L
Lord Garth
Guest
When I think of modern movies I think "1975 or later". I draw the line for the beginning of modern movies at the middle of the '70s. Between The Godfather, Part II (1974) and Jaws (1975).
Mainly I do this because I get the sense that The Godfather is considered a classic but not necessarily a modern classic and The Godfather, Part II followed in close proximity. 1975 introduced the first Blockbuster in Jaws which was then followed by a series of blockbusters such as Rocky and Star Wars, all of which had numbered sequels, which was started, ironically by The Godfather, Part II.
I consider 1967-1974 to be an intermediate buffer zone between modern and classic movies, starting with 1967's Bonnie & Clyde and The Graduate. These movies were more experimental because the traditional movies of the Hayes' era had fallen to the wayside and a new formulaic approach had yet to be established before the rise of blockbusters.
Mainly I do this because I get the sense that The Godfather is considered a classic but not necessarily a modern classic and The Godfather, Part II followed in close proximity. 1975 introduced the first Blockbuster in Jaws which was then followed by a series of blockbusters such as Rocky and Star Wars, all of which had numbered sequels, which was started, ironically by The Godfather, Part II.
I consider 1967-1974 to be an intermediate buffer zone between modern and classic movies, starting with 1967's Bonnie & Clyde and The Graduate. These movies were more experimental because the traditional movies of the Hayes' era had fallen to the wayside and a new formulaic approach had yet to be established before the rise of blockbusters.