haptalaon: A calming cup of tea beside an open book (Default)
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"But what was it about the Seventies that produced such weird, eerie and horrifying stuff for kids? Brotherstone’s theory is that it was a hangover from the permissive Sixties. “At the end of that decade the shutters sort of came up and film-makers and artists started doing a lot of stuff that they felt was free of censorship,” he says. “I think they felt so free that they just went for it in a big way, there was possibly an element of naivety in what people thought was appropriate for kids. These days there are so many guidelines about what children should and shouldn’t be exposed to, and that sort of thing wasn’t in evidence much back in the Seventies, which is why we had a lot of stuff that looks really scary and disturbing today.”

Brownstone on his book Scarred for Life, a lovingly assembled 700-page tome on unsettling children's media of the 1970s.
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haptalaon: A calming cup of tea beside an open book (Default)
Haptalaon

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