Yeah, wow! One movie!
And I was talking mainly about the older US remakes of such "classics"
Gee, defensive much?
I was giving one example, but there's plenty other out there. Admittedly these are more recent examples rather than older remakes, as I'd have to do a bit more reading into what happened with the older films (though I do recall when I studied film history that, WAY back in the early days of the studio system, when a remake was made the studio would literally burn the reels of the original so that the remake was officially replacing it) but as a couple more examples, think about
The Descent. In the UK, it came out just a little bit before similar US subterrenean horror
The Cave, and was VASTLY superior, wiping the floor with its US competitor and totally trumping it. Over in America, studios sat on
The Descent for years so as to avoid any "confusion" between the two films, then when they DID release
The Descent they damn near spoiled the film with a hatchet-job on the ending, because they thought American audiences wouldn't understand a dream sequence. Then there's the excellent
Red Riding trilogy, one of the best dramas to come out of the UK in years. It only got a blink-and-you'll-miss-it limited release in New York, because Ridley Scott already scooped up the rights to the American remake.
As you'll see as I write a little more below, I'm hardly saying this is a universal phenomenom, that all originals are buried by their remakes. Far from it. But it's equally wrong to just pretend it never happens, and lash out with sarcasm at anyone who even suggests that it does.
I love how people always come up with the excuse that the reason remakes fail "In their eyes" is because they fail to live up to the writing or acting in the original.l Ummm no, facts are that the reason remakes fail & the reason people feel the way they do about them is because ppl have a mindset in their heads already that it can't touch the original. that the original is soooooooooooo awesome, that a new take couldn't possibly touch it. Remakes fail, not because there badly made, it's because you, the audience never give them a chance. You guys will sit there before a movie, trash it & then go, but I'll give it a chance. Ahhh, you just spent your post trashing a remake & then expect me to believe your going to "Give it a chance?". Laughable at best, Really is. End of the day remakes fail because of you guys, not the film makers. They give you something new & it's blasphemy, they try to keep it close to the original & it's blasphemy. That's just a fact, you'll never be happy.
Steve
That's a pretty bogus, unfair assessment of why people are against remakes. Bad movies fail because people say they are bad? Yeah, it's the audience's fault. How dare they not just sit back and say "NOM NOM NOM! We love the s**t your spoonfeeding us, Hollywood! More please!"
I am not against ALL remakes on some matter of principle. There are plenty of remakes I have enjoyed and supported. John Carpenter's
The Thing, one of the all-time great sci-fi horrors, is a remake. I have Martin Scorcese's
The Departed displayed proudly alongside the
Infernal Affairs trilogy in my DVD collection. Though the original is still the best, I have no objection to Peter Jackson's
King Kong, and thought it was a great movie in its own right.
The Escapist was an ingenius reworking of
Bad Day at Black Rock, so much so that you don't even realise it's a remake until the ending. Christopher Nolan added a whole new dimension to the central moral dilemna of
Insomnia when he remade it, in my opinion surpassing the original. And though I may be in the minority, I believe the recent remake of
The Manchurian Candidate was even better than the classic original, with superior performances from its ensemble (though Angela Lansbury was better than Meryl Streep).
What these remakes have in common is that they have something new to say. Either they bring an exciting new twist to the story, or the source material has become relevant in a new way in the context of today's society, or it's even just a case of an auteur director putting his own authorial stamp on this new version of the film in fascinating fashion. Whatever the reason, it brings something new to the table, it has some reason to justify its existence, other than "this movie made money for us 20 years ago, we'll make money from it again rather than thinking up something new" or "I DON'T WANT TO READ STUPID SUBTITLES OR LISTEN TO FUNNY BRITISH ACCENTS! AMEEEEEEEERICA, F**K YEAH!"
But still, though these pointless remakes do often annoy me, I don't get overly up in arms about them. I don't scream to the heavens at the outrage. I just speak with my wallet, and don't see them. In my mind, the remakes of
Halloween and
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre don't even exist. I'll just rewatch the classic originals on DVD, thank you very much. And if a movie is truly meant to stand the test of time, if it's such a classic that remaking it IS blasphemy, then as the years pass the remake will fade in the memory to a mere historical footnote, while the original will remain fresh in people's minds. I mean, how many people remember the 1990s
Night of the Living Dead remake or the 1970s
King Kong remake?
Let Me In will be released, and it might suck, it might just be a transparant cash grab that offers nothing new. But it might also be a worthy remake that has something new to say, that can stand as an enjoyable film experience in its own right rather than owing a leech-like, parasitic existence to
Let the Right One In. We won't know until it comes out, I guess. But at the end of the day, I still own
Let the Right One In on DVD. No one's coming to burn that.