Spinoff of Vice's Dark Side of the Ring that looks at '90s pop cultureSpinoff of Vice's Dark Side of the Ring that looks at '90s pop cultureSpinoff of Vice's Dark Side of the Ring that looks at '90s pop culture
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Browse episodes
Featured reviews
They could've approached this in an unbiased manner and it could have been very well done and still somewhat accurate, but they just couldn't do it. The history is good about how things have happened, but the narration and perspective is inaccurate and biased. Too bad because there was a lot of promise of nostalgia for a teen of the 90's.
I've only watched season one so far and I've enjoyed the episodes. I'm a child of the 80s and 90s so watching this is like being back in the 90s being nostalgic for some of the best times of my youth. It's also a refreshing and deeply reflective experience, looking at the era with different lens now being much older and thanks to some information this documentary presents that I didn't know about at the time.
Like some reviewers pointed out, there are details that are left out in the episodes, and the series could probably have done better. But for a docuseries covering such a wide range of topics that spanned a decade, I think it did well.
I particularly enjoyed the episode on the Viper Room with information surrounding the scenes at the club that I'd never heard until now. I was a huge fan of River Phoenix from when I was a preteen in the late 80s after being struck by his raw and beautiful performance in Stand By Me, and his death, which happened when I was in high school was a traumatic event for the then-seventeen-year old girl. Three decades later my heart still aches when I think about him and his life cut too short. So many interviews and articles written about his life and death that I read or watched over the years and they always left questions. This documentary helped to fill that void. It was heartbreaking to remember it once again but thanks to the interviewees who were the regulars of the club and their stories of what kind of place it really was, I have more clarity and understanding. So thanks in particular for this episode.
Like some reviewers pointed out, there are details that are left out in the episodes, and the series could probably have done better. But for a docuseries covering such a wide range of topics that spanned a decade, I think it did well.
I particularly enjoyed the episode on the Viper Room with information surrounding the scenes at the club that I'd never heard until now. I was a huge fan of River Phoenix from when I was a preteen in the late 80s after being struck by his raw and beautiful performance in Stand By Me, and his death, which happened when I was in high school was a traumatic event for the then-seventeen-year old girl. Three decades later my heart still aches when I think about him and his life cut too short. So many interviews and articles written about his life and death that I read or watched over the years and they always left questions. This documentary helped to fill that void. It was heartbreaking to remember it once again but thanks to the interviewees who were the regulars of the club and their stories of what kind of place it really was, I have more clarity and understanding. So thanks in particular for this episode.
So I like this show, it's fun 90s nostalgia. It's not very different from other 90s decade docuseries done in the past by CNN or Vh1. The title implies it would be about something "dark sided" but it's not really. Some of the dark sided stuff seems like a stretch. I presume they're just doing it for branding purposes since Vice has other docuseries like "Dark Side of the Ring". Ooooioo.
I felt nostalgic watching this series and it had some nice stories but I also felt like something was missing here. They only had 10 episodes so they had 10 stories to present to represent the entire decade of the 1990s, yet they went with stories like Beanie Babies, sock puppet or some night club in Los Angeles out of all the interesting topics they could have picked.
Also episodes felt drawn out and repetitive. The people they interviewed in each episode were knowledgeable about their topic but they all repeated the same things over and over. The storytelling in these episodes could have been a lot tighter.
Also episodes felt drawn out and repetitive. The people they interviewed in each episode were knowledgeable about their topic but they all repeated the same things over and over. The storytelling in these episodes could have been a lot tighter.
I mean, it's not wrong and pretty much sums up a lot of the 90's influences but more focused on American events for the most part.
That said, it will FOREVER irk me that they always try to say "Beverly Hills 90210 was the first groundbreaking show about real teens" when Degrassi was already doing that before they ever showed up.
Watching Jason Priestly, being Canadian, agreeing with this bs in the documentary is just rich.
That said, it will FOREVER irk me that they always try to say "Beverly Hills 90210 was the first groundbreaking show about real teens" when Degrassi was already doing that before they ever showed up.
Watching Jason Priestly, being Canadian, agreeing with this bs in the documentary is just rich.
- How many seasons does Dark Side of the '90s have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime44 minutes
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content