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Top 10 Hollywood Movie Remakes


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Old 08-26-2010, 07:43 AM
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Default Top 10 Hollywood Movie Remakes

It’s often said that Hollywood has run out of original ideas, which is why there are so many movie remakes. Actually, remakes are part of a longstanding Hollywood tradition- the very first remake was 1904’s The Great Train Robbery.

The first version of The Great Train Robbery was made in 1903 and is the “first narrative film” (sometimes referred to as the first feature film). In other words, Hollywood made its first “remake” as soon as it got the chance!

Hollywood continues to churn out remakes like the Amish churn ****er, and most of them are absolutely terrible. However, as the Amish will tell you, if you churn long enough, you’ll eventually get something good. Throughout Hollywood history, there have actually been some good remakes. These are most of them:


10. Assault on Precinct 13

The original “Assault” from the 1970s, directed by John Carpenter, is actually a pretty good movie for what it cost. The idea is that the different gangs, usually split by their race, have united and are going to take out the aforementioned precinct.

The remake sounds terrible on paper: Ethan Hawke as a drug addict, Drea de Matteo as her Sopranos character, and John Leguizamo as a tweaker. And this time, instead of being in Los Angeles in the summer, it’s Detroit in the winter, and it’s a group of corrupt cops.

Yet, it works- partially because of the awesome action sequences and partially because, amazingly, the cast are all great. In short, somebody actually decided that instead of just profiting from a title five people recognized, they should actually make a movie. We wish all of Hollywood was so courteous.


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Old 08-26-2010, 07:45 AM
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9. The Thing



The 1950s original took a classic science fiction short story and made into a movie about fighting a bloodthirsty plant in the Arctic. You know, because everybody’s afraid of photosynthesis.

The 1982 remake (also John Carpenter) decided to stick to the original story, featuring a shape shifter that could take on any form it wished and incredibly gross (and awesome) special effects; i.e. the movie they should have made in the first place.

Although nobody’s face ever explodes in the movie, so we have no idea where the idea for the movie poster came from.
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Old 08-26-2010, 07:47 AM
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8. Ben-Hur

Ben-Hur, from the ’50s, is incredibly gay. We don’t mean this in a derogatory sense, we mean this in the sense that it’s all about dudes wanting to have *** with other dudes. It makes the Jesus parts seem a little random, but it’s nice that Hollywood spent the equivalent of Titanic’s budget on what amounts to a break-up. In fact, according to imdb.com, Rock Hudson was offered the role but “his agent explained to him that the film’s gay subtext was too much of a risk to his career.”

The 1950’s version was actually a remake of a movie made in the 1920s, which mostly featured a cheap-looking chariot race and lots of bad acting, as opposed to the ’50s version, which featured an incredibly expensive chariot race with lots of elaborate stonework. And lots of bad acting.
There’s a reason we still remember the ’50s version and the ’20s version is thankfully forgotten.
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Old 08-26-2010, 07:49 AM
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7. Ocean’s Eleven

The original “Ocean’s Eleven” is a great movie, solely because it consists almost entirely of the Rat Pack sitting around drinking, and occasionally pulling off a heist. Sure, it’s supposedly a heist movie, but it’s basically a movie about sitting around and getting wasted.

As fun as that can be, we like the remake better, if for no other reason than the heist is clever, elaborate, and features Carl Reiner rappelling down an elevator shaft. And really, when are you going to see that in the movies?
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Old 08-26-2010, 07:51 AM
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6. The Fly

The original “Fly” from the ’50s is…well…you see…it’s…

We’re struggling to find a description of a movie that features a scientist with a fly’s head and arm while a fly buzzes around with the scientist’s head and arm that doesn’t involve the word “ridiculous”, but that might be a writing challenge too great for anyone.

Thankfully, David Cronenberg knew this, which is why instead of limb swapping, it features Jeff Goldblum’s flesh falling off in disgusting chunks, kidnapping Geena Davis, and vomiting all over people to dissolve their flesh. It also happens to be a thoughtful film about the boundaries of humanity and an epic tragedy. Just not boring.
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