Remake needed?
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Hancock_the_Superb — 19 years ago(October 14, 2006 03:58 PM)
The movie could theoretically be reworked into another setting; I'm working on an idea (one of about a million) involving a similar story set during the US occupation of Vera Cruz, Mexico in 1914. But a direct remake? Hell no!
"We're all made of the same CLAY, you know!? Clay!
CLAY!
" -
scouterrob — 19 years ago(November 23, 2006 11:14 PM)
You simply can not re-make a Steve Mcqueen movie!!!It's been tried with The Getaway and The thomas Crown Affair and both remakes in my humble opinion are not even in the same park as their originals. There are no actors of McQueen's calibre and talent in hollywood today. A remake of this movie would not only be an insult to the original movie but also an insult to the memory of Steve McQueen. How about instead of remaking classic movies, why don't the 5 or 6 writers that actually work in hollywood take all the energy they put into re-makes and instead put out something original and fresh.
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Lonixcap — 19 years ago(December 04, 2006 08:14 PM)
The only way a remake of this could possibly work is as a Broadway musical.
I know this sounds crazy and I'm not a big broadway fan at all, but it could be done in a Miss Saigon sort of way.
It would probably be a huge hit, with a hit pop song or two, and then they would do a movie version of it and that would suck.
The Sand Pebbles is a classic film, and a movie remake is totally unnecessary.
btw
Paul Newman was the first choice to play Holman, but apparently he did'nt want to spend a year in Taiwan.
Alex North was to be the composer, but became ill and was replaced by Jerry Goldsmith.
Theme "And We Were Lovers" was a pop radio hit. -
scruffy58 — 18 years ago(August 28, 2007 10:16 AM)
No to remakes, especially great films like this. This film is virtually perfect - cast, cinematography, score, screenplay and direction. I have yet to see a remake that has even come close to it's original. It is just as ridiculous to suggest someone repainting a Monet.
"Thus, we began our longest journey together."
Adult Scout, 'To Kill A Mockingbird' -
kalamazoo101 — 19 years ago(December 22, 2006 10:09 AM)
Bhague,
I am sick to death of people like you who demand remakes of already excellent films. REMAKES DO NOT WORK. That, and who the hell cares about the changing relationship between China and the U.S.? This movie was based in 1926.
That, and suggesting a cast of Matt Damon and Scarlett Johansen about made me vomit. -
Sarge075 — 19 years ago(January 10, 2007 10:54 PM)
As far as I am concerned there is no need to remake this fine film. All of the actors fit into their respective roles. No one in my mind could replace the late Mako as Pohan, McQueen as Holman.
Besides Most of the remakes I have seen try to cater to the "MTV" generation by sticking Young actors or actresses into roles that they should never even contemplate taking. Don't believe me? Watch the original "The Fog" and then the remake, or even Amityville. While the thought of a modernized re-envisioning does peak my curiousity, the original has no need for improvement. -
goodallp-1 — 18 years ago(August 23, 2007 04:19 AM)
Totally agree with you!
Remakes show signs of Hollywood running out of ideas. Psycho. The Italian job. The Amityville Horror. The Wicker Man. The Omen. Alfie. The Flight Of The Phoenix. These and much more are perfect examples of why remakes suck. Only a select few actually work, and only then because they tried to change the original (Cape Fear, The Departed). Why is it that people suggest that every old film should be remade? Why? Why not just stick to the original?
After all, the films they remake are classics, so why would anybody want to redo something that is classic to begin with? I've heard horrifying news of a remake of The Wild Bunch! God help us all. Old Sam must be doing cartwheels right now! -
mopar-11 — 18 years ago(June 09, 2007 01:10 PM)
Instead of remaking this film, why don't you find a good novel and make a film based on that. "Tom Mix and Pancho Villa" by Clifford Irving comes to mind. Or the two Herman Wouk novels "The Hope" and "The Glory"(Granted, they would probably have to be miniseries) Ang Lee took Woodrell's novel "Woe To Live On" and made "Ride With The Devil", an excellent film, in 1999.
Of course, today's Hollywood can't make a film, historical or otherwise, without infusing today's politics in it. Bergen, Wise and a plethora of media critics will tell you that "The Sand Pebbles" is really about Vietnam. No, goddamn it! From what I got from the Richard Mckenna novel and the film, it was about U.S. gunboat sailors on the Yangzee River in 1925-26 China. The fact is, no one in Hollywood had the guts to make a film about Vietnam in the 1960's (except for John Wayne, bless him) so they had to make "allogorical" films. Today, they are a wee bit more brave, but we are still inundated with "alagorical" films and TV shows about Iraq. If you want to make a film pissing on the Iraq War(and, consequentially, the soldiers who are fighting it, because you will be) then kindly have the spinal fortitude to stand up and make it. Not the rectal fortitude to use alagory. And, please, do not bring up Michael Moore. His documentaries are more fiction than "Jane and the Dragon"
"Main stim stop wawlf." -
rogcbrand — 16 years ago(June 12, 2009 08:45 PM)
LOL! I agree. Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar and I think this was not meant to be an allegory, but simply a very compelling story based on events in 1920's China!
I can think of extremely few film remakes that are as good as the originals- I loved the Mel Gibson/Anthony Hopkins "The Bounty", but never is a remake even slightly as good as the original when they use "todays" latest flavor of young celebrity. -
racroen — 16 years ago(June 23, 2009 07:12 PM)
But if they remade it, we could have Will Smith as Jake Holman, and Denzel Washington as Captain Collins, and Forest Whitaker as Frenchy Burgoyne, and Mario Van Peebles as Po-han, and, uh, Queen Latifah as Shirley Eckert.
We could make it just like the original, except set it in space, and the spaceships could look just like gunboats from the 1920s, because they're so high-tech they could look like anything. And they could travel though hyperspace with, like, Audioslave on the soundtrack, and we could all get really fcked up for the hyperspace parts. That would be cool.
It would need a CGI character, though, for comic relief. Just make something up. It could be a big green ogre with antennae, or a talking dog, or a little blob of goo or something. But the important thing, the very, very most important thing of all, would be to give it a really irritating voice.
I wonder what Ahmed Best is doing these days? -
racroen — 16 years ago(June 24, 2009 09:05 AM)
rogcbrand:
"I think they'd have to go with a black, disabled lesbian for the role of Jake Holman"
Well not disabled
differently
abled. You really need to brush up on your PC-speak. A differentability would hamper the non-stop action sequences, though.
I know! We could make her a cyborg! She could have a mechanical arm and half a mechanical face, but really killer original ta-tas spilling out of a tight leather corset! Then she could be super-strong
and
differently-abled!
Are you listening, Hollywood! We're talking BOX OFFICE GOLD here!
