Yeah, but Len Wiseman is involved and that automatically means the remake will be approximately 100% shitter.Well, if Paul Verhoeven's not involved, that automatically means the remake will have approximately 85% less gratuitous gore, so I'm all for it.![]()
Yeah, but Len Wiseman is involved and that automatically means the remake will be approximately 100% shitter.Well, if Paul Verhoeven's not involved, that automatically means the remake will have approximately 85% less gratuitous gore, so I'm all for it.![]()
I'm hoping that this isn't so much a "Total Recall remake" as a new adaptation of Philip K. Dick's "We Can Remember It For You Wholesale." The Dick story and the Verhoeven film are profoundly different, so a film that uses the story as its launching point and develops it in an independent direction would be very different from the previous film.
It's hard for them not to use the Total Recall epithet though since this is what most people identify with, as with other adaptations of his work. PKD's titles were rarely filmic.
Just like they called the movie in which a kid in China learns Kung-Fu from Jackie Chan "The Karate Kid".
It's hard for them not to use the Total Recall epithet though since this is what most people identify with, as with other adaptations of his work. PKD's titles were rarely filmic.
I'm hoping that this isn't so much a "Total Recall remake" as a new adaptation of Philip K. Dick's "We Can Remember It For You Wholesale." The Dick story and the Verhoeven film are profoundly different, so a film that uses the story as its launching point and develops it in an independent direction would be very different from the previous film.
Hollywood doesn't care about how old something is to remake it. They're remade movies that were new just 2-3 years before the new "re-imagining" so nothing is sacred.And maybe it's because I'm 37 and was 17 years old when the original came out but I think the original just isn't that dated to need a remake.
That is if you think something needs to be old fashioned and dated in order to need remaking.
I guess this is probably trying to cash in on Inception's success, but hopefully it's good.
Hollywood doesn't care about how old something is to remake it. They're remade movies that were new just 2-3 years before the new "re-imagining" so nothing is sacred.
People often think of remakes as a modern phenomenon, but they often remade the same story several times per decade back in the era of silent films and early talkies.
People often think of remakes as a modern phenomenon, but they often remade the same story several times per decade back in the era of silent films and early talkies.
The thing older fans often don't seem to get is they're not making these movies for us. They're for a new generation of moviegoers for whom 1990 was ages ago . . ..
That is true but it was also due to limitations of the time. Now it's just blatant they're redoing/remaking/reimagining/rewhatevering they want to call it. At one time they at least tried to limit the exposure of the fact it's just redoing a movie that was previously a huge success or a huge flop. I think the fact they're so much more open and frequently open about it now irks people. Especially when they are used to a more discreet and less common flood of remakes of classic and recent movies.Hollywood doesn't care about how old something is to remake it. They're remade movies that were new just 2-3 years before the new "re-imagining" so nothing is sacred.
People often think of remakes as a modern phenomenon, but they often remade the same story several times per decade back in the era of silent films and early talkies.
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