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Topics that virtually everyone has thought about; whether they make you chuckle or they turn your stomach, they exist.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

The Movie Industry

So about ten years ago my husband and I had the pleasure to see this wonderful Asian film called Internal Affairs. It was a movie about an undercover police man who discovers that there is a mole for the drug lord working on the police force. Each man is worried that they will be discovered and it becomes a race of who can find the other first.


Sound at all familiar? Try an award winning movie starring Jack Nicholson, Leonardo DeCaprio, Matt, Damon, Martin Sheen, and Mark Walberg. Yep, you guessed it. The Departed.

Imagine my surprise 35 minutes into this new American movie, with an all star cast, that is nominated for several awards including Best Picture, Best Director (Martin Scorsese), Best Film Editing and Best Adapted, to find out that I had already seen this movie. According to Reelviews.net (Retrieved 2009-10-17), critic James Berardinelli awarded the film four stars out of four, praising it as "an American epic tragedy." He went on to compare the film favorably to the onslaught of banality offered by American studios in recent years. "The movies have been in the doldrums lately. The Departed is a much needed tonic," he wrote.

The problem I had was not with the movie being remade, it was that little credit was given to the original and that Scorsese got credit for originality, though the movie was identical to the Asian masterpiece, minus the Asians.From the blocking to the wardrobe the film was nearly identical. Unfortunately the liberties taken such as texting to communicate in The Departed verses Morse Code in Internal Affairs, deflated the quality of the movie.

Without changing the screenplay, it did not have the same affect in translation as the moving, thrilling, Asian version. Disappointed I barely was able to finish the movie, which was adapted from one of my favorite movies.

While perusing the channels late night, just a year after I discovered Internal Affairs, I stumbled across another foreign work of art, a French movie called Le dîner de cons or known as The Dinner Game or Dinner for Idiots. It was the funniest comedy I had ever seen. It was about a man who met a savant, who built landmark sculptures from matchsticks, and invites him to a dinner, The dinner is a contest of who can bring the biggest idiot. Everything that can go wrong does and the comedy runs rampant.

Sound familiar? Yes, you got it. Steve Carell is playing the unwitting idiot in this summers big film Dinner for Schmucks. Did you realize this was a remake? They are not publicizing it, Again I am disappointed in the lack of credit, but have not yet seen this film to say how similar it is to its French parent or if it is even worthy of comparison.

Topping my list of disappointments is the fact that the film industry has had almost no original ideas. I got a flyer advertising the summer’s upcoming block buster’s as the list was:

 Little Fockers (a sequel)

 Shrek Forever After (a sequel)

 Iron Man 2 (a sequel)

 The A Team (an adaptation)

 Sex in the City 2 (a sequel)



Worse, here are the upcoming movies this year:

 Batman 3 (a sequel)

 Eclipse Movie (a sequel)

 Harry Potter 7 (a sequel)

 Last Airbender (an adaptation)

 National Treasure 3 (a sequel)

 Pirates of the Caribbean 4 (a sequel)

 Resident Evil 4 (a sequel)

 Transformers 3 (a sequel)

 Tron Legacy (a remake)

They also plan to reboot several other movies such as Spider Man and Superman. They seem to be just milking us to make a profit. It is so sad that all America is contributing to the great art of filmmaking now is copies. Imagine a world where every painter only painted the Mona Lisa, but in their own interpretation.

This is not about foreign films being better than American, though they are definitely more original. This is about the creative people in the world wanting a chance to make art, while instead the money is used to create Terminator 43 or Baywatch Returns. This is about directors, actors and movie companies rehashing old, unoriginal material, again and again.

PS: If a movie based on Baywatch comes out, remember it I called it here first.

1 comment:

  1. It's really sad how the movie industry has become nothing but a bunch of sellouts who care about nothing more than making a buck.

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