The "Taboo" era ended not with a bang, but with a realization. The things that were once forbidden were now being packaged and sold on MTV. The subculture had been absorbed. Elias packed away his lenses, looking back at a six-year stretch that had redefined what it meant to be an outsider. The world was louder, brighter, and faster, but the secrets he had captured between '79 and '85 remained locked in the static of those old tapes—a testament to a time when being "taboo" was the only way to feel alive. Should we focus more on the cinematic influences of that specific era, or would you like to explore the underground music that defined the transition from 1979 to 1985?