Remake Culture is the Worst (except when it isn’t)

I posted a thing on my dumb Tumblr thing about how awful the Stallone Judge Dredd movie was, and a lot of people asked me if I’d seen the 2012 Dredd with Karl Urban. I hadn’t, and didn’t intend to, for reasons that will become clear shortly. So many people recommended it to me, though, and it had such a great group of creative people behind it, I gave it a chance … and I loved it. Here’s what I wrote about it this morning:


I hate reboot culture. I hate that studios remake movies that were perfectly fine the first time around, simply because they’re too afraid to take a chance on something new, different and unproven.


That said, in an instance like Dredd, where the original film adaptation was a catastrophic failure of flaming shit, I should be willing to make exceptions.


I should be, but I’m usually not, because I’m stubborn. So when I posted about how I didn’t want to watch the 2012 version of the film, about two dozen people urged me to reconsider. I decided to take a chance (you know, like studios won’t), and watched it last night. I am so glad that I did, because I loved everything about it. A lot of fans fixate on Dredd never taking off the helmet, which I understand, but I don’t think that’s its strongest selling point. What I loved about it was how it felt like a proper motion picture adaptation of the 2000 A.D comics I read in the 80s, and the Games Workshop games I played from that universe. The city blocks felt massive. The Judges felt powerful. The relationship between Dredd and Anderson felt real. She didn’t need him to save her, even when he was trying to. The design of the entire picture, from the costumes to the sets to the little details like graffiti was pitch-perfect. And the photography was sensational.


I felt like it started to wobble a little bit in the third act, but like I originally wrote yesterday, I was on board by that point so I was willing to go along with it and let it be. I’m guessing that there won’t be any sequels, or we would have heard about it by now. If that’s the case, it’s a bummer, because I’d like to see these characters and this universe again … but maybe it’s for the best that this film can simply exist as its own thing, without being tainted by a sequel that lets us down (OH HAI THE MATRIX). Or maybe it’s a tragedy that Dredd won’t get its Aliens or T2. I don’t know. I’m not a doctor.


So now I’m thinking about other movies that missed the point of their source material (Running Man and The Shining come to mind, though they stand on their own in their own glorious ways), and trying to figure out what other pictures I’d remake, if I could pass a universal law that requires two new movies be made for every remake, because I am a powerful, tyrannical king.


Following these rules, what would you remake, and why? Show your work.




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Published on April 02, 2016 10:46
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message 1: by Prons (new)

Prons But you're famous for acting in a sequel/update to an existing property...


message 2: by Goldielox (new)

Goldielox Have you seen the miniseries remake of The Shining? Stephen King approved of it. I really liked it but I've never seen the original so can't compare.


message 3: by Khae (new)

Khae I am Legend...How many times will they make this film and completely miss he point of the book? For anyone who hasn't read the book I won't spoil the ending, but suffice to say the films don't do it justice, especially the Will Smith one...urgh...That film I would love to see remade and done faithfully.


message 4: by Sonia (last edited Apr 03, 2016 09:13PM) (new)

Sonia I would only remake movies that missed it the first time around. I usually avoid remakes of classics or cult movies, for that reason I did not watch the new version of Evil Dead, even though I was told that it was good. Movies I would remake:

- I, Robot (let's face it, that movie was an insult to Asimov vision)
- Dune (good luck with that lol)
- The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (the movie was terrible, someone needs to come back and do the story justice!)
- I Am Legend (Will Smith's curse? Redo the movie that actually follows the book with the right ending!)
- The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (definitely needs a remake, the movie adaptation was awful)

Exception to the rule of not touching classics:
Okay, so some people are going to beat me on this, but 2001 Space Odyssey could use a remake, and even though it is considered a classic I am not a fan of Kubrick's artsy vision. Clarke's style is more appealing to me, and I would love to see a movie leaning more toward his version.


message 5: by Beth (new)

Beth I'm currently reading Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep and while I liked the original Blade Runner, I am shocked at how different they really are. I would like to see a movie based more closely to the book.


message 6: by Khae (new)

Khae Beth wrote: "I'm currently reading Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep and while I liked the original Blade Runner, I am shocked at how different they really are. I would like to see a movie based more closely ..."

I was actually considering this one too. Blade Runner is one of my favourite films, but as you say it's incredibly different to the book and would be nice to see a faithful adaptation. I'm still not sure how I feel about the Blade Runner sequel that's in production eitther....


message 7: by Sonia (last edited Apr 04, 2016 11:22AM) (new)

Sonia Michael wrote: "Beth wrote: "I'm currently reading Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep and while I liked the original Blade Runner, I am shocked at how different they really are. I would like to see a movie based ..."

I think Blade Runner stands on its own as a movie. Ridley Scott interpretation is different than the book, but it is well thought and calculated. I am not sure a faithful adaptation would work, because the novel has flaws. I love Philip K. Dick but I don't think its his best novel.


message 8: by Dhove (new)

Dhove Beth wrote: "I'm currently reading Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep and while I liked the original Blade Runner, I am shocked at how different they really are. I would like to see a movie based more closely ..."

The same goes for "Solaris", which totally changed the ending - and in my opinion the entire point - of the book.


message 9: by Kevin (new)

Kevin The Shining is one of the scariest books I've ever read, so when the movie came out, I was sorely disappointed. I have grown to like it since, but it is still too much the Jack Nicholson show. If you have seen the movie, I strongly recommend watching Rodney Ascher's documentary, Room 237. Holy Cow! A lot of theories, but what I found interesting was the battle between what King wanted and what Kubrick actually put on film. Lots of spite!!!

The mini-series of the Shining was better, but it was TV. Meh! I would love for someone ( Jennifer Kent who directed The Babadook) to re-make the movie version of the Shining, but I doubt it will happen since the Kubrik version has such a following.


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