Nothing gets me around to watching a movie like a deadline. Back before streaming, when I had to rely on a TV schedule to find things to watch, I would resist buying anything I liked because I knew if I always had it available to me I’d never watch it again. Better to catch it some Sunday afternoon on cable when options were limited. Even now, I tend to program my viewing the same way.
On the first of every month I don’t look at the new releases on Max or Peacock. I look at what’s leaving.
However, October is spooky season, and that means now’s the time for scary stories. This month I’ve watched more movies in general, and more horror movies specifically, than I have in a long time. Once November hits the moment is gone. So when I got up early Saturday and was looking for some entertainment, I decided it was finally time to watch The Lost Boys.
Vampires are sometimes my favorite monsters. However…
I tend to avoid 80s movies because I hate the music. I know, I know. The Lost Boys has a wildly popular soundtrack. But synths, drums, and saxophones grate on my ears. How many movies of the era would I love if not for the music? Many. Once I heard Echo and the Bunnymen’s cover of The Doors’ “People Are Strange,” though, I was optimistic.
For the most part, the soundtrack is tolerable.
Music aside, this is a fun movie that I wish I'd seen sooner. It was clearly inspired by Michael Mann, and influenced Buffy, while remaining untainted by Anne Rice. Ironically, one of the screenwriters said the story was inspired from reading Interview with the Vampire. Yet these aren't woe-is-me sympathetic vampires. They’re bloodsucking fiends.
As they should be.
If you aren’t familiar with the story, it’s about two brothers who move to Santa Carla, California with their widowed mother. Their grandfather is a crazy taxidermist who lives in treehouse like cabin (though it’s on the ground), and the local vampires live in an abandoned luxury hotel that fell off a cliff after an historic earthquake. Of course, the brothers don’t realize the local biker gang is made up of vampires until it’s too late. The movie takes its time getting to that part.
The vampires, perpetually young Lost Boys, aren’t the focus. This is a story about family.
We have to remember that in 1987 geek things like comic books and vampires hadn’t found mainstream acceptance. So when younger brother Sam (Corey Haim) finds his key information in a comic book shop, we know this an adventure story made for a very specific audience. There’s no pandering, it treads very carefully between the niche premise and old-fashioned thrills, since movies will always need wide appeal.
Clearly, it worked then and is why it still has an audience now.
Roger Ebert didn't like The Lost Boys, feeling that it was a missed opportunity to explore deeper issues. It wasn't what he wanted it to be, and to that I say, "So what?" I think it's everything the filmmakers intended and promised. Perhaps it could have been something more meaningful, substantial, or scary. But it's what I wanted it to be, which is entertaining.
Leonard Maltin gives it two stars for being aimed at a juvenile audience.
Yeah, I wish I’d seen it when I was ten or eleven, though I’m sure my parents wouldn’t have approved. The Lost Boys was made for kids like me, adolescents who dreamed of vanquishing evil with secret knowledge gleaned from comics. Even now, that child-like desire is alive and well, even if I exercise it differently than I once did. So I will revisit this movie at some point
Soundtrack and all.