Remakes of Movies & TV Series
#1
Posted 2012-November-14, 21:59
Conversely I found "The Next Three Days" better than the original "Pour Elle" (translated as "Anything for her") although both were very well made. TNTD was longer but achieved more depth.
And then an old favourite, I enjoyed the first full season of "Forbrydelsen" but gave up on the remake "The Killing".
Seeking other titles, other views, and on a related point I have no objection to sub-titles but I am told they are unpopular in US?
#2
Posted 2012-November-14, 23:27
This was true with many Old movies as well as foreign movies.
to go a bit further...many say there are only 5 basic plot lines for books, movies, plays, music etc...so everyone is a cannibal.
I once heard there are only two plot threads:
1) a stranger comes to town....
2) people go on a long trip...
iN any case a good thread ...thanks
#3
Posted 2012-November-15, 09:55
Scarabin, on 2012-November-14, 21:59, said:
Conversely I found "The Next Three Days" better than the original "Pour Elle" (translated as "Anything for her") although both were very well made. TNTD was longer but achieved more depth.
And then an old favourite, I enjoyed the first full season of "Forbrydelsen" but gave up on the remake "The Killing".
Seeking other titles, other views, and on a related point I have no objection to sub-titles but I am told they are unpopular in US?
As I understand matters, the major studies are becoming increasingly risk adverse.
For the most part, they are unwilling to try anything that is big and new.
Most of the content that they are creating and promoting is either
1. Part of a franchise (Batman, Tokien, Bond, Bourne)
2. A remake
3. Associated with well known director (Aptow, The Coen Brothers, Spielberg)
4. Extremely formulaic
#4
Posted 2012-November-15, 10:14
hrothgar, on 2012-November-15, 09:55, said:
For the most part, they are unwilling to try anything that is big and new.
Yes, but the independent filmmakers are backfilling this need quite nicely (albeit on much lower budgets).
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#5
Posted 2012-November-15, 11:28
#6
Posted 2012-November-15, 12:39
To move the level of conversation down a few pegs, I liked the remake of Freaky Friday. I can't help it, I just like Jamie Lee Curtis. She made True Lies a watchable movie. The original Freaky Friday was unwatchable for me. I like Jodie Foster but I watched so little of it before signing off I had to look it up to see who was in it.
An Affair to Remember is a remake of Love Affair, and I guess I like both. You don't often see Love Affair so I can't really recall, but I am pretty sure I liked it. AATR is a Cary Grant movie. Cary Grant movies are basically watchable, basically enjoyable, basically stupid. So I basically liked it.
I really liked Day of the Jackal, book especially but also very much the movie. As I understand it, legal action prevented the directors of Jackal (a perversion masquerading as a remake) from calling it Day of the Jackal. I heartily support this legal action.
#7
Posted 2012-November-15, 12:49
Several years after the movie came out, I saw it again. Trying to view it without prejudice, as an "action" movie it's not terrible, although the anti-Nazi elements still detract from the story. I even saw one of the sequels (I understand there were several). But I still say that, as an adaptation of Heinlein's novel, it's crap. Of course, Hollywood is well know for buying the rights to a book and then producing a movie with a completely different story.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#8
Posted 2012-November-15, 13:06
blackshoe, on 2012-November-15, 12:49, said:
I read The Subterraneans when I was in college. An African American woman (well, in the 1950s she was a black woman) , Madou Fox, has an affair with the white narrator. It was made into a movie in 1960. The part of Madou Fox was played by Leslie Caron.
Actually I never saw the movie, but I learned about this interesting casting choice recently while watching a movie historian on TCM.
#9
Posted 2012-November-15, 13:40
blackshoe, on 2012-November-15, 12:49, said:
I am very VERY worried about World War Z
Saw a preview right before "The Man for the Iron Fist"
The movie was unrecognizable.
#10
Posted 2012-November-15, 14:01
blackshoe, on 2012-November-15, 12:49, said:
The Postman was my favorite story as a kid/young adult. I was super excited about the movie but it turned out to be a totally different story. I was so pissed that regardless of how good the movie may actually have been, I absolutely hate it.
Still a great book though, even if it is no longer my favorite.
#11
Posted 2012-November-15, 14:19
Basically, you should never expect much from a sci-fi novel turned into a "blockbuster" film -- there's just too much difference between the two genres. Probably the closest was "Blade Runner", but much of the psychological material was left on the cutting room floor (I'm not sure if I ever saw the "Director's Cut", which supposedly added some of this back in).
#12
Posted 2012-November-15, 14:37
kenberg, on 2012-November-15, 13:06, said:
Actually I never saw the movie, but I learned about this interesting casting choice recently while watching a movie historian on TCM.
The girl from Gigi? Heh, I am not a big fan of musicals but Gigi is a huge exception, that movie is awesome.
Did they put her in blackface or something? Actually I just looked it up and apparently they turned her into a young French woman, which for Leslie isn't a stretch at all.
#13
Posted 2012-November-15, 15:16
dwar0123, on 2012-November-15, 14:37, said:
Did they put her in blackface or something? Actually I just looked it up and apparently they turned her into a young French woman, which for Leslie isn't a stretch at all.
She certainly can play a young French woman w/o distorting herself. It would seem to distort the storyline in the book a bit.
I also like Gigi. Perhaps oddly, I didn't care much for it when it first came out, but I was nineteen or something like that, and neither John Wayne nor Robert Mitchum was in it, so that may explain my lack of enthusiasm.
#14
Posted 2012-November-15, 16:46
I started watching "The Killing" wich was fine, but then my wife wanted to see the original, and I knew I rather go away and do something else.
#15
Posted 2012-November-15, 18:47
George Carlin
#16
Posted 2012-November-16, 08:17
gwnn, on 2012-November-15, 18:47, said:
You mean The Office, the TV show? Lots people seem to love that, but I just don't get it. It's like I am that one guy in the room not laughing at a joke. I have tried to watch it and the only response I can ever dig up is "huh, this is supposed to be comedy?"
-gwnn
#17
Posted 2012-November-16, 08:21
George Carlin
#18
Posted 2012-November-16, 08:35
blackshoe, on 2012-November-15, 12:49, said:
You realise that the move is meant to be a parody right?
#19
Posted 2012-November-16, 09:04
barmar, on 2012-November-15, 14:19, said:
Basically, you should never expect much from a sci-fi novel turned into a "blockbuster" film -- there's just too much difference between the two genres. Probably the closest was "Blade Runner", but much of the psychological material was left on the cutting room floor (I'm not sure if I ever saw the "Director's Cut", which supposedly added some of this back in).
Authors like asimov who depend heavily on intellectual or quasi-intellectual thinking for enjoyment will never translate well into a movie. However, some authors, particularly Philip K Dick, have led to a number of good movies. Those novels based on clever plotting or compelling characters do better. Notable movies based on Sci Fi books include:
Blade Runner (based on, do androids dream of electric sheep),
Johnny Mnemonic (based loosely on neuromancer/burning chrome by Gibson),
Minority Report (based on Dick story of the same name), Solaris (based on a book by Lem),
Paycheck, (based on another Dick story),
Bicentenial Man was closer to the Asimov book than I robot,
Planet of the Apes was a book first,
I am legend was based on a very famous book by Matheson,
Jurassic Park is another classic based on a Micheal Crichton book.
2001 Space odyssey
Then there are the classics, Invisible Man, Time machine, War of the Worlds, Day of the Triffids etc
#20
Posted 2012-November-16, 09:28
http://www.huffingto...n_n_942340.html
remake won't be coming soon to a theater near you. According to Deadline.com, Warner Bros. has slowed down the process on the presumed blockbuster, with attached director Rob Marshall moving on to "Into the Woods." That leaves "The Thin Man" without a director, leading actress or green light; Warner Bros. has received a budget for the project, but nothing has been accepted just yet.
http://www.huffingto..._n_1618332.html