Zontar said:
michael87cn said:
I don't need to watch the trailer to know this will be a bad story. I only enjoy movies with good stories. Remakes have like a 99.9% ratio of being bad. (if you have to copy someone elses idea, you probably can't come up with your own).
It's sad that this is what movies, and even video games are becoming. Visual and audio popcorn. Snacks.
Also the inception noise is much like the piano clang. I freaking hate that thing, it sometimes pops up in freaking comedies for petes sake.
You do realize that the complains about movie remakes are as old as movies, and that there are plenty of example of remakes being better then the source material, right? I mean hell, sure we have some bad examples in recent memory (Reboot Cop, Meh of Steel), but we also have good examples of remakes that are genuinely better then the things they rebooted (Dredd, True Grit).
The Dark Knight Trilogy was a reboot of the Tim Burton Batman films, which were reboots of Batman in general, as well. Heck, the Adam West Batman was a reboot of sorts. Speaking of the 60s, the Hammer Horror films were all reboots. How many Phantom of the Opera, Robin Hood, or King Arthur movies are there? (Heck, technically, ever single iteration, book or film, of the Robin Hood and King Arthur stories are reboots right back to Le Morte d'Arthur and A Gest of Robyn Hode.)
However, I think the thing is that, lately, there've been more reboots/reimaginings/adaptations of earlier work than in the past. I, personally, don't think that's
inherently a bad thing, since enduring stories and characters are good for cultural consistency. The problem is that the vast majority of recent ones are mediocre, if not bad. They've also been doing this to earlier works that don't need it. The Back to the Future movies, for example, don't need rebooting/remaking, since they still stand as strongly now as they did in the 80s. Godzilla, on the other hand, is a product of 1950s Japan, and, being Japanese cinema, is quite slow and deliberate in its delivery. I think an American reimagining of that story is no bad thing
inherently, and it remains to be seen whether this iteration will be any good or not. I think it looks great, but that's no guarantee of anything.
...plus, come to think of it, American reimaginings of Japanese media has never proven to be... successful. I know I've never seen an American reimagining of Japanese media that I liked. (I didn't like The Ring, the 1999 Godzilla film was awful, I've heard the Grudge was terrible though admittedly I didn't much care for Ju-On either, and American dubs of anime tend to be inferior to the original in terms of script and story unless they just translate it directly... on the other hand, Power Rangers).