Remaking (rebooting?) classic movies wasn't enough... - Printable Version +- RepairmanJack.com Forums (https://repairmanjack.com/forum) +-- Forum: Other Topics (https://repairmanjack.com/forum/forum-9.html) +--- Forum: Off Topic (https://repairmanjack.com/forum/forum-4.html) +--- Thread: Remaking (rebooting?) classic movies wasn't enough... (/thread-4445.html) Pages:
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Remaking (rebooting?) classic movies wasn't enough... - Alvin Fox - 09-14-2011 I've thought of another one. Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle's Inferno was a contemporary (at the time it was written) retelling of Dante's Inferno. Okay, it wasn't originally a novel. Remaking (rebooting?) classic movies wasn't enough... - nonquixote - 09-14-2011 Scott Miller Wrote:I hear they are using a rock for Keanu's role. Snork! Remaking (rebooting?) classic movies wasn't enough... - Dave - 09-14-2011 The Mad American Wrote:Not to veer off topic but if you think this is bad, they are remaking "Point Break". Honestly, this is one of those times that the WTF?!? thing is appropriate.They already did, it was called The Fast and The Furious. IanSF Wrote:Yet another Shakespearian play re-told in a modern setting is Ian McKellen's 'Richard III'. I don't think there was ever more than a screenplay written that could qualify as a re-write, but the film was very well done IMHO.Films have been ripping off classic literature for decades, normally re-writting them with a high school setting. I'm toying with a modern school setting for The Three Muskateers :decision: But this books idea seems odd to me, a novel is rarely an 'adaptation' of something else. A continuation, yes, seen plenty of 'characters' reused and sequalised/prequalised, but I wondered if a blatant adaptation has been done. Interesting to hear about Christopher Moore's Fool, I might have to look that up. Remaking (rebooting?) classic movies wasn't enough... - Bluesman Mike Lindner - 09-14-2011 When I =had= to read Willy the Shake in school, I did not care for the man. But the plays were not meant to be read. They were meant to be acted. When you see them on stage, even a farce like THE MERRY WIVES comes alive. The hombre knew how to put words together. Remaking (rebooting?) classic movies wasn't enough... - Lisa - 09-14-2011 testing... Remaking (rebooting?) classic movies wasn't enough... - Scott Hajek - 09-15-2011 Can I repaint the Mona Lisa? Remaking (rebooting?) classic movies wasn't enough... - Scott Miller - 09-15-2011 IanSF Wrote:Yet another Shakespearian play re-told in a modern setting is Ian McKellen's 'Richard III'. I don't think there was ever more than a screenplay written that could qualify as a re-write, but the film was very well done IMHO. I liked the movie but was really glad to have my Shakespearean-buff friend watching with me to help me better understand it. There is also a modern version of Hamlet starring Ethan Hawke that uses Shakespeare's dialogue but the setting is contemporary; I didn't like it very much. Remaking (rebooting?) classic movies wasn't enough... - The Mad American - 09-15-2011 What about re-imagining the classics? Like that whole series of classics with zombies or whatever added in? I haven't read any of them but see them all the time "Pride and Prejudice and Zombies" things like that. I am guessing they are more satire rather than a straight rewriting of the books. Remaking (rebooting?) classic movies wasn't enough... - Alvin Fox - 09-15-2011 Just today I heard of Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters. And now looking at it on Amazon they also recommend Jane Slayre, Android Karenina and Little Vampire Women. Remaking (rebooting?) classic movies wasn't enough... - mad4tunes - 09-15-2011 With very few exceptions, I've thought EVERYTHING in the past century was just a riff on someone else's original novel. On the other hand, wouldn't Greenpeace have a field day with a retooling of "Moby Dick"? |