Personally I prefer the PS2 |
Lame. |
I don’t mean to sound like I’m knocking nostalgia either. No matter how shitty things may have been in the past, they’re still comforting because your memories are part of you and your experiences make you who you are. If it was up to me I would have been nailing cheerleaders and doing sick karate moves when I was 14 instead of playing SEGA, and bitching about how much I hated everyone in my Junior High. In retrospect I wouldn’t trade those memories for anything, except maybe the ability to get all the pee out of my dick before I put it back in my pants. How do people wear khakis? Anyway, since we’re on the subject of nostalgia…
Vice City (PS2) 2002
I think nostalgia is a big part of Vice City’s appeal to most people. Other than Weekend at Bernie’s, it’s hard to imagine a piece of media that evokes the feel of the 1980’s more than Vice City. For the most part the game presents itself as a larger than life caricature of the era rather than a Wedding Singer style 80’s wankfest, or a Weeknd at Bernie’s style 80’s piece of shit. The game is like a larger than life version of Scarface (1983) crossed with Miami Vice (1984.) In fact, the credits sequence for Miami Vice could almost be a credits sequence for Vice City except for the Jai Alai player. For a show that tried to be hip and of the time, that guys seemed kind of out of place. Almost 30 years later Jai Alai remains as popular as ever, which is to say not at all. Also why do minorities like Scarface so much?
Vice City’s soundtrack is also great, and it evokes the mood of the era better than any photograph or Ken Burns documentary ever could. While most 80’s musical retrospectives focus on one genre; bad music from the 80’s (e.g. Cyndi Lauper, Poison, Duran Duran, Thomas Dolby, The fucking Go-Go’s.) The Vice City soundtrack has some crappy songs, but paints with a broader brush and uses old school hip-hop, new wave, heavy metal, and everything in between to paint a picture of the decade. Many of the songs featured are little lesser known, probably in an effort to save money, but I think it serves the game well. While artists like Madonna and Prince certainly defined music in the 80’s their careers continue on to this day and much of their respective catalogs are considered classic. On the other hand, The Vice City soundtrack features Gold by Spandau Ballet. Gold makes Frankie Goes to Hollywood look like Judas Priest. That is to say the song is so wimpy and lame it could not possibly be a hit in any decade but the 1980’s.
Aside from the soundtrack, Vice City is my favorite entry in the GTA series because it improves on GTA3, without getting serious and “realistic” (tedious) like its sequels San Andreas and GTA4. I’m not a total loser, so I don’t get a lot out of getting virtual drunk and playing darts with my imaginary girlfriend. I don’t look to GTA to give me some sort of Maxim interview* style girlfriend fantasy. I look to GTA to provide a consequence free environment to sell cocaine, wreck sports cars, murder hookers, and all the other things I’ll never do in real life. On that level Vice City never disappoints. I played the shit out of this game in college and I can’t think about it without getting all nostalgic for the brief time when I had nothing to do but drink beer and play video games to the wee hours of the night.
Looking at the date I just realized this game came out 10 years ago. I’m getting old. I wonder if the 1980’s will seem as weird and distant to my kids as the 50’s seem to me. I don’t know. I just hope they port Vice City to a modern platform so they might be able to get at least a little taste of, if not the 80’s at least the early 2000’s. It would be a shame if they have to learn about hooker murder from a stranger.
*I hate how Maxim asks Jennifer Love Hewitt or whoever “What do you look for in a guy?” or “What’s your idea of a perfect date?” No one reading that interview is ever going to fuck Jennifer Love Hewitt so who gives a fuck? “OMG! She says she loves a guy with a good sense of humor! I’m buying a ticket to Hollywood!” Ideally you could ask her about sexual positions or any bisexual experiences she may have had, but at least ask something relevant. She’s not a Rhodes Scholar but you could ask her about some funny anecdotes from the set of I Know What You Did Last Summer, or some other movie she was in. Does she still work?
JLH from April 2012's Maxim. As far as I can remember she hasn't been in a movie for at least ten years |
Thanks for the good stuff Man.
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