They say there are only seven stories, and that all others are just rehashes; Hollywood, gawd bless ‘em, seem to have taken this well-worn maxim a little too literally.
With the groaning predictability of a lunar cycle, Universal last week announced that Scarface, the much-loved eighties cult classic, and itself a remake of the 1932 Howard Hawks original, is to be remade. Except no, listen, you see, it’s NOT actually a remake, or a sequel, or even a prequel, as their hilariously disingenuous press release claimed; instead it will “take the common elements of the first two films” to create something “resembling” the originals.
Not a remake. Just something resembling one in every conceivable way. Such jaw-detaching oxymoronism is usually only found in badly behaved children. It’s the PR equivalent of a toddler smearing poo on the wall and explaining to his mother: “this is not poo; I have just taken the common elements of poo to create something resembling poo.”
The news is as much surprising as it is, well, unsurprising. In a year which has seen twenty-seven sequels released, more than any other year in the history of all that ever was, you’re not looking at an industry which is blazing a path of confident originality. Remakes are now as de riguer in Hollywood as happy endings, cutting the red wire, and black guys always getting killed first.
Next year, for example, sees another ‘franchise reboot’ in the release of The Amazing Spider-Man, featuring Andrew Garfield as the sticky-fingered hero in his origins story. The producers of this ‘re-imagining’ are really hoping that you’ve completely forgotten all about that other Toby Maguire-shaped Spiderman origins story, which appeared on the big screen way back in that prehistoric, long-forgotten yesteryear of 2002. (Ask your grandparents.)
We’ve reached a tipping point in remakes, where studio executives are no longer ashamed to pretend a spade isn’t actually a spade, and remakes and reboots are being endlessly remade and rebooted until eventually all films released will simply contain “common elements” of precisely the same films released six months previous, and going to the cinema will be a deeply déjà vu-ian experience, akin to being repeatedly and willingly beaten over the head with the same bit of wood, by the same person, at twelve quid a pop.
In order to accelerate this sickening vacuum of creativity we as a society are unstoppably hurtling towards, here’s a few suggestions for remakes filmmakers are free to use, each more derivative than the last. I’m waiting for your call, Hollywood!
- The Godfather, remade by Guy Ritchie. The action is transposed to the mean streets of East London. Don Corleone becomes Dodgy Donny, the horse’s head becomes a greyhound’s head, and Michael Corleone becomes Mikey the Brick, who tells his wife: “Daaahn’t ask me abaaaht moi business!”
- When Harry Met Sally, remade by Lars Von Trier. Now set in a forest in Denmark, Harry and Sally are now sexy teenage heroin addicts and Sally does her famous fake orgasm scene not in a cafe, but a crack den. “I would have what she’s having,” says one of the other crackheads, “but I am consumed by the futility of life.”
- Star Wars, remade by George Lucas. (This will probably happen sooner or later.)
- Citizen Kane, remade by Michael Bay. Giant space robots fight aliens in space, in 3D. Not actually a remake – it will just feature common elements of the original. And cool explosions.
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