CrimsonMist
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I hope they learned from their mistakes from this and don't need to piss away $200M. Hopefully the $50M is enough to make a Creature costume. I'd be disappointed if it was fully CGI.
I'd give CFTBL around 80 or 90 million. Regardless of your thoughts on Hellboy 2, the budget for that film was 85 million and it certainly didn't look it. The creature designs and what not were incredible. Put some of that money into making a *****in' looking Creature design, make it a puppet, a guy in a costume...maybe do motion capture for the swimming sequences.
Doc Jones and I threw around some ideas for a Creature remake in the "Movies You'd Like To See Get Made" thread and there's certainly potential there. Especially in setting it in the Victorian period. Not sure if i would incorporate any "Beauty & The Beast" aspects in there, but I'd most certainly play up the sexual tension.
Me, too. I've not seen Coppola's but I can't stand the design of Dracula they used. IMO, there are only 2 acceptable designs of Dracula: Bela Lugosi's and Nosferatu. Anything else is Dracula in name only.
I also hope they avoid the temptation many other Dracula/vampire films give into and make Dracula's mouth all bloody when he's sucking the blood out of a victim. He's not supposed to eat their neck, just puncture it.
Even Lugosi's is off. To do the book right, you need to be rid of the image of Dracula as a suave devil in disguise. Dracula in the novel is NEVER attractive and where he grows younger, he NEVER BECOMES attractive. Stoker's Dracula has all the appeal of a rapist. He is a truly EVIL villain. He isn't a gothic, romantic, or tragic hero. He's pure evil. He takes what he wants when he wants it, sometimes just because he can and other times to teach a lesson to those who might seek to destroy him. He's a brutal warlord, a strategist (though one could argue against that by questioning how Dracula inadvertently gets involved with the group of people that are friends with Jonathan Harker, the man he has locked up in his castle, though that's mostly attributed to the literary period, where coincidence is stretched.) He also has hairy palms, rancid breath and a white, droopy mustache. He wears all black as well.
He should NEVER look like Nosferatu. Being a german expressionist film, the disease-ridden rodent features of Murnau's Count Orlock are merely physical representations of the aura of the character. Stoker's Dracula is a plague carrier, but to make him look like that is all wrong. Stoker's Dracula's intent is to blend in as much as authentically possible in England so as to create more vampires from the inside, without ever being caught.
and vampires go after the jugular vein. I'm pretty sure that once that vein is ruptured, it bleeds like crazy.