously identify with the middle section of the Human Centipede. Cheerio

  • @PretentioFilms
    @PretentioFilms Před 2 lety +3

    I can't wait for the "remember when" early 2000's movies.

  • @timdavis2522
    @timdavis2522 Před 2 lety +2

    Forgive me DFL but I must ask this again. What are your thoughts on John Carpenter's The Thing?

    • @timdavis2522
      @timdavis2522 Před 2 lety

      @@christopherrobin361 I'm a big fan of Rob Ager as well.

  • @reggiebinyaner8613
    @reggiebinyaner8613 Před 2 lety +1

    I heard that Grease was written by people who hated folk music, and missed the rock music that they grew up with. If that is the case that surely explains a lot.

  • @HOTD108_
    @HOTD108_ Před 2 lety +11

    Simple answer: It's literally cheap nostalgia-bait. It's not a coincidence that the film is set in the 50s, considering adults in the 70s would have been children in the 50s.

    • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017
      @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 Před 2 lety +3

      I always thought the "greaser" thing was an invention of Hollywood. The Brando thing, Grease, etc. Sure there were gangs, and juvenile delinquents, but the way that Hollywood makes it look is pure caricature.

  • @b6k66
    @b6k66 Před 2 lety +1

    I agree with everything that you mentioned. As far as not understanding Why a certain feel most popular when it was released this is the thing. Cinephile culture as it is today did not exist in the late 70s or 80s. Film critics had to be searched out in newspaper and television. In the 90s DVDs educated the masses and how films are made. A new appreciation for film in general came into the collective consciousness now with CZcams everybody is a film critic. More movies are released today than in previous decades therefore we have more to do a AB comparison if it is genre or a side-by-side comparison of a like-minded film. So what I’m saying is that people enjoy the film on a basic level of what the film made them feel versus all the nuances that we appreciate today. Today we have high definition televisions with MuchBetter Physical media where is back with these films are made you were watching it on a 4 x 3 limited resolution medium like VHS on a limited resolution TV

  • @mistahmata
    @mistahmata Před 2 lety +7

    That “we’re not gonna gel” movie moment happened for me about 30 seconds into Moulin Rouge. I couldn’t believe what I was seeing lol

    • @65g4
      @65g4 Před 2 lety +1

      Moulin Rouge thats a film i cant understand the love for because i dislike it immensly

  • @slc2466
    @slc2466 Před 2 lety +1

    As a movie nerd, the thing that bothered me most was during "Look at Me, I'm Sandra Dee," when Rizzo mentions Troy Donahue I was like, "Wait a minute, if this is 1950's high school the latest the year could be is 1959, and by June of that year Troy Donahue wasn't really famous, as "A Summer Place" came out later that year, so he'd only be a blip to the public as the boyfriend who beat up Susan Kohner in "Imitation of Life" released earlier in the year, and that role hardly would prove endearing enough for Rizzo to want to put him on her bedroom wall- this movie sucks!"

  • @danielrosas7800
    @danielrosas7800 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Either way to this day its still the best-selling soundtrack because its super popular.

  • @1080TJ
    @1080TJ Před 2 lety +6

    Glad I'm not alone here. This movie is basically the reason I spent years thinking I didn't like musicals. Also, the ending sends an awful message.

    • @davidl570
      @davidl570 Před 2 lety

      .......................and I also thought Sandy was FAR more appealing before she changed.

  • @seaslob2820
    @seaslob2820 Před 2 lety +2

    Grease is comfort food. loved it

  • @gnalkhere
    @gnalkhere Před 2 lety

    I never saw the film all the way through, but I've had the soundtrack on CD since I was 11 and THAT takes me back to a time. Not the 50s, but 2006, when I was playing N: The Game (N++'s origin game), Icy Tower and a bunch of other webgames that I found on the Lego website, Stickpage, Albinoblacksheep, Newgrounds, the whole lot. To me the soundtrack trumps the movie because it makes all the songs a main character

  • @Tolstoy111
    @Tolstoy111 Před rokem +1

    The original Chicago stage version that opened in '71 was much raunchier; more honest basically. The movie tried to have it both ways: being a squeaky clean and fun teen musical and sneaking in sex jokes.

  • @Imperium83
    @Imperium83 Před 2 lety +1

    It's going to be wild when we're in our 50s and 60s and they start making nostalgia musicals about dudes sliding in Twitter DMs talking about eating ass.

  • @robertgreen7593
    @robertgreen7593 Před 2 měsíci

    Today the song came on the radio and I told the person next to me how bad it is. All I could remember is "a promising academic girl ruins her life, completely changes her personality and dresses up like a hooker, to be with a loser who doesn't care much about her." I'm glad I'm not the only one who hates it.

  • @charleskidney4279
    @charleskidney4279 Před 2 lety +16

    The movie is a master piece. I don't understand how you can't like it. The music, is cool. All the characters are great and they all work of each other so well. Plus the movie has a lot of wisdom thrown in, if you are open to it. Stunned 😯 that you don't like one of best movies ever made

  • @420taku3
    @420taku3 Před rokem

    Check out Grease 2, seriously. It’s my favorite movie of all time, and only somewhat ironically. It’s definitely largely due to nostalgia, but I think anyone who dislikes the original will approve of Grease 2 much more. It’s my ultimate comfort movie. Definitely give it a shot if you’ve never seen it, even tho it’s still universally considered a shitty sequel, you may be surprised.

  • @TTM9691
    @TTM9691 Před rokem +1

    That makes two of us. I saw this in the theatre when it came out, I didn't think much of it. The 70s was filled with 50's stuff ever since "American Graffiti" and then "Happy Days". (Plus a string of American Graffiti knockoffs, "Lords of Flatbush", "Cooley High"). "Animal House" was the same year as "Grease". Sha-Na-Na was on TV. I didn't think much of "Saturday Night Fever" the year before, although I love parts of it now. (The one-dimensional friends are insufferable). So between those two movies we used to call him John Revolta, lol. It wasn't until Pulp Fiction that I thought Travolta was cool.

  • @nerychristian
    @nerychristian Před 2 lety +1

    It was the first high school musical.

  • @michaelwarwickvalencia8501

    I still have nostalgia for this film as a musical that center the times in the 50s

  • @move_i_got_this5659
    @move_i_got_this5659 Před 2 lety +1

    It's just a fun long music video.
    Having strong hate for this movie is more telling about you, perhaps a little jealousy during high school, a little emo teen hate.

  • @jwebstersmithii7459
    @jwebstersmithii7459 Před 2 lety +2

    I vaguely remember the film-except for being in love with Olivia Newton-John (gimme a break. I was 5). Anyhow, the soundtrack is some of the best music ever written. It has 5 eternal pieces. 5! That alone should make you understand. Also, this was a time when actors HAD REAL CHARISMA. They, alone, make it worthy of a watch. Nowadays charisma doesn't exist. There literally are zero great modern actors. Which is good if an actor out there has charisma and knows it. It's grace, basically. And grace basically boils down to refinement- which is the removal of impurities. And what are the impurities people are not removing? Propaganda, and the willingness to make propaganda. It doesn't get more impure than that. So you if this is you, you need to start researching how the controllers have cranked up the propaganda machine, so you can spot it, and reject those roles.

  • @stevenwatchorn9816
    @stevenwatchorn9816 Před 2 lety +1

    Never much cared for it one way or another, though I did not despise it. I was too busy in 1978 (and after) paying attention to "Superman."

  • @realDialFforFilm
    @realDialFforFilm Před 2 lety

    Okay, I haven't watched the video yet. But I think that ranks up there as one of my favorite video titles I've ever read. Haha

  • @christinadeshaies4465
    @christinadeshaies4465 Před 2 lety +1

    Funny it rubbed me the wrong way immediately also. I always said my worst nightmare would be forcing me to watch this forever. Glad I'm not the only one 🤣

  • @TheHoodedWonder
    @TheHoodedWonder Před 2 lety +4

    Thank you for saying what needed to be said!

  • @reubensane5539
    @reubensane5539 Před 2 lety +2

    Listening to this review,I just thought it was over analyzed and scrutinized through the lens of today’s mentality.
    In that time from the 50s to the 80s that’s pretty much the mentality of dating. That’s why is it had much appeal because that was so relatable to people pre 90s .
    The songs are very catchy and I disagree I think they work perfectly well in the order of the movie.
    When people are young kids there’s always the popular guy or girl and the people that aren’t as popular look up to those characters.
    That’s the same reason boys liked James Bond because they couldn’t be James Bond .
    in grease that was the typical mentality of high schoolers . The same way people liked clueless in the time that movie came out .
    It was in many ways a less complicated time and of course much art shows a more rose tint glasses nostalgia of a time that was .
    The TV show happy days is the same exact thing as grease ,it portrays a hyper innocents and American graffiti too .
    They all tie in .
    And John travolta was getting very popular in this time people thought he was goofy but had charisma in his time and Olivia Newton John there’s nothing not to like about her ,she’s a gem till this day .
    I think we have to have some misery in our life not to enjoy grease at just face value.

  • @mikeknowles5848
    @mikeknowles5848 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you. I've had decades of incomprehension from acquaintances for my loathing of every aspect of this drivel.

  • @TTM9691
    @TTM9691 Před rokem

    I never knew ANYONE from the 50s who liked "Grease". It was a Broadway show that was cashing in on the 50s craze that had been going since 1973 and then made into a movie. It's audience was mostly the generations that hadn't been there. For those who HAD been there, they had "American Graffiti" and the more realistic movies. But "Grease" had nothing to do with cashing in on people's genuine nostalgia for their own past, it was about cashing in on a trend for the 1950s and marketed to those who hadn't been there. (The John Waters "Hairspray" is good, by the way; I'm assuming you're talking about the second version, with Travolta).

  • @filmpositive6601
    @filmpositive6601 Před 2 lety

    I appreciate your honest takes on movies so much. Who cares about popular opinion?! My personal hot-take on Grease is that I legitimately prefer the sequel. Not ironically, either. I think Grease 2 is a more entertaining and re-watchable experience for the fact that it embraces the dumb high school melodrama in a cheeky way, has a more fun, upbeat tone and is full of songs that are entirely euphemisms for sex, or just bluntly about boning. I love that it revels in the cheese! I've been a fan since I was 7. My VHS copy was almost worn out. Grease 2 for life!

  • @myahollandia3552
    @myahollandia3552 Před 2 lety +2

    My favorite musical ever !! Only thing I didn't understand was the teenager's looked 30 lol.

  • @Acesman12345
    @Acesman12345 Před 2 lety +2

    First time I've liked a video because of the title alone

  • @julianwalker9782
    @julianwalker9782 Před 2 lety +2

    Preach Maggie!

  • @curiousthecat
    @curiousthecat Před 3 měsíci

    ‘Grease’ and ‘Happy Days’ (TV). Even as a kid I despised this version of … everything.

  • @leftenantthunder
    @leftenantthunder Před 2 lety

    THANK YOU MAGGIE

  • @thunderstruck5484
    @thunderstruck5484 Před 2 lety +2

    I saw Grease at the Drive-in with my High School sweetheart she really enjoyed it i found it entertaining I guess, thanks

  • @VOAxInsanity
    @VOAxInsanity Před 2 lety +1

    What's your top 5 silent films?

  • @93komuso
    @93komuso Před 2 lety

    Oh thank you so much for this! I thought I was the only one who detests this movie. As a child, my family had a vhs tape of this and it got played too often. Later, I worked in a group home and Grease was one of the few movies they had, so once again I was forced to listen to it continually. It makes me nauseous now.

  • @OldTechMemories.mp3
    @OldTechMemories.mp3 Před rokem +2

    You should review American Graffiti!

  • @Starkardur
    @Starkardur Před 2 lety

    two of the songs from Grease weren't in the original musical but were basically pop songs added to the film, one being the biggest single of 1978 world-wide. The movie was a hit back in the day because of 50s nostalgia and with the songs being so popular, it kind of endured, the original stage version was much more edgy than the film but the subsequent stage performances of Grease have been based on the film and not the original musical.

  • @JohannesYtterstrom
    @JohannesYtterstrom Před 2 lety +2

    Like many actors who made many movies I feel that John Travolta has his ups and downs. Some of his most famous movies are the "dancing"-movies:
    Saturday Night Fever
    Grease
    Staying Alive
    I must admit. I like Saturday Night Fever quite much. That is a movie worth watching.
    Grease? Some good tunes and high nostalgia factor but little substance. I don't hate it like you do but watching it with "review"-glasses on... I have no idea why it has become such a famous movie. It is far more famous than it is good. If someone never seen it? Don't have too high expectations.
    Staying Alive? That one I hate. The soundtrack by the Bee-Gees is a classic but the movie? It's moody, goes nowhere and have no charm. I wouldn't say it's the worst movie I've ever seen but even including B-movies, modern sort of "Netflix"-movies and such I'd still rank it very low. Probably one of the 100 worst movies I've ever seen. Buy the soundtrack if you want - Skip the movie.

    • @davidl570
      @davidl570 Před 2 lety

      Your comments on Grease (which I agree with) perfectly describe why I don't like Saturday Night Fever.

  • @swanstep
    @swanstep Před 2 lety +8

    Agree with this critique. One thing to keep in mind is just how *big* the soundtrack was and how massive the three main (original to the movie) songs from the soundtrack were. '50s nostalgia had been floating around for years in the '70s since American Graffiti, but Grease, like Happy Days before it, was popular with young kids and teens not just their parents. Grease was made fast and cheap with no real expectations for great critical or commercial success (Vanity Fair has a great article on this). First choices for Danny and Sandy were Henry Winkler (The Fonz) and Carrie Fisher (hot off Star Wars). Then Marie Osmond almost got Sandy. Then Travolta and ONJ were cast, the new, original songs clicked into place... et voila. When a pop meteor like that lands it has reverberations for decades. So here we are. Grease is still a cheap and nasty, slap-dash affair sold by a casting coup, a few killer pop tunes, and a few more OK-ish songs and scenes from the stage show. Never has the fast-forward function been so valuable.

    • @jjdvideo
      @jjdvideo Před 2 lety +1

      In a way, Grease was the first to bring on the 50’s nostalgia, since it began as a hit live show in the early 70’s.
      Before Graffitti.

  • @craydogdog1530
    @craydogdog1530 Před 2 lety

    Haven’t seen the movie, should I watch it?

    • @arieraaphorst1998
      @arieraaphorst1998 Před 2 lety

      No

    • @Suite_annamite
      @Suite_annamite Před 2 lety

      You can just enjoy the soundtrack, and ignore the movie, and you wouldn't miss out much.
      Even the character "Tom", played by Lorenzo Lamas, looks like a distant uncle that I hate. LOL

    • @craydogdog1530
      @craydogdog1530 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Suite_annamite cool, I’ll take that into account

  • @jbliv831
    @jbliv831 Před 2 lety

    Always liked it...

  • @masudaharris6435
    @masudaharris6435 Před 2 lety

    I like the costuming. Why is your video so dark?

  • @RapFanatic4ever
    @RapFanatic4ever Před 20 dny

    Grease is a classic .

  • @davidl570
    @davidl570 Před 2 lety

    Maggie, are you familiar with the channel Musical Hell? The gal on that channel reviews musicals (as you probably guessed) and her rant on how much she hates Grease is almost as hilarious as yours! I'd recommend that you (and anyone else) check it out!

  • @Suite_annamite
    @Suite_annamite Před 2 lety +1

    @9:20: "Olivia Newton-John and John Travolta, they really sizzle there."
    Just that alone really could be what "Grease" fans are holding on to: the shallow suburban teenager's fantasies of simply "how they look together". If they were otherwise an inter-class or interracial couple, everyone would just easily hate on them, and see how they "obviously don't belong together". In other words, *bad couples get away with staying together just because they "look the part".*

  • @user-ln4gd6hx7e
    @user-ln4gd6hx7e Před 2 lety

    Oh God, please do a full review of Crash 2005. That would be glorious.

  • @kieranhealy8279
    @kieranhealy8279 Před 2 lety +4

    The second one is even more all over the place 😂

    • @davidl570
      @davidl570 Před 2 lety

      I actually like it better.

  • @odorutori
    @odorutori Před 2 lety +1

    "We're not gonna gel, are we."

  • @ryanrudolph5667
    @ryanrudolph5667 Před 2 lety

    Totally agree on Grease, although I don’t think the same nostalgia bait is fully what American Grafitti relies on. It has a similar existential dread to it, especially with the girl in the car.
    I also agree on Ferris, but The Breakfast Club is the perfection of the teenage existential crisis. It’s one of those films that I thought I would grow out of, but I didn’t. It’s a genuinely great film that I still love. I realized how intelligent it actually is, how it uses symbols and composition. Would really like to hear your thoughts on that film.

  • @alianagutierrez2733
    @alianagutierrez2733 Před 2 lety

    Grease great movie I grew up watching at 16. Now I’m 56

  • @AxeManOfSuburbia
    @AxeManOfSuburbia Před 2 lety +1

    You rock.

  • @brettcoster4781
    @brettcoster4781 Před 8 měsíci

    I also hate (hate, hate, hate) Grease. I saw it in a cinema with a really good friend, when it was released here in Australia, who hated it from beginning to end. She gave a great running commentary during its screen time, all of it scandalous and relevant. I didn't really feel the same at that time but came to really hate the movie. I was born in 1959 but really hate the music from the 50s and early 60s (apart from The Beatles, Rolling Stones, the Who, and other British artists - but NOT Cliff Richard). Loved this review, you covered everything that (I think) needs to be said.

  • @robsavage3217
    @robsavage3217 Před 2 lety

    Back in the day when it was playing in theatres, I knew a guy who loved it so much he went and saw it two nights in a row - and that was after he had already seen it several times (and pretty much after he had worn out his LP of the soundtrack).
    I should note the big audience for this thing in the '70s was teenagers, rather than the middle aged. Teens who were into disco seemed to really go for this film, for some reason.
    But I hear you. I don't hate the movie but I certainly don't love it.
    On the other hand, I really like "Jesus Christ Superstar." The music is strong in that one and the lyrics were very clever.

    • @triscat
      @triscat Před 2 lety

      Maybe for the same reason we all tuned in to Happy Days in the 70's when we were 14 years old? I don't know. It's a good question.

  • @MadSimple
    @MadSimple Před 2 lety +1

    How was 5th grade summer camp?

  • @noctus1409
    @noctus1409 Před 2 lety +1

    Man, I really dig your platform- it's so candid. I've thought about becoming a CZcamsr, but my lack of monetary resources kind of deterred me from doing so...🤔 Yeah, I'm loving the sofa, bookshelf thing- makes me feel connected and comfortable with you✌

  • @Sotnasbentsion
    @Sotnasbentsion Před 2 lety +1

    As a Brazilian English teacher, we're kind of pushed to like this movie (such as Friends TV show that you guys don't have an idea, but Friends here is a sort of religion - which I'm part by the way).
    But I completely understand if you don't like (both).

  • @lathanandrews417
    @lathanandrews417 Před 2 lety

    Nostalgia plays a big part in this argument…
    But I’d much rather go to Dazed & Confused for that 😉
    And for Teen Films, I do admit that John Hughes is awesome. Shout out to Some Kind of Wonderful. For some reason, I appreciate this film more than a lot of his more popular ones, like Breakfast Club, Weird Science, and (definitely) Pretty in Pink.