Any one of the 22 (not exaggerating) film versions of Count of Monte Cristo is surely considered by most to be better than the first.
See, I regard any adaptation as worthwhile even within the same medium. It's going to have a different attitude, different perspective, and different production values. To me, it's the same as going from radio or stage to film.Thought about that but I don't think Silent film adaptations should count, it's basically a different medium, as different as radio or the stage. But again we need to distinguish between remakes and new adaptions of the original
Ocean's Eleven is a remake of a movie from the sixties called Ocean's 11. One of them is the most famous heist movie ever. The other is the original.I can't think of a single remake I've ever enjoyed as much as the original and I'm at the point now where I pretty much skip all of them
Ocean's Eleven is a remake of a movie from the sixties called Ocean's 11. One of them is the most famous heist movie ever. The other is the original.
See, I regard any adaptation as worthwhile even within the same medium. It's going to have a different attitude, different perspective, and different production values. To me, it's the same as going from radio or stage to film.
Never mind the numerous other efforts to adapt the Wizard of Oz. Or various Shakespeare plays, Passion Plays, musicals, or stage productions. I don't understand why Star Trek is special but I can get twenty different iterations of Batman in film?![]()
That doesn't diminish the originals by remaking them. That's absurdity at the highest level.Star Trek started out as live action, all the shows are in the same continuity (even ST09 in the multiverse). The seal has never been broken, and after 60 years, that's one tough seal. Disco/SNW is beating on it pretty hard with the visual reboot, but it's still intact.
That doesn't diminish the originals by remaking them. That's absurdity at the highest level.
Hey, I liked the Netflix one!None of the Lost in Space adaptations (you mean reboots) have managed it, and the original Lost in Space is a low bar.
There never should be that need for the respect like the original. To me it's absurd because they are two different things. Treat them as such instead of searching for the thrill of the original. It's like trying to get a band to sound like the first album. It's not possible.New Sherlock Holmes books are never as respected as the originals, regardless of their quality, but all the movies are judged on the same standard, because it's a different medium.
There never should be that need for the respect like the original. To me it's absurd because they are two different things. Treat them as such instead of searching for the thrill of the original. It's like trying to get a band to sound like the first album. It's not possible.
How people react doesn't demand such a response though. To me, people's first reaction shouldn't dictate that response forever. It's absurd to stay with your first reaction no matter how comfortable.That's nice, but it's not how most people react to things. Ghostbusters 2016 was loudly rejected by fandom in a way that simply wouldn't have been possible if Ghostbusters had been a book first. That said, the Harry Potter reboot is coming up and, hold on to your butts, it's going to get very ugly, even though it was a book first. Some of that is because it was adapted so soon, a mere 4 years later, so the movies have more cache than is usual with this sort of thing.
I never saw them, but they are pretty well regarded.The Fly or The Thing?
Never saw that either.Ocean's Eleven is a remake of a movie from the sixties called Ocean's 11. One of them is the most famous heist movie ever. The other is the original.
Aha! Battlestar Galactica! That's a remake I actually did enjoy. Though it's so distinct that it's more like a brand new story with new characters that's just inspired by the original.It's a big deal to make an adaptation in the same medium as the original. New Sherlock Holmes books are never as respected as the originals, regardless of their quality, but all the movies are judged on the same standard, because it's a different medium. There is a massive handicap that has to be overcome for a same medium adaption. Nu Battlestar Galactica is a notable success.
Which is hilarious in light of @UssGlenn saying the comics are more important because in Batman's first appearance in "Detective Comics" #27, and it's Batman punching a criminal in to a vat of acid:Fans are not happy when movie Batman starts killing folks, adaptations aren't entirely isolated from the original,
Batman's slightly murdery early stories are pretty much just trivia at this point, especially as he really didn't kill a lot of people even then. With Detective Comics alone running over a thousand issues, I'd estimate Batman kills people in about 0.1% of his stories.Which is hilarious in light of @UssGlenn saying the comics are more important because in Batman's first appearance in "Detective Comics" #27, and it's Batman punching a criminal in to a vat of acid.
Ah,so it doesn't count? How wonderfully arbitrary.Batman's slightly murdery early stories are pretty much just trivia at this point, es
This fan doesn't want them to fail. I don't think I have a proper continuation of the things I enjoy. Not TOS, not Farscape, not Firefly, not even Man in the Iron Mask, which is an awful story compared to Three Musketeers.Plus if they're successful studios are going to go in that direction instead of giving us a proper continuation, so fans have reason to want them to fail
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