With a properly respectful team behind it, that is going to do everything that they can to match its legacy, would you support an actual Seven Samurai remake?
With a properly respectful team behind it, that is going to do everything that they can to match its legacy...
remakes are cancer.
Yeah. The Magnificent 7 is a great fucking movie.
Ask about Yojimbo next, dingus.
No. What's the fucking point? We already have Seven Samurai
But we don't have a version starring an American.
fuck off
No. What does "match its legacy" even mean? There's no reason to make a shit color remake of a movie people still watch in its original form when the new film won't be made to add anything to the story, just ride Kurosawa's coattails.
I'd be up for more samurai movies in the same style as Kurosawa but remaking his movies is pointless. And they wouldn't even be profitable because women wouldn't be able to understand it.
lol you mean americans playing samurai? Because they made magnificent seven a few times already
Magnificent Seven (1960) is better than the original.
Wrong
No.
Why remake an already great movie?
The Magnificent Seven: 128 minutes
Seven Samurai: 207 minutes
The plot is basically the same, therefore Magnificent Seven is about 62% better.
Wrong
Are any of the Zatoichi movies worth watching? I ran out of Kurosawa samurai movies to watch.
Watch Kobayashi's
Snyder wanted justice league to be based on Seven samurai. It's a shame we may never see his Snyderkino
Why not? Remakes of script-driven films are totally fine in my book, you can retell stories and themes endlessly and still be powerful. If they try to redo what Kurosawa did specifically thoough it would obviously fail
Yojimbo has a remake though, and is just as retold in action movies as Seven Samurai
Soon
>Yojimbo has a remake though, and is just as retold in action movies as Seven Samurai
Yes. That was literally my point.
already been done
WHY IS Sup Forums SO FUCKING PLEBBY?
Remakes miss the point. The story is what is compelling, not the surface details. Remakes only really have one value, and that is to frame a story for a people when their culture becomes unable to get the context of the most recent version of the story.
The original is not so foreign that people today can't relate to it. So we don't need a remake for western audiences. Maybe India, the Middle East, Central Asia and Africa could benefit from a localized remake of the story though. Otherwise it would just be a redundant cash in.
>Seven samurai in fallujia
I'd watch the shit out of that.
Seven Samurai isn't even that good desu. Not even in top 5 Kurosawa films.
What do you think A Bug's Life was?
I've been cooking up a script for a modern Seven Samurai remake, with members of coalition forces gathered to help protect a farming settlement in Afghanistan from a raiding party. There would be a French character, an American, a Brit, etc. and the Kanbe role would be a grizzled old Russian leftover from the eighties.
But, I'm not anybody, so I'm not planning on doing anything with the idea.
Yojimbo also has multiple remakes, pleb
Ask about High and Low next.
Why not? Try writing and filming it and see where it goes. So long as you make it your own thing it's not like you'll ever not benefit from trying to make it, even if it never sees the light of day.
For what it's worth I'd watch any low budget film so long as it has an interesting story.
Take that cultural context and remake Rashomon instead. Way more interesting, I think.