What are your thoughts on the 80s movie being remade today?
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Jgirl2688 — 10 years ago(May 01, 2015 02:09 PM)
Technically, the superhero films today are not remakes of those from the 80s because the source material has been around since the 30s and 40s, and they are generally very different from the superhero movies that were made in the 80s. Batman (1989) and Batman (2005) are completely different in tone, plot, minor characters, etc.
But that's just the superhero films. You are right that we are seeing a lot of 80s remakes, but they're the horror films mainly. Like, Poltergeist, Friday the 13th, Nightmare on Elm, Halloween
What's really strange, I think, is that we're seeing remakes of remakes now too. For example, The Blob was remade in 1988, and now I hear it's going to be remade again! And they aren't out of new ideas. They just stopped funding new ideas because people kept going to see remakes and sequels. If we all support more of the films that do get out there with original scripts, I think we will start to see less remakes.
So, my thoughts are that if you want to see Robocop, watch Robocop (1987), not a remake. And if you want to see a new movie, watch something that is actually new! -
Lady_Elaine_Fairchild — 10 years ago(August 08, 2015 05:27 AM)
While I understand the "why" of it (money on a "sure thing", CGI etc) there is a part of me that is offended. Some of those are such great films and in a way by remaking it you are saying that its not good enough.
But today's kids are different than I was growing up-we(my brother & I) played outside as much as we could (until street light came on), we had to ask to use the phone, we were spanked, we were taught right from wrong, we could only watch movies/tv shows at the time they aired and that made things like Christmas Rudolph shows special. When you have everything at your fingertips they lose that treasured aspect.
They are remaking Pete's Dragon that was one of my brother's and my go-to films growing up. Its very special to me because of the memories and nostalgia. I hate to see it get the Charlie and the Chocolate Factory treatment.
Re-making Jumanji is a crime if they are in fact doing that Robin Williams was a genius and cannot be replaced or outdone.
Shoot for the moon. Even if you miss, you'll land among the stars. -
ddmod — 9 years ago(July 11, 2016 05:28 PM)
The biggest tragedy to me is that when they take something that is/was treasured and beloved and make it something so different and crap Starsky and Hutch, 21 Jumpstreet, they are effectively killing the original by burying it and making it something no one will ever watch again; destroying the appeal because of the bad taste left by the remake.
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blaque108 — 9 years ago(February 12, 2017 04:32 AM)
I agree especially with your 2nd paragraph I was the same way growing up I had to be inside before the street lights came on, I got spankings growing up, and etc.
I think I seen Pete's Dragon it's been a while, my to go film from the 80s would be E.T. and The Neverending Story if they ever remake these two..I just hope it doesn't happen. -
Trioxin_Zombie — 9 years ago(August 19, 2016 04:41 PM)
Honestly it's pathetic. It only shows how the currently suits in Hollywood have no originality or talent. Cashing in on past glories was fine if it's once in a while. Not a regular business.
"Pandora's box is earth's Pariah" -
tr47 — 9 years ago(October 16, 2016 12:19 PM)
I'm sick to death of it, almost all of the newer remakes/reboots/sequels are crap, with maybe a few notable exceptions. From what I've read, there
are
more original ideas & scripts floating around Hollywood, but the studios are so risk averse that they're ignored in favor of the "safe" choice, which is currently capitalizing on Gen X nostalgia. While I'm all for studios releasing catalog titles on blu-ray, trying to recapture that spontaneous, creative movie magic of the past just doesn't work. -
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gmfaithboy — 9 years ago(December 04, 2016 11:48 PM)
I've never seen any. Until they remake "The Breakfast Club" I probably will never notice. I remember correctly the box office wasn't such a fun place to hang out at in the 1980's I don't recall it being that popular. I believe the 1990's had to revise the box office.
I do remember movies on cable being very popular on TV back then. Movies they never play now at all. You could always count on seeing one no matter where you were at or any time of the day. They would just suck you in. They no longer play them and probably never will ever again. But it was fun watching them back then.