For pure '80s-meets-'50s rock 'n' roll aesthetics, it's hard to top Streets Of Fire

Watch This offers movie recommendations inspired by new releases or premieres, or occasionally our own inscrutable whims. This week: The recent (and very strange) Jeannette: The Childhood Of Joan Of Arc has us tapping our toes to other rock musicals, rock operas, and rock-driven movies.
Streets Of Fire (1984)
Even the MTV generation didn’t know what to do with Streets Of Fire. With its flimsy, Western-inspired plot and all the chemistry of a wet washcloth between romantic leads Diane Lane and Michael Paré, Walter Hill’s 1984 “rock ’n’ roll fable” bombed at the box office and flopped with critics (save for Roger Ebert, who gave the film one of its few positive reviews). Plans for a trilogy were scrapped by a humbled Universal, and the film soon faded from popular memory, where it’s ironically been eclipsed by a hit song from its soundtrack. But like many exercises in knowing kitsch, it’s only improved with age.
Perhaps the ne plus ultra of the ’80s-does-’50s aesthetic, Streets Of Fire takes such classic symbols of midcentury Americana as Studebakers, corner diners, and black leather motorcycle jackets and drenches them in New Wave neon, creating an alternate dimension—“another time, another place,” as an opening title card declares—that’s familiar, but still ineffably strange. It’s a world where ’80s punk coexists with ’60s soul and everyone talks in slang straight out of a ’50s B-movie, where the lone gunslinger wears a duster designed by Giorgio Armani and the baddest guy in town can be laid low by a well-placed sock in the jaw. There’s a certain innocence to the film, the dream of a 13-year-old boy who fell asleep at the drive-in as directed by one of American cinema’s boldest and most kinetic visual stylists.
The story, such as it is, revolves around Tom Cody (Paré), an ex-military man who returns to his rough-and-tumble hometown (actually a combination of downtown Chicago and a Universal backlot) and discovers that his ex-girlfriend Ellen Aim (Lane), now a hugely popular rock star, has been kidnapped by a greaser gang led by the dangerously alluring Raven (Willem Dafoe). Cody soon teams up with butch drifter McCoy (Amy Madigan) and Ellen’s dorky manager/boyfriend Billy Fish (Rick Moranis) to go rescue his girl—she says she’s with Billy Fish now, but we all know who she really loves—and the final showdown between good and evil has been set into motion. First stop: a raucous warehouse party full of leather boys gyrating to L.A. cowpunks The Blasters.