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[Film] Films Long Overdue a Remake



Gwylan

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
31,376
Uffern
I think people are lazy in their dismissal of remakes. There are many classics that are themselves remakes, either regular remakes or 'reimaginings' (such as samurai films reworked as westerns).

I think reimaginings are somewhat different - The Seven Samurai and The Magnificent Seven are totally different films (even if they are the same story).

The reason that remakes are so easily dismissed is that there are very few examples of a remake being better than the original (and in most cases, they're considerably worse). There are some decent remakes: True Grit and The Thomas Crown Affair (that's one where the remake may actually be better) but the vast majority are dire: Alfie, The Italian Job, Get Carter etc

There was even talk, a few years ago, of remaking Casablanca - thankfully, that idea died a death.
 




blue-shifted

Banned
Feb 20, 2004
7,645
a galaxy far far away
I think people are lazy in their dismissal of remakes. There are many classics that are themselves remakes, either regular remakes or 'reimaginings' (such as samurai films reworked as westerns).

For me, it comes down to vision. If there is a reason you're remaking it that goes beyond 'well, we've got the rights to it, lets make some money with something recognisable than risk losing money on something new' or 'I liked the original, I want to remake it and put myself in my favourite role'. Does technology/society let you do things you couldn't originally? Is there a narrative thread that was particularly resonant but didn't get a lot of attention? Is there something about the film's message that has a deeper meaning in a modern context? and so on.

Having said that, stay the hell away from Clue. That is movie perfection.

But the trouble is that 9/10 of them are cynical ways of raking in risk free money. I understand why people are reacting the way they are
 


jakarta

Well-known member
May 25, 2007
15,639
Sullington
I think reimaginings are somewhat different - The Seven Samurai and The Magnificent Seven are totally different films (even if they are the same story).

The reason that remakes are so easily dismissed is that there are very few examples of a remake being better than the original (and in most cases, they're considerably worse). There are some decent remakes: True Grit and The Thomas Crown Affair (that's one where the remake may actually be better) but the vast majority are dire: Alfie, The Italian Job, Get Carter etc

There was even talk, a few years ago, of remaking Casablanca - thankfully, that idea died a death.

Locally of course, the remake of Brighton Rock was rubbish.
 


portlock seagull

Why? Why us?
Jul 28, 2003
17,248
But the trouble is that 9/10 of them are cynical ways of raking in risk free money. I understand why people are reacting the way they are

The answer is stop making films costing £100million, where A list actor is a third of that budget. The film industry is one greedy pigs trough like football a lot of the time. Obscene wages demanded (and paid) for ‘stars‘ we’d soon forget if we promoted others who would ironically replace them but demand less because they’d learn the lesson or suffer the same fate.
 


Acker79

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Nov 15, 2008
31,921
Brighton
I think reimaginings are somewhat different - The Seven Samurai and The Magnificent Seven are totally different films (even if they are the same story).

The reason that remakes are so easily dismissed is that there are very few examples of a remake being better than the original (and in most cases, they're considerably worse). There are some decent remakes: True Grit and The Thomas Crown Affair (that's one where the remake may actually be better) but the vast majority are dire: Alfie, The Italian Job, Get Carter etc

There was even talk, a few years ago, of remaking Casablanca - thankfully, that idea died a death.

Casablanca has been remade 'A Night at Casablanca' just a few years after the original.

Many films considered classics are themselves remakes - The Thing, The Man who Knew Too Much, Scarface, Apocalypse Now (arguable), His Girl Friday, Wizard of Oz and Heat spring to mind.

Many remakes are decent films and either dismissed because they're remakes, or dismissed because they're 'not as good' - something that is subjective and in a number of cases dependent on which you saw first. Everyone I know who saw the american remake of 'The Ring' preferred it to the high profile Japanese version (itself a remake I believe). Everyone I know who saw 'Ringu' first seemed to prefer it to the American remake.

When I say lazy, I mean people see the tag 'remake' and don't often bother to look beyond that. They don't look at the film on it's own terms and criticise it based on the film itself, but on the fact it is a remake.
 






portlock seagull

Why? Why us?
Jul 28, 2003
17,248
I tried watching the Papillon remake but it just felt so hollow I couldn’t get past the hour mark. The original 1972 version of Sleuth is one of my favourite films of all time but Michael Caine stomped on its memory with the remake. Consequently, I don’t go near remakes if I’ve any affection for the original film.

So can anybody tell me if the remake of The Taking of Pelham 123 was rubbish or not?

I can probably answer that question. Liked the original, have tried to watch remake several times but never finished it...
 










blue-shifted

Banned
Feb 20, 2004
7,645
a galaxy far far away
The answer is stop making films costing £100million, where A list actor is a third of that budget. The film industry is one greedy pigs trough like football a lot of the time. Obscene wages demanded (and paid) for ‘stars‘ we’d soon forget if we promoted others who would ironically replace them but demand less because they’d learn the lesson or suffer the same fate.

Don't really agree. I'd say the studios have carefully researched consumer behaviour. Rightly or wrongly, the popcorn eating public go to see films, because they know the actors in it or they know the name of the film from their youth. Until consumer behaviour changes, casting won't either. You get the same phenomenon with novels.
 




Gwylan

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
31,376
Uffern
Casablanca has been remade 'A Night at Casablanca' just a few years after the original.

Many films considered classics are themselves remakes - The Thing, The Man who Knew Too Much, Scarface, Apocalypse Now (arguable), His Girl Friday, Wizard of Oz and Heat spring to mind.

But a Night In a Casablance bears little relation to Casablanca - it's just set in the same place.
Yes, His Girl Friday is another example of a remake being better than the original - although the plot was drastically altered. TMWKTM was not remade - it has the same title but a completely different story.

If you're talking Hitchcock, the 39 Steps has been remade twice - a poor version starring Kenneth More and a pretty decent one with Robert Powell. But that's not a patch on the original.
 








Coach_Carter_92

Active member
Apr 25, 2013
663
Home
I would like to see remakes of films that didn't live up to expectations the first time round, especially if they were based on a book or real world events
 


portlock seagull

Why? Why us?
Jul 28, 2003
17,248
Don't really agree. I'd say the studios have carefully researched consumer behaviour. Rightly or wrongly, the popcorn eating public go to see films, because they know the actors in it or they know the name of the film from their youth. Until consumer behaviour changes, casting won't either. You get the same phenomenon with novels.

Less and less so I’d say. Public, even the dim ones, have cottoned on to franchising and ‘stars’ in multiple Turkeys. Cinemas increasingly not profit making, it’s the home entertainment sales and merchandise where money is made. Sadly, it’s lapped up at home by billions and we will probably end up with F&F 74 or Marvel 469 only, and these will be deemed successful simply because nothing else to watch! I can’t be the only one to be going back in time for great films or finding independent gems or hugh number of brilliant foreign films (If you’re ok with subtitles as I am) because I’m bored to death with what we get served in mainstream Hollywood studio owned cinemas. Popcorn flicks, as you say.
 


KZNSeagull

Well-known member
Nov 26, 2007
19,930
Wolsingham, County Durham
Braveheart. This time with a Scot in the lead role, a bridge during the battle of Stirling Bridge and no ludicrous storylines about impregnating princesses who were, in reality, only 8 years old at the time.
 


GT49er

Well-known member
Feb 1, 2009
46,910
Gloucester
Remakes have a tendency to be crap though, look at the mess they made of The Italian Job and Quadrophenia. But to even suggest they remake The Great Escape should be treasonable, and Where Eagles Dare!!!!!!! go and sit on the naughty step and think about that for a moment.
Classic opening Ariel shots over the Alps with one of the great movie themes, and dialogue at times worthy of Shakespeare!

"Broadsword calling Danny Boy, Broadsword calling Danny Boy"

"SIT DOWN COLONEL"!

Outrageous, at times farcical but the combination of Richard Burton, Clint Eastwood, Ingrid Pitt:love::love:, and the guy who was Paddingtons TV voice! This a classic that must remain unsullied, We don't want realism brought into it, we want Germans who can't shoot straight, machine guns with unlimited ammunition, dodgy German accents, helicopters that the Germans didn't posses, cars that explode for no reason when pushed over a cliff and wobbly back projections. That's what we want!
:lolol:
They've remade Quadrophenia?

Personally I think re-makes are cr*p - unnecessary, not as good as the original, and only made for the money. For me, if we've got to have re-makes, I'd go for the Northern Rail version of Brief Encounter.
 
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Palacefinder General

Well-known member
Apr 5, 2019
2,594
So can anybody tell me if the remake of The Taking of Pelham 123 was rubbish or not?

Coincidentally I watched it last night, which possibly inspired this thread, and it was utterly dire, even with a cast of Gandolfini, Washington, John Turturro and Travolta (who hammed it up too much). I haven’t seen the original.

One of the problems with the Papillon remake (apparently basically everything) was that I believe they just went for a scene by scene remake.
 


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