I'm waiting for the new Back to the Future trilogy starting in 2015. Part I goes back to 1985. And maybe by 2045 we'll finally get our flying cars!
He's said to be in talks regarding both films, whether he actually signs up for either of them remains to be seen.McTiegue's probably going to direct Magneto, AFAIK, which would mean he wouldn't be available
I always thought Godzilla was A-sexual, that's how there were children.
And besides, the Godzilla movie completely and utterly sucked ass. I was nine when I watched it for the first time, and from nine years old I've wanted to write movies in dispise of Godzilla.
I'd love a remake of Fahrenheit 451, the long-rumored one that Frank Darabount was going to direct starring Tom Hanks, that would be considerably closer to the book.
You know, prior to The Incredible Hulk, I was real interested in seeing Edward Norton as Matt Murdock/Daredevil, but I guess that's out-of-the-question now. Honestly, I think Norton attached to anything is kind of a neat idea. So yeah, I'd like to see a Daredevil do-over, since I thought the theatrical version was decent at best (the Director's Cut is a considerable improvement). I think Mark Walhberg could be interesting as the Man Without Fear.
This I would love to see!I'll be more specific in my desire to remake Highlander. The first movie pwns. But it's very 80's. And very dated. The Highlander brand(calling it a "franchise" is being way too kind to it) has been in such a free fall of crap for decades I doubt even a good remake could redeem it. That being said I love the first movie. The only problem with it? Christopher Lambert. Awful actor who cannot do a Scottish or American accent(AHHHGGG AHHHMMM CONNNAAARRR MAAACLAAAD OF DA CLANNNN MAAACLAAAD) to save his life. Granted, neither could Adrain Pual. My solution? Get a good actor who can. Ewan MacGreggor would be awesome as Conner.
This I would love to see!I'll be more specific in my desire to remake Highlander. The first movie pwns. But it's very 80's. And very dated. The Highlander brand(calling it a "franchise" is being way too kind to it) has been in such a free fall of crap for decades I doubt even a good remake could redeem it. That being said I love the first movie. The only problem with it? Christopher Lambert. Awful actor who cannot do a Scottish or American accent(AHHHGGG AHHHMMM CONNNAAARRR MAAACLAAAD OF DA CLANNNN MAAACLAAAD) to save his life. Granted, neither could Adrain Pual. My solution? Get a good actor who can. Ewan MacGreggor would be awesome as Conner.Plus, if they can make TREK popular again, I'm sure the right people can make highlander popular again too! *Think Queen would do the theme again?*
Anyone suggesting a remake of BTTF should be taken out back and shotI'm waiting for the new Back to the Future trilogy starting in 2015. Part I goes back to 1985. And maybe by 2045 we'll finally get our flying cars!
Aren't they already working on a Highlander remake?
I'd suggest Oded Fehr for Ramirez if he were about ten years older. Right now he's probably just a bit too young.
Goyer's apparently off the project and they're looking for a replacement.I thought David Goyer was directing that one? Regardless, I'd much prefer McTiegue over Goyer. I'm beginning to lump Goyer in the same category of industrialist hack as Michael Bay and Brett Ratner.
To understand Godzilla, you have to understand when it was made and where. 1954, Japan, just nine years after two nuclear bombs were dropped on two major cities.
Godzilla was always an allegory for nuclear weapons, the power of nature perverted by man, the horror of it, the pure unstoppable destructive force of it. Godzilla was the nuclear bomb given form, by people who were all too aware of its power.
The Soviets had just developed nuclear bombs of their own in 1949 and an Arms race was inevitable. The fears of this and the trauma of the bombings were all exemplified in the film. In the end, though Serizawa builds an even deadlier bomb to slay Godzilla, the personification of nuclear weapons, he chooses to die rather than risk his weapon sparking an arms race in a statement against WMD proliferation and for scientific responsibility.
Later incarnations of Godzilla don't represent The Bomb directly like the original did, but rather nature's rage against the bomb, and nuclear irresponsibility in general.
All of them are punishment for mankind's hubris, spawned from it directly.
Stripping Godzilla of it's nuclear and environmental allegories pretty well destroys the concept. Stripping Godzilla of its near invincibility does even worse.
Goyer's apparently off the project and they're looking for a replacement.I thought David Goyer was directing that one? Regardless, I'd much prefer McTiegue over Goyer. I'm beginning to lump Goyer in the same category of industrialist hack as Michael Bay and Brett Ratner.
A remake of Highlander could be great, but if it's remade (whether as a film or as a TV series) it needs to be designed to tell a finite story that concludes once "the one" has emerged victorious. The worst thing about the sequels to Highlander (apart from their general crappiness) was that they undid the whole "there can be only one" premise.
Yes, but then they had Highlander II: The Quickening, which loused up the whole premise (with all of the alien nonsense and such), and then the third film essentially ignores both the first sequel and the TV series and plays as if it's a direct sequel to the original. So it was hardly a well-considered franchise. A reboot needs to have a game plan that will maintain a clear internal consistency and lead up to The Gathering.Well, the first one did, like you said. The TV Series and the movies with Adrian Paul are in a different continuity then the rest of the movies and take place when "The Game" is still going on.
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