How To Use Trends in Filmmaking to Your Advantage

Published: March 5, 2018, 8:02 a.m.

If you haven\u2019t picked up on the hottest trend in film and TV right now, then you may be living under a rock. Of course, we're talking about the \u201c80\u2019s Revival\u201d a movement seemingly spurred by the success of Stranger Things. In reality, however, the 80\u2019s Revival may just be the sign of a new wave of filmmakers coming to fruition in the masses. 80\u2019s babies who are looking to re-live their childhood on the big screen are having their moment at just the right time. They have an eager audience at their disposal and an even more eager group of producers looking for projects. Many movies of the revival deal with similar themes. You can usually bet that a group of suburban children will encounter some sort of supernatural force then band together to defeat it. Summer of 84 puts a spin on the trend, keeping many of the Stand By Me vibes, but committing to an antagonist that\u2019s more grounded in reality. In the film, a group of kids begins to suspect that their neighbor is, in fact, a serial killer. As a result, the kids spend their summer gathering clues and spying on him to prove he\u2019s responsible for the death of several other teens in the neighborhood. Summer of 84 is directed by the filmmaking trio that made Turbo Kid, which first started off as a short, before being picked up and greenlit for a feature. No Film School's Jon Fusco sat down with the directing trio at Sundance and talked about how they used the \u201c80\u2019s Revival\u201d to their advantage to strike while the iron was hot.\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices