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| General Media Discussion For discussing the silver screen, the TV series, the DVD. |
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| | #16 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: Australia
Posts: 119
| Re: Metropolis remake? Quote:
Having said that, I am not sure how Metropolis can work - the themes and ideas were all social experiements of the future. Today they are experiments of our past. Some worked, many failed. The point is we know the result, so that whole process of speculation that made Metropolis, is closed to us. | |
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| | #17 (permalink) | |
| Silly Person Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Denmark
Posts: 365
| Re: Metropolis remake? Quote:
A movie should be able to explain itself alone; if it doesn't, it's a failure. When I tell people that I'd like to see it made better, they will tell me that there are so many other stories with the same theme and they're right, but it's this particular story I'd like to see, only made better. Does that mean that I'm wanting a remake? | |
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| | #18 (permalink) | |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 8,552
| Re: Metropolis remake? Quote:
A remake (as commonly meant) is the redoing of what is primarily known as a film, and the only reason it is considered for remaking is because of the reputation of that original film. Without the reputation and fame of that original piece in the same medium, the remake would not even be considered; they'd look to something else (whether an adaptation of a literary work or an original screenplay) instead of redoing what has been done before. (This is true even with bad films that are remade; as they've got some sort of cachet to begin with, else filmmakers -- especially producers -- are simply not going to touch it with a barge pole. This is an entertainment industry first; any art that comes out of it is through the particularly strong personality of a guiding hand or incidental. The first point is to make money on what is, after all, a very expensive thing to produce in the first place.) Which brings us to Shakespeare (or, for that matter, any other playwright) and the numerous filmic takes on his work. While Shakespeare was written to be read (in various senses of the term), his plays were also written to be performed, by various actors at different times and in different places. A film of such is simply another staging of material intended for numerous dramatic presentations to begin with; there was no intent to have a "definitive" take on any such plays, nor can there ever really be such. A film that is not an adaptation of a literary classic, on the other hand, is initially made with intent to succeed itself, as something that already is the definitive handling of this particular piece. Often this would seem to be the case even when it is an adaptation of a preexisting but lesser-known literary work -- though there the claim is more than slightly doubtful. Remakes are done with full knowledge that they are competing with the original film, and (as said above) intent to capitalize on said film. Otherwise it's extremely unlikely that the original film would ever even be noted (by the filmmakers, at least) at all. | |
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| | #19 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: New York
Posts: 86
| Re: Metropolis remake? From a financial standpoint, it makes a lot of sense to remake a classic film or TV show. You have a much better chance of making a profit because there is a built in audience who will be at least curious. Films not based on anything pre-existing need to be marketed from scratch. It costs more and is less reliable. From an artistic standpoint, it's stagnant. It's uninteresting. It's disappointing to those of use who want something new. Unfortunately, as film costs go up, the need weight of importance moves to the finances over the art. One of the things that will be good about the democratization of technology in the coming years is that it will soon be possible to make a pretty high quality movie with home equipment for comparatively little money. Actually, it already is possible, but you still have to be really technically skilled. In time, it will get easier. |
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| | #20 (permalink) | |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 8,552
| Re: Metropolis remake? Quote:
As for the other point... yes, I agree. The fact that we are seeing a lot of amateur adaptations of literary works which, however crude, nonetheless manage to be more faithful and capture more of the feel of the original material than anything the big boys have turned out for a couple of decades (at least), strongly indicates this may be a very beneficial trend in the future.... | |
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| | #21 (permalink) |
| Haggis Connoisseur Join Date: Jul 2003
Posts: 2,342
| Re: Metropolis remake? You may be right about Batman but I think it important to keep homage seperate from actuality. The German Expressionist movement was a creation of its time - influenced heavily by both the defeat of Germany in WW1 and the post war confusion that followed. Homage (as respectful as it may be intended by the creator) is not subject to the same circumstances and is, for want of a better phrase, merely a copy of an actuality. |
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| | #23 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: Australia
Posts: 119
| Re: Metropolis remake? Quote:
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| | #24 (permalink) | |
| Haggis Connoisseur Join Date: Jul 2003
Posts: 2,342
| Re: Metropolis remake? Quote:
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