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10/10
Great Scott!............The Best Film Ever Made!
20 November 2020
As my title states, the Best Film Ever Made. You don't need another long rambling review for a film seen and loved by millions. However, disagree with my awarding this best film ever made?

You have to ask yourself one question; could it be improved in any way?

Many great films could have been improved at the time if time and budget allowed. Some movies could work better with a different approach by the director, a more concise ending. A change to the score. Special effects, cinematography etc etc.

But BTTF needs none of those. Ask yourself what could be done to this movie to enhance the enjoyment of the film. There is none. Everything is perfect, from the small details you only pick up on afterwards or by watching again (and again and again), a superb memorable score, the perfect leading man for this role and casting of other characters. There's no flab to the film. It gets from A to B (or maybe that should read B to A and back to B) without subplots and dead ends. It's written so well that in a different pair of director hands, would it be all that different? I truly believe this film can never be improved.

Not just the greatest 80's film. The Best Movie of All Time!
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8/10
Into the Forbidden Zone!
19 November 2020
This is a movie that has a very special place in my heart. Whilst many pick out its faults, it does have some really good things going for it and a great cast. Michael Ironside is giving it his best OTT skills, Molly Ringwald is just a kid and not far off superstardom with her big mid 80's movies with John Hughes, Ernie Hudson is the wise cracking character type he would go on to repeat in Ghostbusters and Peter Strauss gives us a very cool James Dean type space gunslinger, not a million miles away from Starbuck and Han Solo. Rough and ready action heroes the boys want to be and the girls want to be with. Obviously, the movie gets thrown in with the whole Star Wars bandwagon thing and it 100% exists because of the success Star Wars had but it's better than many copycat movies and TV series, including Ice Pirates, Space Raiders, Battle Beyond The Stars, Buck Rogers, Flash Gordon and arguably Battlestar Galactica. Unfortunately, for some reason its never attained that cool cult status which it absolutely deserves.

This movie is special to me. In and around 1984, my family purchased our first VHS recorder and this alongside the movie Blue Thunder was the first VHS rental we ever made. I didn't want to take the tape back, so rented it again and again over subsequent weekends. It played straight into my love of all things sci-fi at the time (including all the above mentioned films and TV shows (and more)).

I can still watch this as an 8 year old excited by the adventure, but I can also watch it as an adult who has a varied interest in all types of cinema. It still holds up well. Much of the movie was made with practical effect, the sets are great, the locations otherwordly and the score is magnificent.

If you're reading this wondering if maybe you should shell out for the recent bluray release to finally see what this film is about, do it. And show it to your kids, they'll love it too!
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10/10
Compliance!
19 November 2020
Flight Of The Navigator is a movie I really enjoyed as a 10 year old in 1986. Together with The Goonies, E.T., Back To The Future, Teen Wolf, The Lost Boys, The Last Starfighter, The Never Ending Story, Star Wars, Star Trek, John Hughes movies etc etc, it was a great time to be a kid. The zeitgeist of the 80's is just captivating and as us kids become middle aged, we look back not with nostalgia, but still feeling like we were part of something special and often still feeling like we are part of it. The following generations don't have to search for movies at video rentals, they don't have to save money for one-off trips to the cinema. Everything today within reason is at their fingertips. That's not their fault, but I imagine it's hard to fathom what being a kid in the 80's was actually really like, hence why such nostalgia exists now. The nostalgic factor is from today's kids wanting something they never had. Every Netflix movie or show aimed at teens now has an 80's aesthetic that tries but fails to conjure the real thing. But for us who were there at that point, it's also something we can never let go of, always seeking a way to relive those experiences.

As I grew up, I lost a little touch of the movies I loved, however I rediscovered that love through my own children. Introducing my daughter at the age of about two years old to Flight Of The Navigator and many of the others mentioned above struck that thought that we had it good back then. And being able to relive that through our own kids proves we still have it good. When your own daughter reaches 18 years old, still watching this movie on a regular basis, you know that certain films and their themes within have something magical and timeless about them, and with that, those people who made the magic happen to begin with.

We all assume Joey Cramer is that same 12 year old kid from 1986. But real life doesn't work that way. We have all heard of child stars being loved and cherished by the movie industry and fans alike only to be spat out and left by the side of the road once they hit puberty. Some forge ahead and make successes big and small. Some fall by the wayside very rarely intentional. Joey fell into that latter category. No doubt a nice kid, trying to make good but befell the pitfalls of being young, having money and no sturdy foundations to fall on to give him support and guidance.

The great news and a story which this excellent documentary makes clear is that you can rise up from those pitfalls. You can ask for help and with that arm around the shoulder, the strength to face down whatever demons have held you down, you can make good on what inspired people to love you in the first place.

This isn't just a documentary about a great and beloved film. It's a story about overcoming the odds with a fist in the air of the kind Judd Nelson gave us kids back in the 80's in The Breakfast Club.

Director Lisa Downs has structured the film in a way that intersperses the making of the movie with Joey's story. Whilst you can guess where it ends, it's the journey that matters, very much like the original movie itself. It's great to see so many cast and crew together for this and shows that the hardships of making a film can create lasting relationships and fond memories. More importantly, Lisa Downs captures the heart of this documentary and the heart of what made Flight Of The Navigator what it is and that is it's star, Joey Cramer. It's about a 12 year old boy trying to get home and against the odds, finally making it. We have all just made it home.
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