Yeah, the whole setting of the movie is a subculture in which Halliday's obsession with 1980s pop culture has been elevated to mythopoetic status. I haven't seen the movie so I don't know how well it does it, but in the book it's done beautifully. Remember that this is a future that is 60 years removed from the 1980s, so it has the same meatworld historical relationship with it that today does with the 1950s.
I was 16-26 in the 1980s so I get all the references but I am a little old for the nostalgia -- the 80s don't hold any emotional appeal for me. Dr. Mrs. (10-20) is perfect for it, and she actually appreciated the detail much more than I did. She was also more into that culture than I was, which helps a lot.
I'm hopeful the movie works even if you don't really care about that particular period but that would make it inaccessible to the bulk of the audience that isn't capable of living at y and enjoying z's looking back at x. I was surprised they made a movie at all -- it's definitely a niche taste for a large group of people in their late 40s and then the usual population of nerds who can (and want to) perform the mental gymnastics required.