And everything?
Popeye, for all those 50+ year olds out there.
Well, there you go, lol. I'm feeling every bit of my age and mid-life crisis so I've been feeling rather bitter of late so maybe I'm too cynical. I do feel like some of these properties are too long in the tooth to be returning, I mean Body Heat, really?my 6 year old is a fan, though he insists on pronouncing it "Puh-Pie". Amazon has all the classic cartoons.
In the year that the original Body Heat came out (1981) there was also a remake of The Postman Always Rings Twice, another noir with a femme fatale, originally made in 1946. I don’t know that age matters with this kind of thriller, if the themes click with the audience. We’re due a renaissance of that sort of film.Well, there you go, lol. I'm feeling every bit of my age and mid-life crisis so I've been feeling rather bitter of late so maybe I'm too cynical. I do feel like some of these properties are too long in the tooth to be returning, I mean Body Heat, really?
It's the age plus the title, remaking Body Heat in 2024+ feels like a headscratcher. Wasn't Postman a bit of a TV classic? I don't think of Body Heat like that but I haven't seen it since I was too young to be watching itIn the year that the original Body Heat came out (1981) there was also a remake of The Postman Always Rings Twice, another noir with a femme fatale, originally made in 1946. I don’t know that age matters with this kind of thriller, if the themes click with the audience. We’re due a renaissance of that sort of film.
It’s been years since I saw it but Kasdan has always been an interesting filmmaker, Hurt was always very watchable in the 80s, Turner set the screen on fire back then and you had a great early appearance from a young Mickey Rourke. Whether a remake captures all of those ingredients is debatable, of course, but the source material is strong enough, IMHO.It's the age plus the title, remaking Body Heat in 2024+ feels like a headscratcher. Wasn't Postman a bit of a TV classic? I don't think of Body Heat like that but I haven't seen it since I was too young to be watching it. Maybe I should watch Body Heat and see if maybe there's something there I don't remember that's worth having another go.
Whatever they do they need to set the story in the past. Nothing in Popeye really works well in a 2024 setting.
Maybe but it would just seem weird watching him walking around in modern clothes and driving a car and looking at his iPhone .
Well, there you go, lol. I'm feeling every bit of my age and mid-life crisis so I've been feeling rather bitter of late so maybe I'm too cynical. I do feel like some of these properties are too long in the tooth to be returning, I mean Body Heat, really?
In the year that the original Body Heat came out (1981) there was also a remake of The Postman Always Rings Twice, another noir with a femme fatale, originally made in 1946. I don’t know that age matters with this kind of thriller, if the themes click with the audience. We’re due a renaissance of that sort of film.
Yeah, that's where I and most everyone I know stand but obviously he has his fans.I'm 54 this year and to be honest I don't think I was ever a huge Popeye fan when I was a kid. He was around, I watched cartoons and probably read some comics but in terms of my favourite things as a youngling Popeye probably wouldn't have scratched the top 20
I don't know if it that was specifically the problem but I don't remember a more tacked on romantic subplot. It definitely felt perfunctory and no one involved particularly seem to care about it.Yeah I mean at its core is just a noir thriller, only the sex is really period specific. I think the one thing that concerns me is that a lot of films don't seem to be very sexy these days (maybe I'm watching the wrong films) At times the viewing public seems downright prudish in fact. That was the one weird thing about Top Gun: Maverick, the chemistry between Cruise and McGillis was off the charts in top Gun. By contrast his relationship with Jennifer Connolley's character felt practically platonic and about as 'safe' as you could imagine it.
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