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Old 12-04-2006, 12:11 PM   #1
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Am I the only one who is grokking Alex?
Nope, I'm right there with you two.
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Old 12-01-2006, 08:37 PM   #2
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Actually, Heaven Can Wait was a remake of a film called Here Comes Mr. Jordan starring Robert Montgomery and Claude Rains.

This, and many of the examples that Alex cites are fine and wonderful remakes. The people involved in Heaven Can Wait (which, by the way, came 37 years after the original) boasted such talent as Buck Henry, Elaine May, Julie Christie, Warren Beatty etc. In 1978, this was clearly a bunch of talented people with a long history in film, unlike the director, writer and cast of The Hitcher remake, that started my whole series of complaints.

There are plenty of great remakes. I could cite dozens of them. Hell, I prefer many of the Hammer horror remakes to the Universal originals. I think the source of my frustration comes from what appears to be a dearth of original ideas lately from our friends in Hollywood.

By the way - I'll bet that most people who know that Heaven Can Wait was a remake of Here Comes Mr Jordan didn't bother to seek out the original, as they'd already seen a version of the movie. And that's a shame - because as good as the remake was, the original was absolutely worthwhile. What did you think of Here Comes Mr Jordan?
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Old 12-01-2006, 09:10 PM   #3
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I don't particularly care for either of them. Though when I watched Mr. Jordan I did get a great anecdote from a coworker who was a personal friend of Rains (but one that isn't worth sharing because its funniness was mostly in my coworker's ability to tell a story).

I saw the Guinness version of The Ladykillers about two months after the Hanks version. I liked it overall though it wasn't a super effort from Guinness.

I saw it because of the Hanks remake, before then I don't know if I had heard of it and certainly hadn't been given any reason to give it priority.

Personally I love remakes and different films from the same source material. Even if the remake (or the original sucks). I view pretty much any movie as a learning opportunity as well as a chance to be entertained. Even if I'm not entertained I can think about why I wasn't. What works, what doesn't.

Filmmaking is collaborative and no matter how much you buy into auteur theory it is the result of dozens of people making hundreds of decisions. More than anything else, remakes and the like highlight those things.

I would love to see four directors (who somehow hadn't seen the original) each take separate stabs at The Godfather starting with the same script. How would they be different. Is the material foolproof or almost impossible. Did Coppola do it as well as it could be done or was it actually a pedestrian effort. What camera angles detract or augment. Different actors. All of it.

So while a remake isn't necessarily an addition to entertainment I think they're boons to film buffs.
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Old 12-01-2006, 09:22 PM   #4
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Alex, based on your most recent posts, I strongly urge you to check out the Lower Depths DVD set from Criterion. It includes Jean Renoir's 1936 adaptation of the Gorky play and Akira Kurosawa's 1957 take on the same source material.

If remakes always attracted the same caliber of talent as the orginal (as in iSm's example), I'd be delighted when a remake is announced.

With all the talk of George Lucas in the "if he'd died after..." thread, I think I might rewatch The Hidden Fortress again tonight.
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Old 12-01-2006, 09:37 PM   #5
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Probably my favorite pairing is Wages of Fear/Sorcerer.

I can't say either entertained me, but they are both quality efforts and in the comparison of approaches demonstrate a lot.

I'll put that on the list (assuming it is available at Netflix). I've passed on the Kurosawa version several times (wasn't aware of the Renoir) version simply because I can't stand Gorky (what little of it I've read, translated or in Russian).
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Old 12-17-2006, 10:53 PM   #6
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Alex, based on your most recent posts, I strongly urge you to check out the Lower Depths DVD set from Criterion. It includes Jean Renoir's 1936 adaptation of the Gorky play and Akira Kurosawa's 1957 take on the same source material.
So I put these on my queue and have both right now.

I tried to watch the Kurosawa version this afternoon. So far I have fallen asleep three times, paused to make dinner. Done a couple loads of laundry.

With rewinding to watch stuff that happened while my eyes were drooping (not good with subtitles) I am now about 44 minutes in. About a third.

Needless to say, it isn't grabbing me. I'll try to finish it tomorrow just in case I'm not in the mood today. Then I'll see if I find the Renoir version any more engaging.

That said, I do find the subtitle translation on the Criterion edition to be interesting. I assume it is a recent translation since it uses language that wouldn't have been used decades ago.
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Old 12-01-2006, 10:29 PM   #7
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Actually, I didn't much care for Here Comes Mr. Jordan, though I can't say if I wouldn't have liked it more if I weren't comparing it to a film I'd already liked.

Sure, there's no inherent devaluation in remakes, covers, revivals .... but the human analytical element of comparison almost always brought to bear cannot be disrergarded out of hand.

It happens all the times with books adapted to film. I usually loathe any movie where I've read the book first. The stereotype exists for a reason: the book's always better than the movie. Often - if I know there's a movie coming out based on a good book - I'll wait till the movie opens so's I can watch it first and then read the book. That way, I'm likely to enjoy both. The other way, I'll only enjoy one.


That value system of comparisons doesn't exist outside the human foible-ridden nature of man, but there it is. Knowing better doesn't seem to help much either, 'leastways not with me.



And N.A. was right earlier .... it's easy to be lax about cover songs: who cares about 3 minutes? But movies take up a couple of hours. And books! What if we had to deal with lousy book remakes?? What a waste of time that would be!


(and why is it that books aren't remade? Why only songs and movies and plays? I don't think I've come across too many re-written novels.)
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Old 12-01-2006, 10:43 PM   #8
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Movies are corporately owned. Books, for the most part are individually owned. Most remakes are either remade by the same studio (because they already own it) or are adaptations from another medium (where the copyright holder can make serial deals for adaptation). Must multiple books have been written offering takes on the same source material (particularly public domain plays) and complaints are not the same.

Frequently, with remakes, I find that people will like better whichever they saw first. But again, that means it is a personal foible and I don't blame the movie for it. The same things happens with Disneyland vs. Magic Kingdom. Most people prefer whichever one they saw first.

I don't know. Maybe I have some super human ability to take movies on their own terms but I don't find it that hard. And if someone thinks they have a unique take on something (and despite whatever base monetary reasons a project has for getting off the ground in the first place, the people involved almost always believe they have something artistic to contribute) then they're welcome to take a stab at it as far as I'm concerned.
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Old 12-03-2006, 07:00 PM   #9
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Quote:
Originally Posted by innerSpaceman View Post
(and why is it that books aren't remade? Why only songs and movies and plays? I don't think I've come across too many re-written novels.)
Well, there are mutliple version of the King Arthur and Robin Hood stories. That happens of course with stories that probably began word-to-mouth. There are many, many written versions of fairy tales. And there are also pastcies and derivative tales...contemporary authors writing Sherlock Holmes count as pastiches. (Suddenly thinking I'm spelling that word incorrectly, but oh well). And there are retellings of stories from the perspective of other characters, and I think those qualify as "remakes". Mary Reilly retells Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Rosencrantz and Gildenstern are Dead - a play - in its own way retells Hamlet...kinda. These types of novels are essentially telling the same story from a different perspective. Bram Stoker told the story of Dracula through a series of letters written by the various characters. If someone else wrote a story called Dracula that essentially told the same story, but in first person from Dracula's perspective, I'd put that in the same category.
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Old 12-02-2006, 09:59 AM   #10
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In theory, I agree with you Alex, but the seeming flood of bad remakes is just making the thought of another one and another one and another one more and more painful. I wouldn't wat to abolish all remakes, but I just wish the volume would decrease significantly because I also agree with iSm that, as much as I might be able to separate a remake from its source, movies don't exist in a vacuum. I still feel that public perception of a movie is part and parcel to its value and a bad remake, even if it is only due to people's stupidity, does alter that .
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