The next TV show on the remake block..... Baywatch.
I second that. NO and just......NO.
I mean, when is it ever objectionable to watch attractive people run around wearing bikinis?People don't need soft core porn like Baywatch anymore to masturbate to. That was what the internet was invented for.
They're not bikinis, they are one-piece swimsuits KNOW YOUR DAMN SWIMWEAR, PEOPLE!I mean, when is it ever objectionable to watch attractive people run around wearing bikinis?
I would almost imagine they'd try for something off of Forbidden Planet due to the MGM thing, but it's a stretchAmazon is moving ahead with their MGM library.
Stargate is getting a movie, then a TV show. RoboCop is getting a TV show, then a movie. Legally Blonde is getting a movie and TV show at the same time (whether or not this is Legally Blonde 3 remains to be seen).
Fame, Barbershop and The Magnificent Seven are getting TV shows (anyone remember the short-lived Magnificent Seven TV series with Michael Biehn and Ron Perlman?). The Pink Panther, Poltergeist and The Thomas Crown Affair are getting movies.
There are already plans for Creed/Rocky spinoffs for movies and TV, and there's also a possibility of Stallone bringing Rocky to TV.
I would almost imagine they'd try for something off of Forbidden Planet due to the MGM thing, but it's a stretch
I disagree with this premise. Remakes tend to work when there ISN'T a built in fanbase for them because then they are judged on their own and not in competition with something else. When the 80s versions of The Thing and The Fly came out I had no earthly idea that these were remakes until many years later. Conversely, when the 90s version of Psycho came out I couldn't help but compare it to the original as it was basically a shot for shot remake of an iconic film, but with weaker acting or actors who were miscast. I think a Forbidden Planet would work because most the people seeing it wouldn't even know it's a remake and would judge it by it's own merits.Too old. Not enough built in audience. 80's/90's nostalgia is the sweet spot, hence the titles they picked.
A guy I used to follow on Twitter (he left it when Musk took over) made the interesting (I thought) point that The Fugitive was one of the last high profile remakes of a popular property that wasn’t beholden to a fan base, didn’t have vocal portions of the internet complaining that Ford was too old to play Kimble or that there shouldn’t have been a conspiracy behind his wife’s murder etc.I disagree with this premise. Remakes tend to work when there ISN'T a built in fanbase for them because then they are judged on their own and not in competition with something else. When the 80s versions of The Thing and The Fly came out I had no earthly idea that these were remakes until many years later. Conversely, when the 90s version of Psycho came out I couldn't help but compare it to the original as it was basically a shot for shot remake of an iconic film, but with weaker acting or actors who were miscast. I think a Forbidden Planet would work because most the people seeing it wouldn't even know it's a remake and would judge it by it's own merits.
I disagree with this premise. Remakes tend to work when there ISN'T a built in fanbase for them because then they are judged on their own and not in competition with something else. When the 80s versions of The Thing and The Fly came out I had no earthly idea that these were remakes until many years later. Conversely, when the 90s version of Psycho came out I couldn't help but compare it to the original as it was basically a shot for shot remake of an iconic film, but with weaker acting or actors who were miscast. I think a Forbidden Planet would work because most the people seeing it wouldn't even know it's a remake and would judge it by it's own merits.
How did the A-Team movie do again?Who's talking about remakes working artistically? We're talking about money and audiences. These are businesses. That's why they focus on products with with nostalgia & built in audiences.
I would almost imagine they'd try for something off of Forbidden Planet due to the MGM thing, but it's a stretch
Too old. Not enough built in audience. 80's/90's nostalgia is the sweet spot, hence the titles they picked.
I think a Forbidden Planet would work because most the people seeing it wouldn't even know it's a remake and would judge it by it's own merits.
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