If the success of Stranger Things is anything to go by, 80s nostalgia is well and truly alive.
The 80s were a time of bold, bombastic adventure movies, filled with practical effects, perky young casts and a pop song or two.
It's not hard to see why this formula is so popular.
Netflix's latest film offering - Finding 'Ohana - is a modern movie that manages to capture the joy of watching an 80s adventure romp.
In the most basic of terms, Finding 'Ohana is The Goonies in Hawaii.
The really good news is that the film is fully aware that it's plot is mighty similar to the 1985 classic, and includes lots of obvious and subtle nods to the iconic flick.
Finding 'Ohana follows 12-year-old 'geocaching' enthusiast Pili (Kea Peahu), her older brother Ioane (Alex Aiono) and their widowed mum Leilani (Kelly Hu) as the family returns to Hawaii during their summer break to care for Leilani's ailing father.
Pili's family moved from Hawaii to New York when she was just a baby, and their lives have become separated from their island culture.
Back home with 'Papa' (Branscombe Richmond), Pili finds an old Indiana Jones-esque journal which speaks of a hidden treasure.
When it becomes evident that Papa will soon lose his home if an immediate payment isn't made, Pili teams up with her new buddy Casper (Owen Vaccaro) to locate the long-hidden treasure.
When Ioane, who is supposed to be looking after his sister, finds Pili is gone he and local girl Hana (Lindsay Watston) join the hunt too.
So far, so Goonies.
The spirit of the 80s adventure runs through every frame of this film, from visual gags, dialogue and even casting - Data himself, Ke Huy Quan, has a small role.
But despite the manifold similarities to The Goonies, Finding 'Ohana is its own beast.
The Netflix film has a great reverence for Hawaiian culture. It shows great respect to the unique traditions of the island culture and treats them as something to be protected and celebrated.
The film is also far more about the importance of family - and anyone who has seen Lilo and Stitch knows that "ohana means family" - than The Goonies ever was.
Finding 'Ohana will have you cheering, crying, laughing and singing (though perhaps a more ubiquitous track than Meghan Trainor's All the Ways would have better served one of the film's most memorable scenes) throughout its two-hour runtime.
It's an instant family classic.