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_____V_____
04-18-2010, 08:15 AM
(via Variety)

Studios have gone back to the future as they develop their upcoming slates, eyeing a slew of hits from the 1980s to remake, reboot or reimagine.

The irony is that "Back to the Future" isn't one of them.

Everything else is essentially getting the "Clash of the Titans" treatment: retooled with flashier f/x and a new cast of recognizable names to reintroduce the material to a new generation of moviegoers.

At least 30 films from the '80s are being revamped, including the comedies "Police Academy," "Short Circuit" and "Private Benjamin," horror fare like "Fright Night" and "Poltergeist," actioners "Escape From New York," "RoboCop" and "Red Dawn," and everything in between from "Near Dark" to "Footloose" and "The Karate Kid." New sequels are in store for "Beverly Hills Cop" and "Ghostbusters."

The projects are the latest sign of Hollywood's continued retrenchment into a safe zone where it only greenlights films with built-in awareness -- pics based on kids and young adult books, videogames, comicbooks and toys, for example.

Of course, Hollywood isn't just remaking movies from the '80s. Studios have dug into their vaults and are eyeing remakes of Alfred Hitchcock's "The Birds," comedy "The Graduate," sci-fi classics like "Fantastic Voyage" and oater "True Grit."

It makes sense that Hollywood is gravitating toward films that will be 30 years old by the time their new incarnations hit the bigscreen. Many of the higher-profile properties were produced at a time when studios were first embracing the concept of the summer tentpole after films like "Jaws" and "Star Wars" proved that high-concept pics could translate to big business at the box office. And the thinking is: If they worked then, why not now?

Michael Bay's production shingle Platinum Dunes, especially, has gone after the youth market with reboots of "Friday the 13th," "A Nightmare on Elm Street," "The Hitcher," "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre," "The Amityville Horror," "The Birds" and "Monster Squad." It was working on a reboot of Kathryn Bigelow's vampire tale "Near Dark," but put the project on hold because of "Twilight."

Many of the films feature strong characters -- Conan, He-Man, RoboCop and "A Nightmare on Elm Street's" Freddy Krueger -- that are bankable in their own right and bring auds to the megaplex while also giving something of a spotlight to the actors that portray them.

Six actors have played James Bond on the bigscreen over the years; four have similarly donned Batman's cape and cowl. Russell Crowe is the latest Robin Hood, and Robert Downey Jr. is now suiting up as both Iron Man and Sherlock Holmes.

It's why Legendary Pictures (which produced "Clash") is looking to reintroduce Godzilla on the bigscreen, not as a remake of Sony's 1998 pic but as an update of the Japanese pics that first introduced the rampaging lizard in the 1950s.

That iconic status is why Universal keeps eyeing its classic monsters like Dracula, Frankenstein, the Bride of Frankenstein, the Wolfman, the Invisible Man and the Creature of the Black Lagoon as prime for bigscreen returns. U is moving forward with "Dracula Year Zero" as an origin story of how Prince Vlad the Impaler becomes the bloodsucking vamp, with Sam Worthington set to star. It also has a "Frankenstein" remake in the works with Guillermo del Toro set helm.

The reality, however, is that not all of these current remakes will work. The latest, "Death at a Funeral," from Screen Gems, has been panned by many critics, and the original Brit farce died at the B.O. in 2007.

Lionsgate stumbled twice with "The Punisher," with four years in between pics. MGM also tripped up with a reboot of "Fame" last year, which danced its way to just $24 million at the domestic B.O.; "Death Race" didn't cross the finish line with a big haul, either. Remakes of "Rollerball," "Get Carter" and "The Bad News Bears" also failed to win over auds.

Still, with "Clash of the Titans" conquering the box office, Legendary will now focus on unleashing "Godzilla" on a new crop of moviegoers. Producers at the shingle are looking to fix what didn't work in Roland Emmerich's pricey version, including the rampaging lizard's overall look. In the new "Clash," they similarly made tweaks, tossing Bubo the mechanical owl from the original to the side and making the Kraken more menacing.

Similarly, MGM changed "Red Dawn's" Russian baddies to invading Chinese communists to make the plot more relevant to the current state of the world. The new "Nightmare on Elm Street" now serves as an origin story of how Freddy becomes a serial killer. And Strike Entertainment and Universal's "The Thing" was developed as a prequel to John Carpenter's original scarefest, and focuses on the Norwegian crew that first discovered the shape-shifting alien in Antarctica.

You can make changes, update the plots and add more weight to the characters," says a producer.

The question now is, what happens if the new versions don't work? Or what if they do? Will Hollywood be remaking the remakes 30 years from now?

http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118017872.html?categoryid=13&cs=1

http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118017899.html?categoryid=13&cs=1

FreddyMyers
04-18-2010, 08:34 AM
I think its hollywood's way of throwing in the towel and giving up trying to be original. I hope some of the stuff works i.e. A del Toro version of Frankenstein. I alsohope some of it fails misarably i.e. Short Circit. I couls see Police Acadamy being funny just because of all the new comedic actors that are out right now. You can have your remakes Hollywood just dont fuck up the Avengers.

roshiq
04-19-2010, 01:10 AM
(via Variety)

The question now is, what happens if the new versions don't work? Or what if they do? Will Hollywood be remaking the remakes 30 years from now?


I think that's gonna happen anyway.

fiend_skull
04-20-2010, 12:52 AM
I think one of the most disappointing things about this is that the theaters will be saturated with these remakes and it will strangle any newer movies who want to actually make an appearance on the big screen. In some senarios the audience might even be completely alienated by the entire ordeal as movie after movie is nothing more than a movie they've seen years before on TV/DVD/VHS/(some viewing device available in the future). God only knows what effect it will have upon the reputation and prestige of some of those films (IE The Birds).

I find it quite saddening that all this is happening at once and is being so well accepted by actors, fans, and directors alike. Already, I can't count the amount of remakes made in the last ten years. I can only hope this fad dies quickly, or is executed so well that it makes the wait and the frustration worth it. A mediocre outcome would only mean a failed attempt and no real stop for remakes or unneeded sequels.

Deimos
04-20-2010, 09:19 PM
I think that's gonna happen anyway.

Same here.