Post
by Solitaire » Sat Aug 06, 2022 5:52 pm
I was sitting around thinking about it, and I wanted to expand on my thoughts about Lost Boys. America is a big country. We have so many different cultures here - every state seems to have its own, somehow. I was in the Florida Panhandle as a teen, which is as far from Miami culture as one can get and still be in the state. My town of Pensacola is considered part of the Deep South and all that entails: hot, humid summers, beautiful Southern Belles, openly racist and bigoted, opposed to anything that even smells of environmentalism or any other hippy-ass nonsense.
Lost Boys, if the vampires are removed, is a time capsule of West Coast cool from the era, in fact it's practically a documentary. Everyone's doing what they want. The middle school kids sit around reading comic books, and their big brothers are the fucking bomb: growing their hair out, bonfires on the beach at midnight, racing motorcycles through fog-shrouded California hills, tromping around the boardwalk, wearing cool clothes... This is the Cali lifestyle that's revered by so many. It lives on today, right now, in the streets and beaches of CA, from San Diego up through the hundreds of miles to San Francisco. And this lifestyle, that's made fun of by the rednecks of places such as Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, and upper Florida, is exactly what I longed for when I watched Lost Boys.
Also, it strikes me that the vampirism is an interesting allegory for the drug culture. Replace being vampires with being drug addicts and dealers. It all still works - the violence, the chaos, the obsessions, the relationships even work. Little brother trying to get Michael to see what's happening, but he's too obsessed with Star, with saving her, that he gets pulled too far into the lifestyle himself. Michael's mother dating an older man that turns out to be the local kingpin. Take him down, all the others fall with him. Kind of a fun thought experiment.
If Edwin's being an Edwin does he call himself an Edwin?