Feraud
Bartender
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And yet I can find little reason to bring Laverne & Shirley(remake of a U.S. television show) to the big screen..[huh]
and the WORST are from the 80s 90s 00s... no doubt about it!
Carlisle Blues said:King Kong (2005) Peter Jackson’s epic “homage” to the ’33 classic is a larger-than-life vessel of entertainment and wonder, and won three of four nominated categories at the 2006 Oscars (Best Sound Editing, Best Sound Mixing and Best Visual Effects), besting its predecessor, which was completely shunned at the ceremony in 1934—an exclusion many believe to be one of the Academy’s greatest mistakes over the years.
Scarface (1983) starring Al Pacino...remake of Howard Hawks’ 1932 gangster movie (also called Scarface)—which starred Paul Muni and was inspired by the life of Al “Scarface” Capone
The Thing (1982) Starring Kurt Russell and directed by horror expert John Carpenter, this film follows more closely to the events of the novella Who Goes There? than it does to Howard Hawks’ 1951 film The Thing From Another World. To name just a few.
Entertainment is timeless........To put forth a remake that speaks to a new interpretation, no matter how slight, is worthy of consideration.
Atomic Age said:Following the source material
Carlisle Blues said:Whether any one person enjoyed my examples is immaterial. The purpose was to show that beyond any "Golden Age" there is creativity.
Following the source material with any production whether it is a remake or original is necessary, it truly captures the spirit of the creator of the story. Therefore, any remake today would work following that theory. There is a broader scope than one movie such as "The Big Sleep".
Unfortunately, movie making is not necessarily about true depiction of a story, rather, it is about entertainment.
Atomic Age said:I don't think its unfortunate that movies are about entertainment. That is what they are. And to be honest its not always easy to directly translate a novel to the screen. A novel has a very different story telling structure from a 3 act movie, and often things have to be re-arranged, combined, or dropped to make it work for a film. For most novels, if you just filmed what was on the page, the movie would likely be 5 or 6 hours long, and VERY boring.
Doug
Carlisle Blues said:While I accept your perspective, I also believe it is subjective and out of context. If I want pure entertainment I will go to a circus.:icon_smil
If I want to experience a story in film I view a movie. It does not mean I will not be entertained, however, I expect a certain degree of fidelity to the original story.
While I understand that your explanation includes a narrow and strident attempt to tell the story page by page, paragraph by paragraph, that is not what I am talking about. I am simply asserting that a filmmaker can be true to the story while making a movie within the constraints of film making.
Atomic Age said:In my opinion films are entertainment...
Carlisle Blues said:If I want to experience a story in film I view a movie. It does not mean I will not be entertained
HadleyH said:Gilligan's Island remake.
You see? That's what I mean. It says there they want to " transport these cultural icons to the modern day".... It's just too much honestly
HadleyH said:^
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Yes. I'm holding my breath now for a remake of "The Flying Nun". I wonder why they haven't done it yet. A computerized 3D Flying Nun! Wow!
lol
Carlisle Blues said:Ask and you shall receive....."Paris Hilton is to take on the part of the Flying Nun, in a Remake of the old Sally Field series.
HadleyH said:I DONT WANT TO RECEIVE! I DON"T WANT TO RECEIVE I DON"T WANT TO RECEIVEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE :rage: :rage:
lol lol lol
Atomic Age said:I have to admit that I enjoyed the Brady Bunch movie. We'll see if they can do something just as funny with Gilligan's Island.
Doug