Lemme add: the Fred Savage character should be reading his own sequel/fanfic, thus giving an in-universe explanation for why the new story would inevitably look and sound different than a movie from the late 80s!![]()
I like this idea.
Lemme add: the Fred Savage character should be reading his own sequel/fanfic, thus giving an in-universe explanation for why the new story would inevitably look and sound different than a movie from the late 80s!![]()
OK, good point, I didn't think about those.If only! Somewhere in box-office limbo, The Lone Ranger, The Green Hornet, Dark Shadows, The Men in Black, Robocop, Total Recall, the Predator, and The Mortal Engines are shaking their heads sadly.
When it comes to show-biz, nothing is guaranteed. It's always a horse race. In the immortal words of William Goldman, author of The Princess Bride:
“Nobody knows anything...... Not one person in the entire motion picture field knows for a certainty what's going to work. Every time out it's a guess and, if you're lucky, an educated one.”
― William Goldman, Adventures in the Screen Trade
6) It is very, very hard to find a successful original concept, but if you go with something with a built in fan base, you're almost guaranteed a hit.
If only! Somewhere in box-office limbo, The Lone Ranger, The Green Hornet, Dark Shadows, The Men in Black, Robocop, Total Recall, the Predator, and The Mortal Engines are shaking their heads sadly.
And yet did any of those remakes actually lose money? While it's pretty rare for a remake/reboot to be better than the original, they generally make enough money to justify their existence. Studios are pretty risk averse and while there is a chance of a new idea becoming a breakout success and spawning a money-making franchise, there's also a good chance of it losing money. Doing a remake is unlikely to earn megabucks but is also likely to generate a steady profit for the studio and from a studio perspective a high chance of a small profit is much better than a low chance of a big profit with an equal chance of a loss.
Thanks for those stats. It appears that reboots aren't as much a sure thing as I'd have thought. Although I must admit of those on your list that I've seen it very much appears as though the studios have assumed that the name alone would sell tickets and have just thrown action and special effects into the mix without bothering too much about the story. I'd suggest that as an example, Lone Ranger should have been perfect for a remake. With the right story (and some of the elements were there) it could have been a huge hit. Unfortunately after signing Johnny Depp they seem to have let him turn it into a Captain Jack Sparrow ego project rather than focusing on the Lone Ranger (i.e. the main character).Yes, they did. Hollywood accounting being opaque and, well, hard to account for, the general rule of thumb is a movie has to gross at least twice its budget to actually start making a profit.
Thanks for those stats. It appears that reboots aren't as much a sure thing as I'd have thought. Although I must admit of those on your list that I've seen it very much appears as though the studios have assumed that the name alone would sell tickets and have just thrown action and special effects into the mix without bothering too much about the story. I'd suggest that as an example, Lone Ranger should have been perfect for a remake. With the right story (and some of the elements were there) it could have been a huge hit. Unfortunately after signing Johnny Depp they seem to have let him turn it into a Captain Jack Sparrow ego project rather than focusing on the Lone Ranger (i.e. the main character).
It would be interesting to expand on the "Buttercup's Baby" sample stuff that was added to later editions of the novel.No reason they couldn't do that, but with him reading a sequel to the original book...
I might agree on this, with some of them, like Blade Runner, which I think overestimated the fanbase, but I don't even think they always care if it has a fanbase. Are you telling me someone thought Wild Wild West & Rollerball had legit fanbases? Some reboots are trying to capitalize on an existing fan base, sure. Those are the ones that suspiciously show up just in time for a generation of kids who grew up on the original, to be old enough to have kids to bring out now.But another is, imo, clearly overestimating the original franchise in the first place. Pre-existing fanbases are great, but not every potentially rebootable franchise is created equal.
I'll just have to warm up my "Ignore it" goggles again. They've been getting a lot of use lately
I might agree on this, with some of them, like Blade Runner, which I think overestimated the fanbase, but I don't even think they always care if it has a fanbase. Are you telling me someone thought Wild Wild West & Rollerball had legit fanbases? Some reboots are trying to capitalize on an existing fan base, sure. Those are the ones that suspiciously show up just in time for a generation of kids who grew up on the original, to be old enough to have kids to bring out now.
However, some just don't have any ideas & dig through IPs they think people might have heard of, like Flipper or Flubber, until one seems plausibly producible, & some things like Sherlock Holmes are just legacies now, & someone will always want to do more, the same as they do with Dickens or Shakespeare
There are different categories, yes. Legacies like Holmes and I think you're also right that sometimes they just throw something out there for the sake of having something to make. There's also the category, I think, of ideas that may not have a fanbase but do honestly have at least some potential that could maybe be realized. Personally, that's where I'd put Wild Wild West. Steampunk cowboys sounds awesome and could make for a reasonable success if properly executed - they just bungled the job on it.
"Ten Little Indians"
I'm not familiar with the movie, but calling it "Ten little Indians " well, that ain't gonna happen.Imagine the uproar if the did a remake and released it under the original title of "And Then There Were None".
I'm re-watching Mission Impossible at home right now. It's been a long while and I honestly forgot just how good the show was. I don't care about the movies at all. Greg Morris walked out of the theater on premier night and I think that says it all.But has that actually impaired anyone's ability to go back and enjoy the original shows? Is it now impossible to watch a vintage M:I episode without thinking "Damn, I used to think Phelps was so cool, but now that I know he's a FILTHY, NO-GOOD BASTARD, I can't root for him anymore"?
Or do old-school M:I fans simply watch the original episodes as they were meant to be watched, without retroactively adding any baggage from the movies? One can certainly argue that the first M:I handled Phelps badly, but did that somehow make the old episodes less entertaining from then on?
Seems to me that's a valid reason to dislike that movie, if one feels so inclined, but it doesn't damage the originals any.
I'm not familiar with the movie, but calling it "Ten little Indians " well, that ain't gonna happen.
Okay, looked it up and, wow.It's a classic Agatha Christie murder mystery that's been filmed several times under various titles. And, funny you should mention it, but the book's very first title is even more unusable these days!
(Google it.)
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