It seems common sense and artistic vision rarely come into play when Hollywood decides to remake a classic (or even for that matter, lesser films that shouldn't have been done the first time). Every year someone is churning out pale carbon copies or "revisionist" remakes of films left best alone (it seems to be mostly horror, but look out world, here comes Zac Efron in Footloose...seriously).
The producers of the proposed Rosemary's Baby remake are displaying unusual intelligence and honesty in announcing the cancellation of their project. The original, directed by Roman Polanski and starring Mia Farrow (with an incredibly unsettling Oscar-winning supporting performance from Ruth Gordon), still manages to get the job done, 40 years later. This was reported from IMDb.com this afternoon:
The movie producers behind a planned remake of 1968 horror classic Rosemary's Baby have dropped plans for a new film.
Brad Fuller and Andrew Form have been working on a way to bring the tale, based on the 1967 novel by Ira Levin, back to the big screen.
But the pair has been forced to admit they haven't been able to conceive a fresh angle which would make a new version credible.
Form tells Collider.com, "We went down that road and we even talked to the best writers in town and it feels like it might not be do-able. We couldn't come up with something where it felt like it was relevant and we could add something to it other than what it was, so we're now not going to be doing that film."
Monday, December 22, 2008
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