Remakes Better Than The Original??

Quite a while back, yours truly went on a mini-rant to tell Hollywood that it was officially enough with the remakes. After all, the particularly recent proliferation of constant re-workings and re-imaginings in the movie business is enough to drive one mad. This is especially true when any efforts to produce original and worthwhile films are eschewed in favor of this practice, which is what often seems to be the case. However, my desperate and futile pleas went obviously and unsurprisingly unheeded, as specifically evidenced by the news of upcoming releases such as Straw Dogs and Red Dawn, which really caused me to bristle. This got me to thinking: Are there any remakes that are indeed better than the original?

Surely there are remakes that are good, but could any of them truly be superior? So, I decided to do a little “research” (and by research, I really mean that I sat around on my couch drinking beer and watching TV) to try to come up with a few. Not shockingly, it was an incredibly tough task to even find five that could possibly be considered an improvement over their predecessors, but I managed to find a handful that I think could have an argument made for them. Now, let me be perfectly clear and forthright: I’M NOT GOING TO WIN ANY FRIENDS WITH THIS LIST… In fact, I may even lose a few. My choices are incredibly controversial, and I’ve already prepared myself for all the vitriolic comments attacking my character, integrity, knowledge, relative youth, and whatever else folks deem “appropriate.” That’s because sparking debate is (kind of) what these postulations are all about… and I’m a big boy, so I can handle it. However, I do want to point out that in no way do I think the following originals are bad movies. All of them are deserved classics and the case could possibly be made for them that the later films would have never been possible without them. But, these exercises are fun nevertheless, so here we go:

Cape Fear (1962) vs. Cape Fear (1991) – OK, so admittedly, Martin Scorsese is probably my favorite filmmaker, so even if his version of Cape Fear was of inferior quality, I would be hard-pressed to concede. Regardless, I do feel that Scorsese gave his actors more to do, and the changes he made along with Wesley Strick’s script adjustments helped to create an overall better atmosphere. Specifically, making one of antagonist Max Cady’s victims someone who was close to protagonist Sam Bowden and expanding Cady’s relationship with Bowden’s daughter made for more engaging and tense viewing. Furthermore, while Robert Mitchum’s portrayal of Cady in the original is good (though, I’m learning that I’m not that huge a fan) and considered to be one of the best screen villains, I felt Robert De Niro’s take was a bit more menacing. A lot of Mitchum’s shenanigans were all movie allusions and subtleties, which is fine, but that only really works if there’s a huge payoff. I’m not saying the original’s ending was bad, but it could be considered a bit of a cop-out (though, that could be debated forever). However, if folks wanted to call the performances of Mitchum and De Niro as well as those from Gregory Peck (who I like, but was a bit stiff in this) and Nick Nolte as the Sam Bowden character a tie, I wouldn’t argue too much. However, no one can say that Jessica Lange as the wife and Juliette Lewis as the daughter aren’t better than Polly Bergen and Lori Martin, respectively. First of all, they had more to work with, but they’re just simply better actresses (Lewis snagged an Oscar nomination). Additionally, the fact that De Niro’s character was sent to jail as a result of a misdeed on the part of Nolte as opposed to Peck simply bearing witness to one of Mitchum’s crimes, and that the Bowden family of the remake was experiencing familial drama as opposed to the picture-perfect, Leave It to Beaver unit in the original, only served to add even more tension to the film.

The Fly (1958) vs. The Fly (1986) – Alright, to put it simply, as awesome as the original version is even to this day, looking at it with fresh present-day eyes, it comes off as a bit silly. Yes, 1958 was certainly a more primitive era for filmmaking, and even taking that into consideration, the film was still ahead of its time, but people can’t deny that the Academy Award-winning special-effects (courtesy of Chris Walas) of director David Cronenberg’s 1986 updating didn’t make for a more enjoyable take. The monster transformation at the end is one of the greatest in film history. I can’t help but wonder if producers initially brought the whole project in under budget, and then just decided to throw the rest of the money into the metamorphosis of the finale. Furthermore, Jeff Goldblum’s Brundlefly is a tour-de-force performance, possibly as good as any in horror or sci-fi, and Cronenberg’s decision to keep the character as an intelligent being for as long as possible was pure genius, as opposed to David Hedison’s character in the original that suddenly transformed into a monster and was rendered almost useless, therefore sending his family on a ridiculous chase for a real fly in their house for a good portion of the film. The choice to make the creature in the updated version more of a hybrid between man and insect instead of an actual “fly” was also brilliant. That the ’86 film also shifted from the immediate concern of the monster after Goldblum discovers what has happened to him to focus on his struggles as he begins to lose his humanity and engage in a dramatic personal battle with his girlfriend (Geena Davis)—ultimately making the movie a metaphor for disease and aging—is also tremendous. The original, while definitely creative, can’t quite muster the strength of the newer effort.

Invasion Of The Body Snatchers (1956) vs. Invasion Of The Body Snatchers (1978) – Yes, the first Invasion of the Body Snatchers with Kevin McCarthy is a bona fide super classic that set the bar for sci-fi and horror in the ‘50s against which all other films of its kind should be measured. It’s suspenseful, original and McCarthy is absolutely fantastic in it, along with most of his supporting cast. However, the ’78 adaptation with Donald Sutherland is simply a better film for several reasons, two of which are fairly obvious. The big one is the stupendous special-effects from Russel Hessey and Dell Rheaume. While the slimy, oozing alien pods that hatched emotionless replicas of humans in the original were plenty creepy, they can’t match the more modern technology of the ’78 version that artfully used what seemed to be time-lapse photography and other tricks to create colorful and grotesque plantlike pods and human/alien monstrosities. Also, as great as the ’56 film is, the ending is decidedly… NOT GOOD. It’s abrupt, a little too convenient, and doesn’t really offer a concrete and satisfying resolution (at least, for me). In fact, I’ve noticed that many movies made in the ‘50s didn’t really know how to end well. I’ll again blame this on the dreaded Production Code, but that’s a rant for another time. Anyway, the ending of the newer film is much more shocking, resolute, and seemingly appropriate for a true horror/sci-fi classic. But here’s the great aspect of the ’78 IOTBS that maybe some people don’t appreciate: The paranoia starts right away! From the first shot of Brooke Adams picking the flower and the camera pans right to follow a school teacher who turns and glares at her, and then the camera briefly settles on a wide angle shot of a priest (it’s Robert Duvall, btw) swinging on a swing set and staring off intently. Right away, everyone knows something’s up, as opposed to the original that takes a while to get rolling, and it isn’t even that long of a film.

Scarface (1932) vs. Scarface (1983) – This one is actually a really close call because Howard Hawks’ Scarface most likely has to be the greatest gangster film of its era, and even now, almost 80 years later, it still holds up very well, while Brian DePalma’s updating has always been a polarizing effort among critics and movie buffs, alike. One even has to give special credit to the Hawks version since it did have a timely social relevance and the filmmakers were persistently bold and steadfast in their shooting of a film inspired and loosely based on crime lord Al Capone (who was obviously still alive at the time). However, as amazing of an effort as the ’32 release is—with incredible performances from Paul Muni in the lead, along with George Raft and Boris Karloff, among others—I can’t escape the feeling that Scarface was a movie meant for the ‘80s. The ’83 adaptation that shifts to the Tony Montana character portrayed by Al Pacino (in a bravura performance, I don’t care how many people have a problem with the accent or his use of the F-word) is a film that (whether folks like it or not) defined a generation. From the use of drugs (altered from the booze running of the first film), violence, clothes, and music, right down to changing the setting to Miami (as opposed to Chicago) and the cataclysmic finale, the movie is the perfect time capsule for the ‘80s. I’m not sure the same could be said for the ’32 version, though, in fairness, I wasn’t there. Performances are strong across the board. The film has a stark, gritty (even in the glitzy scenes) feel to it. It also feels “real” and it has become as deeply ingrained in our culture as any film of the modern era, regardless of genre. So therefore, say hello to my little friend, the slightly superior, cult classic ’83 Scarface.

The Thing (1951) vs. The Thing (1982) – Here’s where I might really make some heads steam. The original film is a favorite among many. I also don’t feel great about calling another Howard Hawks effort inferior since he was a true master, but that’s the way things go sometimes. Anyway, the ’51 version is another fantastic and INCREDIBLY suspenseful film, with again, tremendous performances. In fact, I would even go so far as to give the acting in the original version the nod over the remake. The script is also very tight and enthralling. But sadly, what slightly derails this masterpiece for its time is… yep, James Arness as “The Thing.” Sure, I get it. It was 1951, and there weren’t effects like we had today, and to the movie’s credit, Arness is unrecognizable in the make-up as the monster. Unfortunately, in the end, all it really turns out to be is a man with a large head running around trying to scare people. People might write me off as a “young whippersnapper” who doesn’t appreciate atmosphere, but the marvelous monster effects (primarily from Rob Bottin) in director John Carpenter’s ’82 release were a groundbreaking game changer that completely strengthened what The Thing was supposed to be. Some oblivious critics even tried to claim that the updated effects were the downfall of the film, citing that drama was sacrificed in favor of them. I couldn’t disagree more. I just think many people at the time simply weren’t ready for such astonishing production. After all, Carpenter’s adaptation was actually more faithful to the novella “Who Goes There?” by John W. Campbell, Jr., where the monster can perfectly mimic any life form… pretty chilling stuff. The choice to eliminate any female presence from the story—therefore eliminating a love interest—completely streamlined the film, and combined with the decision to keep the alien an unknown entity (as opposed to the original where it’s revealed relatively early that it’s an advanced form of plant life) made for plenty of drama. Furthermore, the choice to have the film set in Antarctica at an outpost so far from other human life without hope of rescue, as opposed to Alaska made for a more isolated atmosphere (not that parts of Alaska aren’t desolate, but it does border a populated country) and the nihilistic ending was way more fitting and appropriate. As for the upcoming prequel starring Mary Elizabeth Winstead… meh, we’ll see.

OK, so let’s hear it… Thoughts? Have a favorite remake that didn’t make my list? Let us know.

 
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  • Tito Pannaggi

    The only time a remake is better or as good is when the director does it himself as Hitchcock did with "The Man Who Knew Too Much" in '34 and in '56.
    Or what Michael Mann did with "L.A. Takedown" (1989) and his second version of the film titled "Heat" (1995)

  • SAL RIGGIO

    Tough. Love both THE THING and THE FLY remakes. Would have to give John Carpenter's THE THING the edge.

  • Bill Pentland

    I really felt the TV remakes of both the Dune series and The Shining were better. The first Dune was, in my opinion, ridiculous, fodder for Mystery Science Theatre. The first Shining had everything going for it - great original story, legendary director in Kubrick, and one of the finest actors of our time in Jack. But the film strayed so far from the story that it took away from the end product. I know Jack's performance is iconic, but I was expecting more.

  • Leo Keil

    The 1941 remake of "The Maltese Falcon" was better than the 1931 original and the 1936 version, "Satan Met a Lady."

    1980's "Airplane!" was better than the 1957 original, "Zero Hour."

    The 1939 remake of "The Wizard of Oz" was better than the 1910 and 1925 versions.

  • SUSAN

    I agree with you, the writer, but disagree with CAPE FEAR. (Anyone with the original idea makes it much easier to "update" it to what the "audience" of that date wants - but, it is who thought of the idea. I disagree and certainly like the original instead.) I think the remake of CAPE FEAR (also, am a MITCHUM fan), think the remake is too gorey, and agree re: the person Cady goes after working in the Law operation makes it too close, as well as that whole storyline.
    Tito Pannaggi makes a GREAT POINT. And, I think he is right. There are a few remakes directors did themselves which are a little better. Although, I do like HITCH's original "The Man Who Knew Too Much" with Peter Lorre (who learned English for the role) is better than the one with D.Day singing - though, for it's time, I can agree it is a great update. I am just not a big fan of loud singing (neither DDay), so I don't know about that, there. (I know a lot of people would not agree with me.)
    THE ONLY ONE I DO AGREE WITH IS "SCARFACE"; however, I like Paul Muni (1932), and for the date of the film (based on the original person as both movies are supposed to be), it really is good/better(!?), since the technical part of the film is good for it's time vs. later, which goes back to my point, re: updates for the time - the people who go to movies at that time like what directors do for THAT AUDIENCE rather than the original audience/s..which, in this case, often comes closer to the story as the event just recently happened (1932 Scarface). And, other movie remakes could be cut due to the Hayes code being more enforced more earlier (especially after the "talkies" which is the case re: the 1932 Scarface, and the 1983 movie had an actor more people could identify with, etc. (Plus, the studio system could make a difference re: casting, and other things which have changed movies over the years/decades).
    NO - leave the originals alone.
    I must say, though, on my mine there IS one I would like to see re-done: about one of the only ones which would be good due to the SP EFX out now (though, I really like/d the non-CGI EFX more), but the CGI's make the process less costly, easier, and more convenient (which accounts for the problem I state later.)
    THAT movie I am referring to is "LOST HORIZON". To have the place ("Shangri-La"?), with it's gold all over, greenery, flowers, etc., e.g. like "paradise" added, it could be a nice, beautiful movie where one could understand why one would not want to leave. Also, when the woman gets older, even tho' the EFX are good for the time period, they would be even better for now - but the story is good as it stands.
    I am not a fan, really, of movies which would not exist without the EFX to get along, but only if they work to SUPPORT the movie and the EFX are an added benefit to make the movie more enhanced, and up-to-date for today's audience (at least those who did not see the original/s). Plus, the original has a number of scenes lost. The only problem is I cannot think of a good cast for this one, except perhaps (Sir) Anthony Hopkins as either the "High Lama" or the one who comes to take his place (the one who is hijacked: Ronald Coleman in the original). Also, perhaps(?) would have to be updated re: the country the people are leaving due to the "war/revolution". Freat movie, though - the end would not change, nor should the basic story.
    One remake, again has MITCHUM, is "THE BIG SLEEP". (Everyone loves BOGIE/BACALL just as I do, and others in the cast, i.e. Elisha Cook, Jr., being in it.) Though the original plot is not as clear (this is where the "code" comes in), the MITCHUM/J. STEWART/S.MILES (as Mrs.Rutledge) -it sticks more to the book. We KNOW what the pics are all about, when we (the audience) have to "Guess" at it in the original one. And, there is no "lovey-dovey" re: Mrs. Rutledge and the Detective in the remake, which is how the book goes. I do love the last line in the MITCHUM movie, but I have to say the original "THE BIG SLEEP" with BOGIE/BACALL is really the best and most entertaining. The age of it being made as well as the actors make it, even the twicst and guessing - just watching it a number of times and one can get the point - or at least be entertained by it, as well as the chemistry between Bacall and Bogart.
    Thanks - you (the author) did a good job in this article in my opinion, and I think your point of view is very well explained, especially for this time. I have to say I do agree with you overall!
    Thank you!

  • Vince Briani

    In 1957, Leo McCarey rewrote and directed the 1939 film "Love Affair", with "An Affair to Remember" starring Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr. By lengthening the film he offered a vastly improved definition to the story. Adding the Theme song, sung by Vic Damone, climaxed one of the Best romantic movies ever shown on the screen.

  • Ed Johnson

    How about comparing the 1941 Maltese Falcon to the 1931 Maltese Falcon film. I bet a lot movie fan did not know about the 1931 film.

  • Ron

    The only one I agree with on that list is the remake of the Fly. Cape Fear (91) was equal only because the censors couldn't butcher it or intimidate the scriptwriers as in the 60's. I don't consider the "Thing" (82) to be a remake since their stories/concepts are so different. But if you want to be specific, Aliens was slightly better than Alien and Alien was a remake of some 1950's cheapy B movie. Forgot the name.

  • John Curtis

    Nothing is better than the originals,as a classic film buff i prefer the originals to remakes.the only exception is 1980's scarface,it is very well made and it delivers the shock that the original did. the bottom line is, you dont mess with perfection!one other note,the 1941 remake of the Maltese Falcon is way better than the original,Humphrey Bogart is one of the best!

  • SUSAN

    1) Vince, you do have a point re: "An Affair to Remember", which brings me to one other movie,
    2)"The Philadelphia Story" (1940 D=G.Cukor) vs. the musical remake "High Society" (1956 D=Sol Siegel). The casts are good in both: Kathyrn Hepburn vs. Grace Kelly in lead female roles; Jimmy Stewart (who won supporting actor Oscar) vs. Frank Sinatra (great vocal choice); Celeste Holm vs. Ruth Hussey (supp. actresses), THEN there is Cary Grant in the male lead, which in my opinion is great compared to Bing Crosby who is, again, a good musical choice;; however, age wise, I don't know how he could have "grown up" with Tracy Lord (Hepburn-Grant yes/Kelly-Crosby no). It works in the 1940, but not in the 1956. But, since Kelley was getting ready to borad the boat to marry the prince, well - I guess that was an addition overlooked at the time. (Or, could it be Crosby finally gave in to Kelly for "The Country Girl" - could it have been sort-of a payback in the final decision? (We will never know.)Plus, Louie Armstrong vs. Henry Daniell for each final ending.Still prefer the original for that story, but do like the musical anyway. Something I always thought was strange about both of these movies was who played George Kitteredge. In both -relative 'unknowns' compared to the others for both era's.
    3) I still like the 1941 Maltese Falcon remake, since the cast is so likeable, well-known and good. Both have the same good story. Even "Satan Met A Lady".(Chalk it up to Dashiell Hammett being a good writer & cast preferance/well-known)
    4) One of the worst remakes, in my opinion, was the 3rd remake of "THE WOMEN"...divorces just were not that uncommon at that time it was made (the one with Meg Ryan). Plus, basically, the plot is so different, just like the "Dial M for Murder" remake.
    SUMMARY: I think the originals are really the best.
    Perhaps the remakes are to introduce the good, ole' classics to new audiences (& lack of good scripts?). Who knows?
    A few exceptions why remakes happen, I would say, are based on audience age, the code, preference for violence,sex being shown rather than referred to, color vs. BW (& even "talkies"?). Also, based on audience date/age could make some could make the decision if one is "into" which version based on items like the actors they grew up with, used to the violence, want to see the sex to know for sure, and the stories which some prior to what-type/who they grew up with are still more or less the same.
    I am not into a a lot of violence, and the assumption of sex without having to see it makes a movie more enjoyable to me when it is a good story. Using words to tell the story is more clever than showing it all, I feel. I don't need to see a lot of these things to know what is going on, and too much can leave a bad taste in my opinion good story or not. There are numerous remakes (and a couple Hitchcock's where the scripts are nearly exactly the same); but, the movies are not.) Imagine making REBECCA over? Please, no one try!
    Good topic. Good comments all!
    Thank you - SUE

  • Rick Cardona

    The Wolfman is definitely better than the 1941 original. I here people say the original was better. And I ask - In what way? Acting? Hell no; you have Anthony Hopkins, possibly the greatest actor of our time in the remake. Special FX - hell no again! Action - super-hell no! In the original you rarely see the wolfman attack let alone get a real sense of how dangerous he really is. In the remake we get atleast 3 scenes of him showing very explicitly his power, agility and deadly ferocity! Yes with all due respect to the original, the remake is FAR better!!!!

  • Rick Cardona

    In the second sentence I meant to use the word Hear and in the sixth sentence I should have recalled that At Least is two words. Sorry.

  • Jim

    I don't agree about "The Fly" and "Body Snatchers." The more understated quality of the originals appeals to me more, and seems more appropriate to the weight of the stories. There is also an element of political satire to the original "Snatchers" that is missing in the remake. As for "Scarface," it is so different from the original that I hardly even consider it a remake.

  • Michael Campo

    1938's THE ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD stands head and shoulders for entertainment value above all of its' remakes.

  • Jack West

    @Ron - the movie your trying to think of was It! The terror from beyond space.

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com Gary Cahall

    Ah, but don't forget, Michael, that Errol Flynn's The Adventures of Robin Hood was, in a sense, a remake of the 1922 Douglas Fairbanks version.

  • Blair Kramer.

    Regarding remakes that are clearly better than the original, go to the search window in the top, right hand corner and write "King Of Kongs." You will learn the reasons why Peter Jackson's 2005 remake of "King Kong" is superior to the 1933 original.

  • Stan Flax

    The remake of The Fly was well-done, especially when color contributed to the horror. As to "The Thing", I prefer the original with Ken Tobey. The remake had a convoluted story and lost focus.
    As to "Scarface", how could you compare the acting of Al Pacino and his buddy with that of Paul Muni and George Raft in Howard Hawkes' original? Interestingly enough, Boris Karloff had a major part as a rival in the original.

    As to "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" give me Kevin McCarthy in the original version-a scary film which left you thinking!!

    Some movies should be left alone--such as "Mutiny on the Bounty", "The Wolf Man", "The Mummy" w/Boris Karloff, "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" w/Charles Laughton, "The Four Feathers{" w/Ralph Richardson and June Duprez, "Joan of Arc"-the Ingrid Bergman or Jean Seberg versions.

    "All Quiet On the Western Front" w/Lew Ayres was superior to the remake with Ernest Borgnine. The use of black and white instead of color contributed to the sadness and gloominess of the film, enhancing the movie.

  • mike jaral

    the yul brunner movie of the king and I , even though it was a musical, far better than the ireane dunn version

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com Gary Cahall

    I'm in your camp, Stan, on The Thing and Invasion of the Body Snatchers (which would have been better if the studio hadn't insisted on tacking on the "optimistic" opening/closing hospital segments and just left Kevin McCarthy yelling in the highway). As for Hunchback, I'm sure there were moviegoers in 1939 who saw Laughton's Quasimodo as an inferior remake of Lon Chaney's from 1923.

  • Anonymous.

    The original version of THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD remains superior to the remake in one respect at the very least. Although the special effects and darker mood are stand-out aspects of the newer film, the characters in the 1950 version are much more likable. As a result, the viewer very much cares about what happens to them. This is not true of the remake. I don't like any of those people. They're not just surly, they're downright hateful! fr'instance: the "hero" of the film deliberately destroys a computer merely because the machine defeated him in a game of chess. I know that people who live in a North Pole science post may get on each other's nerves, but one would expect a few of them to become genuine friends. They would respect each other. Perhaps even rely on each other. In the remake, those guys clearly hated each other long before the alien showed up. Consequently, I DON'T LIKE THEM! Do you?

  • ed cohen

    The original "Wolf Man" was far superior to the remake because I cared about the characters. More emphasis was on character development, which is generally true from the older movies. This is why it's a blessing in disguise that there was a lack of technology. Moviemaking depended more on a script, acting and direction due to the lack of technology. The same is true of the original "King Kong". How can anyone enjoy any remake more than this 1933 classic? Part of the charm and excitement for me was the herky-jerky motion of Kong. When he's being shot at when he's on top of the Empire State Building, I was in tears when he fell. I didn't feel anything in any of the remakes. This is not a denouncement of the acting, but rather the production as a whole. I feel the same way for the original "Invasion of the Body Snatchers", a true classic without any special effects. The only remake I feel is superior is "The Fly". Cronenberg kept to the story with a slight modernization of the romance between Goldblum and Davis, which thankfully he did not overdo. But I loved how Brendel's humanity stayed with him right through to the end, when he takes the gun from Davis and points it to himself, indicating it's all over and his attempt to "become human" has terminated. I also enjoyed how Brendel evolved into a fly. It was gory, but with a purpose. I can't blame the origianl version for not doing this, since the technology was not there (Technology finally comes through!!). David Hedison, who played the scientist in the original version, was interviewed and said if he had it his way, he also would have preferred being morphed into a fly instead of plopping a fly's head on top of his own. The trouble with remakes, in general, is special effects take over, probably due to the lack of attention span on the part of today's audiences. Would today's kids appreciate the orignal "Psycho"? NO WAY. No heads are being decapitated nor are there any explosions within the first ten minutes of the movie.

  • Blair Kramer.

    Mr. Cohen,

    Your comments regarding the '33 Kong and '05 Kong are puzzling, at least to me. Basically, you shifted your car in reverse. As good as the special effects certainly are in Peter Jackson's remake, the primary reason it IS superior to the original is the fact that it has a great deal more character development. I just don't see how you (or anyone else, for that matter) could possibly see it any other way. Even King Kong himself is a much more fully developed character in the '05 remake. Please don't get me wrong. Like you, I love the original 1933 version of KING KONG. It's a classic film. But Peter Jackson's remake takes a much deeper look at the psychology involved. Of course, it isn't a perfect film. Some of the action is decidedly unbelievable. But after all is said and done, it really IS the best KING KONG film ever made. In fact, you may know that Peter Jackson agreed to remake KING KONG precisely because the 1933 original is his favorite film. I think it's fair to say that he certainly did it justice.

  • tony payne

    Message to Ron:

    Hi Ron, the original Alien film you were thinking of was called 'IT, the terror from beyond space' and starred Marshall Thompson. Although a bit dated now, it still is a most enjoyable film and does hold the suspense. Great fun.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1063274681 Irv Slifkin

    Scorsese turned Cape Fear into a boogeyman movie as opposed to the earlier intense thriller. Robert De Niro's laughter in th emovie theater is great, but I'll take the original.

  • chris

    Here's a thought. I don't consider any movie that is based on already published materials(i.e., a book or play) being done again as a remake. Rather, it's someone else's take on the source material. Therefore, the 1982 version of "The Thing" isn't a remake to me since it is based on John Campbell's classic "Who Goes There?" I find that Carpenter's version is closer to the source material than Hawk's/Nyby's. And, the newest version of "True Grit" isn't a remake as well.

  • http://davesclassicfilms.blogspot.com/ dave02720

    Hey guys -

    I was thinking more along the lines of "The Lodger" (1927) with Ivor Novello vs. "The Lodger" (1944) with Laird Cregar vs. "The Man in the Attic" (1953) with Jack Palance. So I'm thinking Cregar over Novello, but then it's a tough choice between the sinister Cregar and the nervous and menacing Jack Palance.
    I'm going to have to stock the fridge and do my own research ... Thanks Brian ...

  • DIRK

    what about CHARADE or A STAR IS BORN that were both remade several times!! And THE WIZARD OF OZ that we all remember with Judy Garland was actually a remake also!!!!! enjoy

  • William Sommerwerck

    Except for "Scarface" (which I haven't seen), I'm in agreement. The remakes are at least as good as the originals, and in one case ("The Fly") sufficiently better to become a bona fide classic. I also agree with "An Affair to Remember" versus "Love Affair", and "The Adventures of Robin Hood" versus every Robin Hood picture that followed.

    A point that might be worth discussing... Some "remakes" aren't remakes, but "makes". "The Thing" falls in that category. The original is stupid, cheesy shlock (Howard Hawks' participation, and likely direction, notwithstanding), while the Carpenter version sticks closely to the original short story "Who Goes There?".

  • Rob

    LOVE "The Thing" from 1982 and in someways unfair w/ orig. to compare as they are so different - def. one of if not THE best "remake" to date - the worst: "Psycho" w/ Vince Vaughn (useless) and 1976's "King Kong"

  • golden1

    I disagree with Scarface. The original was so well done and well acted. The remake was laughable in places -"say hello to my leetle frens" - and gratuitously violent. But my strongest disagreement is with The Thing. John Carpenter's version was artistically "cheap" because of the really gross and stupid creature transformations and the totally unsatisfying ending. The original's understated build up of suspense and terror still holds up today.

  • Richard Dicks

    This discussion on remakes is always fun and no one ever agrees, completely. It is one thing to discuss movies like "My Favorite Wife" with Cary Grant and Irene Dunne vs. James Garner and Doris Day in "Move Over Darling". Both are fun but Irene Dunne is great in the original and as much as I love James Garner, he was never really the next Cary Grant. The real stumper happened this past year with "True Grit". The best movie is probably the new one, it is much more like the book and how can you fault this cast. Still who is the best Rooster Cogburn, that is another subject. Jeff Bridges did a great job and played is totally different than the Duke. Both were terrific and I don't think anyone could have played the John Wayne, Rooster better than he did. Add to that, he had to do it with Glen Campbell instead of Matt Damon and what can you say.

    So,I say the original with My favorite Wife and the remake with True Grit. I also like apples better than oranges, if you get where I am going.

  • speedle

    True legitimate comparison of these films can only be made by considering the impact they made in their own time. It is not fair to compare these Sci-fi films from the artistic standpoint without making allowances for the differences in technology and film making advances.

    Put another way, if we could take the "Independence Day" film cans and transport them back to 1957 in a time machine and show the movie at the local Bijou (including all the advanced color and audio techniques) the audience would go absolutely bonkers. There would be lines for miles to get in to see the movie.

    Back to present day ( or 1996), this movie IMO was a complete yawner, trite, contrived and a commercial so so.

    The point is that we are comparing how the original films impress today's audiences whose standards are much higher. A more appropriate measurement would be to compare the kind of impact and reaction was evident in each film's time by the people who witnessed them for the first time. If we use that basis on the movies that were noted in the article, I don't think any of the modern flicks would win.

  • Wayne F.

    The original "The Thing" and " Body Snatchers" were better films in that they captured the era of the Cold War period and created tensions in their films that played on America's fear of the unknown whether it was the Communists or our limited knowledge of outer space and what lied beyond. When the remakes came, the fears of uncertainty didn't exist as much and the directors were now relying on special effects which for me doesn't always translate to a better movie.

  • ron

    Are you kidding? The Thing (new version) over the original? Wow, you must be a “young whippersnapper”. Actually, the only thing good about the new version is the story. The acting and low-life characters do nothing for me, as a matter of fact, I've come to dislike Kurt Russell in anything due to this performance. I also think that my generation doesn't need blood, guts and gore to scare me, but that seems to be the only type of horror movies anymore-no original thought provoking stories to tweak the imagination-just give me a slasher. In the original Thing, you get close to the characters, shared their fear, their isolation, their camaraderie, their humor. They were likable everyday people, not riff-raff. The original story from August, 1938 is still chilling, however, who says a movie is better because it follows the book more closley? And the use of the Theramin in the original adds to the fear. I must admit that the music score by Ennio Morricone in the new version was also excellent.
    I actually hate it when a remake is made. Why don't they just name it something different even if they don't have an original idea. In my opinion, the original is leaps and bounds greater than the remake (however, I kinda like the remake too).

  • Mike

    Respectfully, I disagree with your pick of DeNiro over Mitchum in Cape Fear. Mitchum brought to Max Cady a quietly cold, sinister psychopath, more subtle to me than DeNiro and what I felt was scenery chewing. I also feel both versions of The Thing are too different to be compared, but I do prefer the '51 version if, for nothing else, its wonderful, natural repartee and overlapping dialogue among the characters.

  • Fred B.

    Actually "The Maltese Falcon" was made twice before the Bogart classic. The first was with Ricardo Cortez as stated. The second version was made in 1936 with Warren William and a young Bette Davis and titled "Satan Met A Lady". The characters names were changed, maybe to protect the innocent.....

  • Gary Vidmar

    I would add to this list Paul Schrader's CAT PEOPLE - another remake that is up to the standards of the original. The subtextural sexual connotations of the original version work well for their time, but are not nearly as effective as the lurid, bestial sexuality of the remake. Kinski and McDowell are superb in it.

  • Allan Cope

    Cape Fear remake is arguably better than the original; untill the climax. The ending is way too much like a Friday The 13th or Halloween movie. It is totally unbelievable. Max Cady should have worn a Hockey mask.

  • James Sedares

    It would be a depressing life if we were to feel that everything (movies, music, books, art, etc.) was better "back then". One must live in the present and try to appreciate what is being created and offered today, as difficult as that may be in this overcrowded, 24/7 bombardment of media we are all live in.

    This comes from a person who loves movie classics as much or more than anyone I know. We must keep ouselves open to the possibility, at least, that something new or more recent can have value and stand the test of time. For example, while I enjoyed Jackson's "Kong" I can never shake the '33 Kong's hold on me, through its nightmarish, fever dream images, and its almost fairy tale ethos that is rooted deeply in our collective human psyche from the days of childhood. Clearly the bar has been raised by the old classic movies, and should inspire modern filmakers to future excellence. When we read modern directors' interviews we realize quickly that, almost to a person, they are aficionados of classic films. Many have an encylopedic knowledge of these films, and their affection shows. The composer Johannes Brahms was so intimidated by the spectre of Beethoven and his symphonies that he waited until he was in his mid-forties to write one himself. And what he wrote was musical greatness in its own right. In movies think of Coppola and Scorcese as the heirs to Ford and Hawks. Or Spielberg as an action move heir to Curtiz. You can bet the newer directors know every frame the old masters ever shot. And it enriches their own work, as well.

    When comparing originals to remakes one should argue from a position of strength. Knowing the original, it's context and place in history can enrich the comparisons and make make the writer credible.

  • Robin

    My Darling Clementine is much better than Frontier Marshal. The Trevor Howard version of Mutiny On The Bounty is far better than the one with Charles Laughton.

  • Evie

    I have to agree with Brian across the board.
    And Scorsese never misses.

  • Gord Jackson

    I am not sure movies are so much remade as retold, i.e. the recent "True Grit". In no way do I think of it as a remake. It's simply a grittier retelling with an even stronger focus on Maddy, where it ought to be. Jeff Bridges, to his great credit did not try to outdo John Wayne. The one remake I found missing was "Night and the City", a brilliant 1950 film noir than Martin Scorcese retold but certainly did not duplicate. The original is so brilliantly ugly that any time after viewing it I feel I need to be disinfected. A true gem if ever there was one.

    • jim martin

      The oridinal True Grit with John Wayne was far superior than the re-make which in my opinion was total rubbish & that is me being polite

  • Bill C.

    Well, I disagree with nearly every choice you made in this article (and quite a few choices made in the subsequent comments).

    I don't really consider DePalma's "Scarface" to be a remake as it is radically different than the original - borrowing character names and the overall crime theme, but they really are two different stories.

    The original "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" (with Siegel's original ending) is superior to both of the remakes.

    The remake of "Cat People" was abominable, substituting graphic sex for the far more subtler (and better) exploration of the fear of intimacy that drove the original.

    No argument that Bogart/Huston's "Maltese Falcon" blew away the two previous versions.

    One remake that I found much better than the original: "Dirty Rotten Scoundrels" (a remake of the rather tepid "Bedtime Story").

  • eddie moscone

    to think robert mitchum showed more menace with out saying a word as peck's daughter runs through the school and ends up running into mitchum. the scowl on mitchums face showed more menace than deniro's dialog with lewis in the same scence in the remake. mitchum is max cady not deniro

  • Mr. Ludy Marvin Wilkie

    Go back in time to 1923--Cecil B. Demille's
    1st version of THE TEN COMMANDMENTS and compare it with the 1956 version with Charleton Heston and Yul Brynner. For a discussion of the o riginal, see CLASSICS OF THE SILENT SCREEN by Joe Franklin.
    By the w ay, wouldn't it be g ood if a first-rate producer did a remake of a couple of Ed Wood films--BRIDE OF THE MONSTER or the
    classic flop PLAN 9 FROM OUTER SPACE?
    There was some good story material there.

  • eddie moscone

    don't mess with the classics lana turner said of remake of the postman always rings twice and she is right. i've have seen the trailor mor straw dogs and already looks like forget it. i could tell the screaming sam's version is better and i almost walk out of it cause first half seemed broing. i have watched it multiple times since. grant it special effects have improved and bugets over cheaply made action movies of decades ago. that doesn't make them better though. nobody has yet to top flynn as an action hero or for that matter wayne stwart cooper etc from by gone days

  • Ellen Urie

    I have to say that I think a lot of movie re-makes are made because there are just not enough ideas for stories anymore. That's just my opinion. I do agree with Bill Pentland about "The Shining." I read the book first & it was SCARY!! Jack Nicholson is one of my favorite actors. He did a wonderful job in the movie. And it WAS scary. But the ending was so completely changed from the book that it ruined the film. I don't agree a book should be changed for the film. I never saw the first "Scarface" but now I want to. Al Pacino was good, but it sure is a violent film. I agree Robert Mitchum was better in "Cape Fear." I always liked him, but until reading here lately about his drug use I had never heard about that before.

  • Editrix

    I can think of two remakes that improved on their originals. One is the Judy Garland A Star is Born and the other, the Pierce Brosnan Thomas Crowne Affair.

  • Barbara Thomas

    My favorite remake: "The Thomas Crown Affair": FAR superior to the original, in plot, humor,and believability.Steve McQueen never projected the sophistication the role needed.

  • StevenWells

    Other comments have covered the superior remakes of "The Wizard Of Oz," The Maltese Falcon" and "A Star Is Born," with which I agree, so I'll throw in: "His Girl Friday," 1940 (over the '31 "The Front Page") and "House Of Wax," 1953 (over the nevertheless very entertaining "Mystery Of the Wax Museum," 1933).

  • Charlie Ray

    The Cape Fear remake isn't even close to the quality of the original! Watching Gregory Peck and Robert Mitchum face off is a spellbinding, suspense-filled experience. The remake went way over the top and replaced suspense with graphic violence.

    It's not a patch on the original.

  • Doug

    I've never seen both 'Cape Fear' films, so, no comment there.

    I have to disagree about 'Invasion of the Body Snatchers.' The remake didn't have nearly as much suspense and the original, overall, is a better production with the acting and the cinematography and concept. Donald Sutherland didn't give nearly as great a performance as McCarthy.

    And btw, there was another remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers, starring Nicole Kidman?

    I agree with 'The Thing,' Carpenter's version was incredibly well done for its time (1982) just when sci-fi and horror films were becoming interesting again with the way they were produced. Much better than the original.

    And 'The Fly?' Who cares, lol?

    It's just like silent film fans say, no sound makes for better acting, better productions. In my opinion, less special effects and makeup 'ooze' can sometimes make for a darker, more dramatic production, esp. if done in black and white, with good acting.

    You didn't even mention 'The Cat People' (1942), one of the greatest horror classics remade 35 years later, or 'The Wolfman.' I enjoyed the original 'Cat People' and the 2010 remake of 'The Wolfman' has such great attention to period detail that it is beautiful to watch, with superb acting.

  • frank600

    There is one movie that was cited here and that is the Invasion of the Body Snatchers of 1956 was an excellent movie in Black & White with Kevin McCarthy and Caroline Jones an excellent picture that was produced during the Cold War Era and when the there was testing of the Atomic Bomb and the the implication that the fallout of the testing were producing the exact person emanating from Pods after sucking the life of the human being that they were replicating and the only thing they lacked were emotions and thoughts/brains. The original is far superior to the remark which is garbage. The latter negative connotation to the word/phrase remake as being inferior and that still seems to be true today. Nothing elipses the original. The original Cape Fear was better than the remake as it was more suspenseful that the remake.

  • Stan Flax

    Re "Mutiny on the Bounty". How can anyone--including Trevor Howard-replace the snarling, hateful, cruel Charles Laughton as Captain Bly? Incidentally, Captain Bly turned out to be one of the greatest navigators of all time--given meager provisions and only a rowboat by the mutineers (who actually settled Pitcairn Island--most islanders have the last name "Christian") he managed to navigate the boat several thousands of miles across the Pacific without losing a single man. Now that's sailing!!!!!!!

    Secondly, the original Wolf Man had Maria Ospenskaya as the gypsy who foretold Lon Chaney Jr's future. It also had Bela Lugosi as the Wolf Man's daddy (as a werewolf), the son of Maria Ospenskaya. Chaney played the part very, very well, creating sympathy for his plight. Although Chaney was eclipsed by his father, Lon Chaney Sr., he proved he was a fantastic actor when he played the role of Lenny in "Of Mice and Men" with Burgess Meredith (one of Meredith's first feature films), and Betty Field. Although Of Mice and Men has been remade at least twice (once with John Malkovich and Gary Sinise), the original captures the pathos, the hopes and dreams of the workers, dashed by Chaney's unintentional strangling of Betty Field. The supporting cast was comprised of some of the best character actors Hollywood had.

    What about the Tyrone Power/Linda Darnell/Henry Fonda version of "Jesse James"? Yes, the movie was romanticized a-ala-Holywood, but it was entertaining without being bloody, without explicit sex, without vulgar language!!!

    There was even a remake of "Captains Courageous"-my favorite film of all time, whose story was 35 years ahead of its time (the plight of single parents--in this case the father as played by Melvin Douglas). How could anyone ever duplicate the role of Spencer Tracy as Manuel the fisherman who rescues obnoxious Freddy Bartholomew? One scene showing the sparkle in Tracy's eyes was truly remarkable. He deserved the Oscar for best actor, which he received for "Captains Courageous". Interestingly enough, despite the strong supporting cast of Lionel Barrymore, Melvin Douglas, Mickey Rooney, and John Carradine, it was Bartholomew who got top billing.

  • Charly Hulswitt

    I disagree that any of the remakes mentioned are better than the originals except the "Maltese Falcon" The shadpows and suggestions of violence in the "oldies is far superior to the blantant gore of modern filmdom.

    I think "Casbah" with Tony Martin and Marta Toren was a big improvement on Boyer's and Hedy's "Algiers". But then "Casbah" like " The Maltese Falcon" was an "oldie" too.

  • Judy Roberts

    I like alot of the older sci-fi movies. Guess it's because they didn't go into the more gruesome, bloody scenes that they tend to do now. I liked the both the old and the remake of "The Thing." Interestingly enough, the remake is more like than short story Campbell wrote in 1938. I was astonished that Campbell came up with such a concept where the alien blends in and absorbs anything they decide to replicate. This guy thought of this way before sci-fi movies were even made. Additionally, remember that comparing the original and remakes is not really fair. Especially when the older movies were dealing with alot of restrictions, including money, sensoring and lack of special effects technology. I say each has their own unique strengths. Oh, by the way, I thought War of the Worlds (50s version) was the very best version although the remakes tended to be more like Jules Verne's story of machines from Mars working on spindley legs. Great special effects in the original especially with it being in color.

  • M. L. Wirick

    The one thing, to me, todays remakes and movies have is character development. Noboby cares about the players in the movies. This is something the "older" movies did. They took time to let you the characters. That's what makes them great. Not all were great, but most were.

  • rontwo

    The original French "Wages of Fear" was certainly bettered by Friedkin's "Sorcerer."

  • christina

    the thing and the fly. the fly is better than the original, by far. but, it is so heartbreaking, especially the ending.

  • BRIAN

    The Glass Key(1942)Better than the 1935 Version.

  • Rick

    I agree with Ed. How about the Maltese Falcon. There were 2 attempts at the Maltese Falcon, before Boggie put his imprint on it. And once he did, he set the bar for film noir after that.
    As for your picks Brian, you can't compare the 2 Things. The stories are different. I still like the original a little better. You may find the idea that the "Thing" looks like a man to be a problem, but that is what makes it better. An alien that can morph and change its mass is less believable than one that looks like a man. Furthermore, the suspense in not seeing the alien until the middle of the movie allows for a persons imagination to do more than special effects could ever do. Your comments sound not like a young whippersnapper, but like a lazy person who needs to be spoon fed the entire story.

  • Marie Lazzari

    Some remakes are better than the original, but not always. Sabrina with Audrey Hepburn was better than the remake. The movie remake with Doris Day and James Garner about the wife being lost at sea is better than Cary Grant and Irene Dunne.
    Marie

  • sugarpussoshea

    As much as I adore Rbt Montgomery and the entire cast of Here comes Mr Jordan, Warren Beatty's Heaven Can Wait was a gr8 remake. Dian Cannon shud have won the big prize for her role. And the fact that Beatty pd tribute to another "oldie" with his title was also just right.
    As for An Affair to Remember - the stars, the cinematography and music are better than Love Affair, but they just don't pull it off as well as Irene Dunne and Charles Boyer....

  • Michael McKenna

    One remake that comes to my mind is "Imitation Of Life". I am sure there are folks who are partial to the original Claudette Colbert version, but in spite of some "Universal gloss" which was applied to the remake, I think the Lana Turner version packs a stronger emotional punch.

  • ron

    Unfortunately, everyone in our society is entitled to an opinion---even when they're REAL bad.

  • Seletar

    The only remake I'm sure was better than the original:

    "The Maltese Falcon" [Humphrey Bogart, Sidney Greenstreet, Peter Lorre] was a remake, only 2 or 3 years later, of "Dangerous Female" [Ricardo Cortez, Bebe Daniels, Thelma Todd].

    The scripts are ALMOST verbatim [but "Dangerous Female" was made before movie industry decided to "self-censor," so there were a few suggestive scenes in it]. To put it midly, though Bogeywas a lot more convincing Sam Spade than Ricardo Cortez.

  • Michael McKenna

    I tend to agree with Marie Lazzari in that "Move Over Darling" (James Garner/Doris Day) has a slight edge over "My Favorite Wife", (Cary Grant/Irene Dunne). Even though it is difficult to place Cary and James on the same comic plateau (their comic styles are different but fit their respective personas like a glove) Irene and Doris were both very effective in their roles, with Doris bringing a little higher level of physical comedy to her version of Mrs Arden (remember Doris "massaging" Polly Bergen). But the courtroom scenes in the beginning of both films has almost verbatim dialogue. Randolph Scott and Chuck Conners could be almost interchangeable in their "hunk" roles as the guy on the island for 5 years with Mrs. Arden. To make this analysis even more confusing/interesting, there is enough footage surviving from the "Something's Got To Give" the initial attempted remake (Dean Martin/Marilyn Monroe) to also consider, whereupon Marilyn brings an entirely heightened level of sexuality over Irene and Doris to Mrs. Arden (as only Marilyn could have!).

    My other thought was sometimes actors have the totally thankless task of trying to replace two true "greats" in their remake, as when Connie Francis and Harve Presnell (in "When The Boys Meet The Girls") had to try to compete with the memory of superlative, top-ranked Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney (in the original "Girl Crazy"). But, then, I don't think Liberace and Herman's Hermits in the remake is what the original architects of "Girl Crazy" exactly had in mind!

  • Andrew

    I think the 1976 remake of "King Kong" was an embarrasment. I don't put that on Jeff Bridges or
    Jessica Lang who both have greatly distinguished themselves in other films. It was just too fake.
    Peter Jackson's 2005 remake however, was such an
    enhancement of the original. Special effects were
    incredible! I loved how he paid tribute to the original creators of the 1933 version in the ending credits. Jackson really did a tremendous job in recreating the 1930's era visually and with some of the original music. I have both the 1933 and 2005 versions in my DVD collection. An added note, it was the 1933 version of "King Kong"
    that inspired special effects genius Ray Harryhousin.

  • Publius

    I used to get mad when I would see re-makes of classic films. Then, in my study of Hollywood, I learned that re-makes are common-place; the cinema always makes a new version for a new generation, even if the old version stinks. What rules Hollywood is the Box Office, and not necessarily cinema greatness.
    I thought "The Fly" films has equal merit. There were things I liked and dis-liked about both versions, but some movies you CANNOT MAKE RE-MAKES OUT OF.

    1.) THE AFRICAN QUEEN. This Hepburn/Boagart classic was re-made on TV and the re-make ruined the story by making Rose Sayer look like she was floating down the barge on Thames witht he royal family. Charlie Allnut was an actor trying to look, sound and be like Bogie and miserably failing. Then in order to keep up with the times, we have a discussion with an African slave about how to free his people from German wrath. This re-make sank into the television graveyard where it truly belongs.

    2.) CASABLANCA. YOu cannot re-make this movie no matter how hard you try. Even Warner Brothers tried it with "Passage to Marsailles," and failed--even though it had 80% of the original cast. The television versions are worse. The only one who arguably came close would be Woody Allen's "Play It Again Sam" which wisely had nothing to do with the original.
    3.) The one film that NO ONE, except The French in a poor 1979 version has ever re-made-- "Sunrise." Its silent cinema quality, and ethereal grace with the camera make it almost a modern painting. To re-make this film would be like trying to re-paint "The Mona Lisa."
    4.) "The Barretts of Whimpole Street" was fine in 1935 when Charles Laughton played the lead. When it was re-made in 1950, it was a shambles.

  • bill blau

    In most ways HOUSE OF WAX (1953) IS SUPERIOR TO mystery of the wax museum (1933) Vincent Price in the remake acts so beautifully as to bring a tear to my eye, Lionel Atwill is, well, Lionel Atwill. Thge funny snappy sayings by Glenda Farrell in MYSTERY are kinda cute, but all tolde HOUSE has the edge. I shall not include thw more recent remake with the melting buildings, it has no resemblance at all to Charles Belding's original story. Comment, anyone?

  • Larry

    It is harder to find superior remakes, but how about
    The Ghost and the Darkness for Bwana Devil?

  • Greg

    "Heaven Can Wait" - excellant movie, best picture nom and big hit

  • Jim Crawford

    The Bounty with Mel Gibson & Anthony Hopkins was a far superior remake than the previous efforts and showed Bligh to be the good man that he was. I did like Brando & Howard, it certainly was a visual 'epic', but Bligh was no flogger, unlike a lot of captains in those days.

  • Michelle Malkin

    I notice that no one has mentioned the abominable remake of "The Day the Earth Stood Still". The only thing in this disaster worth writing home about were the special effects. The new Klaatu was
    so awful that I can't imagine any alien race sending such a stiff ignoramus as their ambassador
    or to deliver a warning of any kind. The original Klaatu (Michael Rennie in a marvelous performance) had obviously learned as much about Earth as he could and was eager to learn more. I'll never forget the look of delight on his face when he opens a little box in the sitting room and realizes that it is a music box. And, the viewer learns to like him and the Bensons (Patricia Neal and Billy Gray) and to loathe the boyfriend (Hugh Marlowe playing one of his marvelous slimes) of Mrs Benson (a widow). From the second you see Klaatu in the hospital after he was shot, you care for this character. And, you see the nonsense that some government representatives have to put up with. I felt no attachment to anyone in the remake of TDtESS. That's probably why no one mentioned the
    crudulous remake of the original movie. It sucks!

  • BDavisFan

    I think Sydney Pollack did a great job with the remake of Sabrina. I enjoyed the much-more-fleshed-out characters very much, and wherever Julia Ormond fell short, Harrison Ford picked up the ball. I disagreed with the casting of empty-headed brother David in the remake, but the overall feel of the family's super-opulant lifestyle, and the clear view Pollack gave viewers of the ultimately superficial whimsies of that family came across to me better than in the original endeavor. The classic "thawing" of Linus' heart was much better accomplished and presented, I believe, in the remake. (Also, I'll take the complete package of Harrison Ford over Bogart any day.)

  • Shawn

    Film noir remake 'Vicki'(1953) with Jeanne Crain and Jean Peters has a different feel to it than original 'I Wake up Screaming'(1941) with Betty Grable and Carole Landis but I don't think I could say I like it better. I do like the 1944 'The Lodger' with Laird Cregar and Merle Oberon better than the 20's and 'The Man in the Attic' (1953). Laird brings a contrast between his Jekyll and Hyde type personality that Palance doesn't quite have. And although I love both 'The Thing' versions, the '82 version just has the freaky special effects that can't be beat.

  • sean

    No one has mentioned my personal pick for " worst
    ever re-make ". You can't run away from it. Has any great actor been more miscast as Jack lemmon
    trying, [but not very hard] to put his own stamp on a part that Clark gable owned? Also I would nominate any of the " Joan of arc " movies after Dreyer's, Passion of Joan of arc. I rarely agreed with Pauline Kael, but she was spot on as to the performance of Falconetti as Joan. I believe that there is more truth and real beauty in the anguished true belief in Joan's mind of her faith
    [sans make-up.] than in all of the lavish hollywood novies on the same subject.

  • Tommy T

    A lot of remakes are so vastly different than the originals, or predecessors, it would be like comparing apples and oranges. "Day the Earth Stood Still","The Thing", "War of the Worlds", "Casino Royale", "We're No Angels" are examples of some that were so different about all they have in commom are the names. Whether one is better or worse than a predecessor is highly subjective in most cases and could lead to arguments. Before the advent of TV, video tape, and DVD studios didn't re-release movies that were good; they made new ones with contemporary stars. So you get three or four versions of "The Prisoner of Zenda" which are almost identical. The beauty of living today for movie fans; we get to see them all and get to evaluate them on their individual merits. Lucky us, huh!

  • Ken Strawn

    The '92 remake of LAST OF THE MOHICANS was vastly superior to all earlier versions. Carpenter's THE THING does follow the John W, Campbell story more closely but it changed the ending. Campbell's story was about how the characters work together to puzzle out how to defeat the creature. Carpenter let the Thing win. Several people have commented on how the old classics used acting, direction and story telling far better than recent productions. It seems that since the introduction of the computer generated images, producers have forgotten that they need a story to go along with their incredibly good special effects. I suspect that most of the "suits" making production decisions today are under 40 years of age and would not know a good story if it hit them in the head.

  • nbrawdy

    My choice would go to the 'characters' more than the movies. You do have to care for them. In that way, I think Christopher Lee was much better than Bela Lugosi as Dracula. His Dracula was more intense and scary.

    By the way, speaking of 50s sci-fi movies. Has anyone heard about a remake of Them? I heard about this quite a few years ago, but nothing has come.

  • Doug

    Don't get me wrong, I love the original 'Wolfman.'
    The studio sets were real spooky and eerie and it had great talent; Lon Chaney, Bela Lugosi, Marie O., and Claude Raines. Even though Raines always looks baffled throughout the movie, like, "why am I in this?" And he doesn't look that old to be playing Lon Chaney's father. I'm not sure, but Laney may have been older than him in real life.

    And, I love the original 'War of the Worlds,' but Spielberg made a great remake. The aliens are great in both films, but the ones in Spielberg's version really scared the crap out of me. And I'm not that easily scared.

    I can't wait to see what Tim Burton does with 'Dark Shadows,' lol. That should be very interesting.

    And there's a prequel to 'Wizard of Oz,' coming up, where they show the wizard and his balloon arriving in Oz. The original only covered one aspect of the Oz books, so there's still a lot of movies that could come out of that series, if anyone dared do it. The 80's remake was insipid and pretty stupidly rendered.

  • Doug

    Oops, Lon Chaney, jr. And I just checked. Rains was 17 years older, but he still doesn't look it in the film, lol.

  • Doug

    Here I go again...

    The original King Kong is great. I own it and just watched it not too long ago. It really is a sophisticated film for its time and the characters are great. Fay Wray does a great job in it.
    I heard it was a sensation when it came out. Even the stop action doesn't look hair-brained.

    Jackson's version is great, too, but I had a real problem with that loooooooooooooooong boat ride. What happened there? It certainly wasn't done for character or story development. Who knows...

    Sometimes I think that director's just love the original so much that they seek to add to, or enhance the original instead of take away from it.

  • Shawn

    The thing about the new King Kong is Adrian Brody just ruins it and to me is not believable in a lot of his roles. He just looks like he's acting to fit a character that just doesn't fit him. The original King Kong is awesome and a classic and it doesn't have an Adrian Brody to ruin it. Yea let's make a new King Kong...Adrian Brody? Really? Sorry, but it had to be said.

  • Jim Crawford

    When I was a boy Bela Lugosi frightened the C--- out of me but the Hammer versions of Dracula did it for me, Christopher Lee WAS Dracula. As for the original Alien, the remake was far superior. The original was pathetic (Which I have)

  • Jim Crawford

    Almost forgot, the original King Kong is a classic and deserves to be. The 1976 version was'nt bad and I think is far better than the new one. The only gripe is that Kong walks upright!

  • Steve Rothstein

    The 1950's version of The Buccaneer with Charlton Heston and Yul Brynner was better than the 1938 version with Fredric March, both versions by Cecil B DeMille. Both versions were still great.
    How about Dr Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. 1932 version with Fredric March and Miriam Hopkins vs 1941 with Spencer Tracy, Lana Turner and Ingrid Bergman. Both are excellent.
    And I think 1951's version of the Thing was better than the Carpenter's remake. The original version had suspense, that eerie background music and who could forget the ending with those famous words - Watch the sky's. Keep watching the sky's.

  • Kathy Fergusson

    My vote for best remake is "Ocean's Eleven". The original was unwatchable but the Soderbergh remake is clever and entertaining.

  • Christopher Anne Samson

    Thanks to StevenWells who mentioned HIS GIRL FRIDAY. That is probably my favorite remake.

    I may have missed it, but no one mentioned remakes of French comedy films, something that has never quiet achieved brilliance. THREE MEN AND A BABY may have been big box office, and I like Selleck, but there is something about the Hollywood slickness that losses against the charm of the French original THREE MEN AND A CRADLE. You could also say the same for THE BIRD CAGE, where Gene Hackman's conservative politician became a card board figure. Do I need to detail THE MAN WITH ONE RED SHOE or THE GOAT? The originals with Pierre Richard are marvelous, and as a dyslexic I generally avoid films I have to read.

    Also remakes of Akira Kurosawa: There are several of YOJIMBO alone, the best is probably Sergio Leone's FIST FULL IF DOLLARS. Leone's may be more accessible for many, both are great. SEVEN SAMURAI became MAGNIFICENT SEVEN. I think Kurosawa's version is the better film, but I also love the remake, which is a pretty good film in its own right.

  • Jim R.

    Have to disagree with most of the remakes. The movies of the 1950s assumed an audience with a little intellect and therefore were not above using words with more than one syllable. After subtracting gratuitous computer generated effects, cursing, crotch shots, violence, gore, and ethically-challenged one-dimensional characters, there's not much left of contemporary films.

  • Lila Johnson

    I have to agree with the comment on Psycho. I love the original and wanted to love the remake (I already loved the actors and director) and since it was shot for shot, how could it be bad, right? I was so disapointed and hated seeing the red blood in the bathroom scene.
    My take on the Cape Fear movies is from the perspective of someone who first saw it as a little girl. It was Lori Martin's innocence and barely pubecent youth that made me identify with her terror. It has stayed with me all these years. The remake had the girl too interested in flirting with danger and she lost some of my sympathy. Also the "rape" scene with Polly Bergen was terrifying and her brave efforts to protect her family were moving. Mitchum's quiet menacing was overwhelming.
    I read the original story on which Invasion of the Body Snatchers was based. In it the invaders were explained as coming from outer space in search of a new home. They took on the form of whatever was around and had landed in a farm field, thus becoming viny vegetation and then taking on human form in an attempt to get a toe hold on the planet. As they were thwarted by the opposition of the doctor character, they made the decision to leave Earth and try somewhere else. Without a third person narrator there could be no explanation of motive for the aliens actions.

  • Stephanie

    The original Cape Fear is a better film period.

    I agree with you Jim that the '76 King kong is better than the CG infested Peter Jackson remake. Someone mentioned disdain for Adrain Brody, I couldn't stand the Jack Black character.

    LOL about all the comments for Thing FYI there is going to be another remake. Hey Sue, FYI - I also believe there is a Rebecca remake on the way or there was a British version done a few years ago. also the Women remake is atrocious.

  • Michael T

    Firstly, I like to thank Brian Sieck for compiling this list....excellent choices.

    My take on the matter...

    I have not seen the original "Scarface" in it's completion...but De Palma's film is a tour de force. Yes, it's violent and there's a lot of swearing etc..but that's an accurate depiction of that world. De Palma's genius of marrying glamour and grittiness in a film without losing sight of either is no small accomplishment.

    "Cape Fear" I've only seen each once...so I would need to see both again. From what I recall, I liked elements of both.

    As for the sci-fi/horror remake trinity. I feel all 3 are better.

    Anyone that likes the Vincent Price original [and no disrespect to Mr. Price, he is wonderful] is out of their mind. Jeff Goldblum and Geena Davis give magnificent performances...The remake of the Fly is one of the few "horror" movies that can also be considered a "romance story".

    The ending of "The Fly" is heart-wrenching.
    Mr. Cronenberg is no slouch.

    There's a lot of criticism over "The Thing" and it's "special effects"..this is a lame criticisim.

    The fx that was used in The Thing was mind-blowing. These were not crappy, CGI effects that aren't scary or inventive. Everything you see on the sreen is happening...that is no small feat. As for "liking" the protagonist..clearly, that was not the intention of Mr. Carpenter or perhaps Mr. Russell.I applaud both of them for not going with the usual formula that there has to be a "hero" in the picture or a likeable "lead". The Thing is a HORROR movie not a romantic-comedy.

    The original Invasion of the Body Snatchers and the remake are [IMO] the closet to being a tie. I love the original but the remake matches it shot for shot.

    The transformations in the original are still pretty gross so no-one can argue that the remake was simply going for "shock value".

    The cold war metaphor of the original is fantatstic...who are they, what do they want, emotionless,etc..read:Communists. However, there is plenty of post Nixon watergate paranoia captured in the remake.

    Even if the studio's would have left the original ending Mr. Siegal shot. It's still not as stark and absolute as the ending of the remake..one of the all time best ending in any horror movie...chilling!!

    Finally, someone made a reckless comment of Donald Sutherland and his "acting". No offense to Mccarthy but Mr. Sutherland is a first rate actor and his performance is simply different than Mccarthy's...not as "highstrung", shall we say.

    In defense of the original IOTBS Dana Wynter's icy look when she "transforms" is perfection!!

    One final thought, all of these remakes on this list are from 1978-1991. The movie business still believed in stories, acting, plot development etc...during that time period. Remakes today are truly all about Money , bad CGI special effects and usually a god-awful script.

    I think these particular remakes should be looked at as a very rare time when remakes where updated for a "modern sudience" but were made with true artistic integrity.

  • Gloria Briganti

    Remakes are never as good as the original. You talk about the remakes starring the greatest actors ever,but don't forget the orginals were make by the greatest actors at that time! For an example, I was teaching a Film class in an inner city high school to teens, some who never saw a black and white film before. I showed them An Affair (1939) and then I showed them the remake An Affair to Remember. The majority of the class chose the black and white because they said it was less distracting than the color. Even though they realized that it was basically the same director, script, scene etc. etc. About the only thing that remakes do is add more explicite sex scenes and horrible dialoge. It's as if the studios can't come up with anything new and orginal. The writers don't have an original thought in their head and it's easier just changing a few scenes from the oldies and cheaper.

  • Hank Zangara

    Pierce Brosnan is no Steve McQueen, but the remake of "The Thomas Crown Affair" is arguably better than the original.

  • Elizabeth

    I agree with the Cary Grant & Deborah Kerr version of 'An Affair To Remember' which I think is the best love story of all time. Also 'Rooster Cogburn' the new version followed the book more but I liked the actors in the John Wayne version better.
    As far as 'Cape Fear' nothing can match the suspense and the brilliantly scary Robert Mitcham
    in the original version.
    There are so many good books to be made into movies I don't see why they continue to make so many remakes of older movies most of which are inferior. Too much time is spent on special effects - the older versions in most cases had better actors and better stories.

  • Janet

    I agree that the remake of The Fly was amazing and far superior to the original.

    I think the remake of Holiday (1938) is much better than the original (1930), even though the original was very good. Leondard Maltin gives them both excellent reviews. However, I think the remake is superior. For one thing, who can top Cary Grant for romantic comedy? And although there are obvious similarities in the scripts, with some of the lines identical, the later film added scenes that resulted in greater emotional impact. The performances of the minor characters also added to this impact. For instance, Lew Ayres, as Katharine Hepburn's brother, gave a touching performance as an alcoholic. In addition, Cary Grant's friends were given more to do and helped the audience better understand the eccentric nature and motivation of Cary Grant's character. One of my favourite films!

  • Eddie Quillen

    Is anybody here old enough to remember what a joke the remake of Scarface was considered when it came out? While it was expected to make Steven Bauer a star, just as it did for George Raft in the similar role in the original (although ultimately Bauer's career stalled), Pacino's performance was regularly mocked ("Lucy, I'm home!") and Pfeiffer's performance was considered dreadful at the time.

    While the violence, which was considered quite gratuitous in those days, was the film's big selling point, in the theater where I saw it, in NYC, people were actually laughing at the ridiculousness (Pacino's cocaine noseslide, anyone?) of it. At the end, during the climactic gunfight, there were howls of laughter in the theater.

    Even the actors and filmmakers I worked with in those days thought it was a ridiculous movie.

    Now it is considered a classic. Blessed be, oh Flying Spaghetti Monster, the "mookification" of our culture (if you don't know what a mook is, it is a term that was used in showbiz marketing to describe a Howard Stern listener, in the early '90s, when he became huge nationally). The internet has made this "mookification" complete.

    It is a ridiculous movie. And yes, I guess I am a bitter, old elitist. It's a dirty job, but somebody's gotta do it.

  • ekim smada

    I like the original "Thing"," Mutuny on The Bounty" and "Cape Fear". Laughton was so arrogant. Arness was so tall and Mitchum was believable. Also in the Mitchum film the young lady who played the daughter looked so much like Elizabeth Taylor I did a double take the first time I saw it. And yes I'm an old-timer!

  • John E

    What do folks think about the remake of "The Postman Always Rings Twice"? Jack Nicholson and Jessica Lange are the hottest duo I've seen in any non-porn film. Admittedly, the suspicious DA is missing in this 1981 version, and that's a weakness.

  • Larry

    Another superior remake: "The Mummy" (Hammer 1959) has much better acting and more pathos for the title character than the Boris Karloff version from the 30s.

  • Bruce Beckwith

    Remakes just show that Hollywood is so devoid of any originality and creativity. They are reduced to redoing previous scripts and make PC recasting choices. I expect one day to see that Gone With The Wind is being remade starring Jackie Chan and Lucy Liu.

  • John Stanaway

    Just a bye-the-bye, there ain't no such word as alright; you probably mean the phrase all right. Aside from that you should either watch movies more, or stop watching them altogether. The greatest sound movies were made between 1930 and 1969, then there seems to be a general aquiescence to bad taste and puerility. I don't see the creakiness that you suggested in the original FLY. In fact, the images were well constructed, and the acting was first-rate. The remake did have the advantage of Jeff Goldblum and Geena Davis, who looked like suvivors of an explosion at a latex factory with all the fake gore spraying through many film frames. John Carpenter is one of the most clueless and overrated directors around, and his heavy handling of The Thing didn't measure up a bit to Howard Hawks's indirect control of the classic version. As for the others listed, the arguments presented may have some incidental merit, but on the whole we are in the nadir of filmmaking presently.

  • Jim Crawford

    Narrow Margin was a good remake. The original was also very good. A 'B' movie from 1952 with Charles McGraw & Marie Windsor. Try and see it if you can, it is excellent.

  • Jim Crawford

    Thank you Stephanie. As for the Brody/Black version of King Kong, I dont think there is an island like it anywhere on earth. I dont believe dinosaurs ever roamed such a place, not to mention any other creatures. TOTALLY unbelievable!

  • Jim Crawford

    Back again. Forgot to say I prefered Tora Tora Tora to the new version. The earlier one is excellent & TO THE POINT!. Both Ocean's 11 are very good but 12 & 13 are the worst drivel I have ever seen.

  • CE Carter

    Of course James Cameron's remake of 'Titanic' (1997) was better than the 1953 version starring Barbara Stanwyck and Clifton Webb.
    What remake (or original version) of ANY film featuring Keanu Reeves would get rave reviews??
    The remakes of "Ben Hur", "Cleopatra" and "King of Kings" improved on the original versions.
    The remake of "Day of the Jackal" (1973) with "The Jackal" (1997) was a horrible production. How many remakes of "A Christmas Carol" are there??
    I have to agree and give the edge to Pierce Brosnan for the "Thomas Crown Affair" remake (1999) over Steve McQueen in the original (1968).
    Both versions had great music soundtracks. I really liked Nina Simone's being featured in the 1999 remake.
    Not exactly a remake, but could the Gene Hackman character in "Enemy of the State" (1998) have been a continuation of his character from "The Conversation" (1974)??

  • Jim Crawford

    A Night to Remember (1958) is the best Titanic movie, based on Walter Lord's research & book. James Cameron's movie is a fictional love story with some great special effects and not much else.

  • Alan

    Remakes are rarely better than the original film if you discount continuous sagas such as Star Trek movies.

    One film that comes to mind is the remake of The Thomas Crown Affair. The first with Steve McQueen and Faye Dunaway was boring. The remake with Pierce Brosnan and Rene Russo was a stylish and very "hot" film with Russo's sexy dress and a great love scene on a stairway....

    McQueen's talent as an actor was misused in the original film

  • Alan

    I just saw that another poster also loved the remake of The Thomas Crown Affair.....

    One of the problems with remakes to older movie fans is the over abundant use of special effects where films take on a very dark look. The original Planet of the Apes was a great film, the remake too dark with all the different simians looking too much alike. The original better showed the differences between gorillas, orangutangs, and chimpanzees.

    Obviously, the dark look of the more present day films allows for more use of special effects.

    One movie that contradicts what I have mentioned here is the Dark Knight but the performance of Heath Ledger was so brilliant that the specials actually enhanced this film. I have seen this film many times now and it is easy to see that Ledger's interpretation of the deeply disturbed Joker became such an obsession that he himself became depressed and led to his subsequent overdose of prescription drugs. Other great performances that rival Ledger's were Anthony Hopkins in Silence of the Lambs, Charles Laughton in Mutiny on the Bounty, Jack Nicholson in Cuckoo's Nest and Robert Deniro in Cape Fear to name a few.

  • Bandyman

    Every time I hear that a film is going to be remade , a shudder goes through my body ( like going to the dentist office and hearing that darn drill) because you don't know what to expect is the film going to be good or just a cheap way to cash in on a picture that was already made because the scripts coming out of Hollywood these days are for the most part lacking and predictable . Now having said that there have been some good remakes of the originals and i like your choices for the movies you picked are also the ones that I have purchased for my own DVD collection . What I do is when a film is being remadeI catch it first on cable or pay per view for a few dollars and if I enjoyed the film I would seek it out and buy it to add to my collection. However not every film should be updated or remade because it loses something , kind of like what Ted Turned tried to do in the 90's by colorizing all the old films that he got when he bought all those old classics.

  • ed cohen

    The remake of "True Grit" with Jeff Bridges was a marvelous remake of the John Wayne version. Admittedly, I'm not a big John Wayne fan and I am a big fan of the Coen brothers. The Wayne version looked way too much like the TV movies that appeared back in the 1970's, especially on ABC in New York. These movies were generally inferior. I think the Spencer Tracy version of Dr. Jekyll had more of a human take on the development of Hyde from Jekyll than the Frederic March version, which reminded me more of the Abbott and Costello version because of the makeup involved showing the transformation of Jekyll to Hyde. However, I do find it UNBELIEVABLE that no one suspected Hyde was Jekyll in the Tracy version. I don't believe there was enough of a distinction in their facial features for anyone not to even suspect they were the same person (reminiscent of the tv series "Superman" with George Reeves and how Lois Lane wasn't sure Clark Kent and Superman were the same when only a pair of eyeglasses separated the two). I also feel the original "Cape Fear" with Mitchum was superior to DeNiro's interpretation, which is also due to the direction and writing of the film. Both were icy psychotics, but Mitchum's was much more subtler, which in fact creates even more suspense, much like Anthony Perkins in "Psycho", the greatest and arguably the only true suspense film ever made. I also agree that if you want to see a well made film about the Titanic, it's got to be the British version "A Night to Remember". James Cameron's version is just a silly love story with special effects to attract the low attention span of today's audiences. I would love to see Cameron direct a film with no special effects and just rely on a storyline. It doesn't look like that will occur any time soon.

  • ed cohen

    Reponse to Blair Kramer:

    I appreciate your response to my writing and in particular to my opinion of the original "King Kong". Although I respect your opinion, I cannot agree with it. When I mentioned character development, I wasn't only talking about Kong. Perhaps part of the problem with Jackson's remake or any other remake of "Kong" is there is too much character development for Kong. This, for me, eliminates any naivete necessary for Kong to have, which is essential so that when he arrives in "civilization", his naivete will be that much more powerful to offset the sophistication of the civilized society. Any great movie is great because of all the elements that comprise the film. One such element is the role of the character actor, usually in a supporting role. Who can replace Robert Armstrong, Fay Wray and Bruce Cabot? They are responsible for the 1933 version being a classic as much as anybody. This is something else I enjoy about the older films - the role of the character actor. It seems to me this intricate part of moviemaking has died out. You just don't see the effort to cast a picture with the use of the character actor like you used to. Where are the Strother Martin's, the Claude Akins, the Edward Arnold's, the Gene Lockhart's, the Jack Carson's and many others? It's enjoyable to even discuss what determines a character actor. How would you classify Claude Rains? He never got top billing, at least by himself. He wasn't a superstar, but he was one of the greatest actors we've had the pleasure of seeing on the silver screen. It makes for a hearty discussion I think.

  • DeMeio

    Everybody has a preference. I'll nominate my choice for two of the biggest stinkers ever, the American re-makes of the French films LES DIABOLIQUES and THE WAGES OF FEAR.

  • Nijole

    The 1950's The Thing was by far our favorite as well as the original War of the Worlds. Another movie that comes to mind that was far superior was the 1963 movie, The Haunting with Julie Harris. What you don't see, in comparison to 1999 remake was far more scary. I think moviemakers OVER CGI everything now.

  • Jim Crawford

    The Wages of Fear is a fantastic movie. I remember a movie called 'The Big Gamble', which starred Stephen Boyd & Juliet Greco. I dont know if this was a remake or not but the premise was similar. I would love to see it again. (circa 1959)

  • WT

    Remakes of horror flicks are mostly for the shock value. They're more gory, more elicit, more cruel. Most remakes are NOT better than the original because the original actors made the characters their own; however, some remakes, such as Father of the Bride with Steve Martin and Diane Keaton, are MUCH better than the original. On film, Spencer Tracy does NOT come across as an attentive, loving father. He is the patriarch but not the kind of father that can bond with a daughter.

    Some remakes that I thought were as good as the originals are: Stolen Hours, Affair to Remember, Back Street, Madame X, Imitation of Life, and So Big.

  • DIRK

    just as long as nobody says JUST GO WITH IT was better than CACTUS FLOWER! LOL

  • sugarpussoshea

    Ed Cohen - being a huge Duke Wayne fan - I still have to agree Bridges True Grit really works. He turned out a perfect characterization of Rooster with the rest of the cast "perfectly" cast.

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000876895229 Dolores Tamoria

      I was a John Wayne fan and really did not want to see the remake as I prefer to keep with the old and
      look for new. However, I will confess that the remake of "True Grit" was better performed and better cast than the original. However, I hold the line on remakes of "Dirty Dancing".

  • http://www.facebook.com/whatever41 Cynthia LaRochelle

    With movies being more available for people who can't live with the price of a ticket now, I also have been comparing old to new. On TV and online thru the mail etc. Did not care for #2 Thing, the Fly #2 very good but truly disgusting, Love Affair #1, yes. The Wolfman #2. Remake of War of Worlds, no. Did not see #2 Thomas Crown, will order it. Tracy was Jekyll & Hyde, hands down. I liked both Phila Story High Society. 1959 Mummy,,Yes. Sometimes you just can't improve on the originals. If it ain't broke don't fix it.

  • ed cohen

    TO CYNTHIA -

    The remake of "The Fly" was, as you said, disgusting at times. However, you must admit it was not done gratuitously and did have a purpose. When you evolve into a fly and weigh 185 pounds,Cronenberg imagined what it would look like on the screen relative to the size of a fly. I'm happy that you thought the remake was a better film. Other great films that have disgusting moments might include "The Godfather", "Goodfellas", "The Exorcist".

  • ed cohen

    TO NIJOLE -

    Good point about "The Haunting", Nijole. It's what you don't see on the screen that many times makes for more frightening moments or as I would like to put it, more frightening environments. Look at Hitchcock's "Psycho". Not once do you see the knife penetrate Janet Leigh or Martin Balsam, another great character actor. Hitch teased us with enough to see on the screen along with audio sound effects (the slashing was a watermelon being cut) and left the rest up to the imagination of the audience. There's nothing more frightening than what one can imagine.

  • ed cohen

    TO WT -

    I have to disagree with you on "The Father of the Bride". The entire essence of the story in the Tracy version is his love for Elizabeth Taylor. Remember when Taylor leaves the wedding reception and Tracy is trying to say goodby to her with all the chaos there was and never did say goodby - you could see the love he had in his face. The way he referred to her as "kitten" throught the movie; the narration of Tracy and his description of how he's going to "lose his daughter"; the look he had when he's walking Taylor done the aisle. The fact that Taylor throughout the movie expresses her love for her "pop" illustrates even more so his love he must have had for her. All this makes for a very attentive, loving father.

  • ed cohen

    TO SUGARPUSSOSHEA -

    Jeff Bridges was great. I think even though he won the Academy Award, and deservedly so, I think he's an underrated actor.

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  • Dolores Tamoria

    I have a tendancy to dislike remakes with Libraries full of good books why haven't they
    scripted some of them. The old book "Beautiful Joe" would make a great picture for children.
    I will say that the latest "True Grit" did beat out the original.

  • ed cohen

    TO DOLORES -

    You're so right. If you haven't read "The Professor and the Madman, do so. It's the story of the creation of the Oxford dictionary, which many sound boring, but believe me, it isn't. I think this would make for a great film. I don't want to give away too much of the plot, but read it and see if you agree that it would make for a very entertaining film.

  • Bob VanDerClock

    Cape Fear, Invasion Of The Body Snatchers, and The Day The Earth Stood Still..remakes not even worthy of the "copy" moniker. They should've never been made.!Cape Fear's "remake " family is so nauseating and dysfunctional you almost root for the killer! The Body Snatchers remake is just soul-less (no pun intended) with an overly bland treatment that just screams for a happy ending...and none forthcoming.The "Day" remake is about as bad as a sci-fi movie effort can get, with Keanu Reeves trying not to act comatose, and failing miserably. Oh yeah...the newest King Kong? Try this on after you've survived the tsunami of F/X to death...Jack Black as Carl Denham (!!??)..the defense rests.

  • Vann Morrison

    As much as I love the classic westerns, especially ones starring Glen Ford. I have to say the remake of "3:10 to Yuma" with Russle Crowe and Christian Bail was by far better than the original. I'm also a big Tom Selleck fan. His remake of "Monte Walsh" was as good as but not better than the one with Lee Marvin. I'd like to see Tom Selleck do a remake of "Winchester 73"
    co-starring Sam Elliot and Keith Carradine.

  • Ken

    1.The Shining was so good the first time but they left out a lot of key points from the book. The second one had its moments but no comparison to the original. 2. The new Zorro movies are too campy. Tyrone Power's Zorro was flawed but still the greatest Zorro of the movies.3. One movie I would love to see remade would be the Love Letter, a Hallmark made for TV movie. 4. Over the years NO ONE has come close to a really great Legend of Sleepy Hollow. I can only hope the Dark Shadows remake won't be added to the long list of disappointing remakes. For what Its Worth.

  • Dolores Tamoria

    I am not happy about re-making "Classics" they represent the best works of real Actors and Actresses. I am horrified that they are already contemplating the re-make of "Dirty Dancing". Hollywood and Television has gone dry. There are no more Norman Lear's who gave us so much of his talents. Re-make the "B" pictures and the Horor Movies that do not take acting skills and only require computer generated "Special Effects"

  • Chazz

    I know "Wizard of Oz", "The Maltese Falcon" are remakes, so I have to agree the Judy Garland version for "...Oz" and Bogart's "....Falcon" are better than previous versions. I happen to like the Susan Hayward version of "Backstreet" better than any previous version. I love both the Kevin McCarthy and the Donald Sutherland versions of "Invasion of the Body Snatchers". Most of the remakes of the classic movies to me aren't better although there are a few that come close or stand on their own as well done and bringing more to the story, like Peter Jackson's "King Kong", or the "The Fly" or "The Thing". And as much as I love the Gene Barry version of "War of the Worlds" I think the version with Tom Cruise is extremely well done. But for me, no one is going to out shine the early versions of "Dracula", "Frankenstein", "The Wolfman", or "The Mummy"..... ever!

  • scribe_well

    Has anyone mentioned LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS yet? One case where a remake is "mulch" better than its predecessor.

    Regarding KING KONG: how can anyone prefer Peter Jackson's reboot to the 1933 classic? Jackson's KONG is overlong (it clocks more than an hour before we even arrive at the island!), Jack Black is his usual obnoxious self (an insult to Merian C. Cooper, upon whom the character of Carl Denham was originally based), the script is bloated with pointless subplots (the "illiteracy" thread does nothing to advance the story--especially when the characters involved in it disappear midway through the film!)and this nonsense about better character development is just a steaming pile of ape poop. For all of his kingly flaws, Kong is STILL a GIANT MONSTER. It's not like he was ever going to elope with Naomi Watts, rent a loft in Soho and follow his dreams of playing the organ grinder, while being accompanied by a tiny Italian man wearing a boxy little hat and holding a tip cup.

    Now, I DARE someone to suggest that Coppola's DRACULA is better than Browning's...

  • Brolga

    A remake that was better than the (admittedly very good) original was "No Way Out", with Kevin Costner and Gene Hackman. This was a remake of "The Big Clock", with Ray Milland and Charles Laughton. The change of venue from the newspaper office of the original to the corridors of the Pentagon in the remake was a master stroke - and the twist ending of the second film added layers of meaning and significance that the original simply did not possess.

  • LUIGI From NYC

    BASICALLY --

    The remakes I really enjoyed were those that were re-made from the SILENT ERA !

  • Robert Stewart

    The Garland-Mason-Cukor version of A Star Is Born (resored version ) is better than the original and certainly much better than the Streisand remake. The Chaney Wolfman & Simone Cat People are classics- the remakes are unworthy. The Dunne-Jones Show Boat with Helen Morgan & Paul Robeson is so far superior to the earlier filming & the sugary MGM remake with Kathrybn Grayson that there is no comparison. Does any remember the Audie Murphy remake of Destry rides Again? It is certainly a great argument for leaving classic films alone - the great majority of film remakes are inferior to earlier filmings. Another prime example of unwanted remakes is the dissterous Meg Ryan remake of The Women. Leave classic films alone - there is a reason they are classics.

  • Tom

    NO remakes are "better" than the originals.

  • MissKitty

    @scribe_well...Thank you! I was reading through this and couldn't believe Little Shop of Horrors wasn't mentioned! Even though it's not 'great' nor a 'classic', I probably never would have seen (or known about) the original had I not been late night surfing...I saw the title and thought, 'great!'...you could not have convinced me that was the same movie. The original, done in one day, all on the same 'set' and that was it! As silly as it is, thank goodness someone saw something in that original script and made that entertaining farce!

  • Vann Morrison

    3:10 to Yuma! As much as I like Glen Ford and Van Heflin, Christian Bale and Russle Crowe made the remake much more action packed and a little darker than the original.

  • John Small

    I have never - NEVER - seen a remake that was better that the original. Never.

  • Sonja

    Although I absolutely LOVE Cary Grant... I have to say that "Move Over Darling", with Doris Day and James Garner was a bit more entertaining than the original, "My Favorite Wife", with Grant and Irene Dunn. I love that Doris Day actually mentioned Irene Dunn in the remake... made me chuckle!! ;- )

  • Vann Morrison

    One of my favorite movies is "All Quiet on the Western Front" with Lew Ayres. Then came the remake with John Boy Walton, Richard Thomas. It was okay as far as remakes go and I'm a big fan of Ernest Borgnine so that helped. It still paled in comparison to the original. Now I hear now that there is to be a third remake starring Harry Potter's Daniel Radcliff. I thought he did a commendable job in "My Boy Jack". I'm courious to see if he can pull off the role of Paul in the third remake.

  • Bob

    John Huston's The Maltese Falcon is better than the original made a few years earlier .

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  • Ginbaldwin

    I thought nothing could conpare to Errol Flynn's Robin Hood but Kevin Costner's was almost equal with it, but then again I am a K. C. fan. And I like a lot of action.  I, also thought Little Women, the one with Liz and June Allyson was just as entertaing as the earlier one, With Katherine Hepburn.

  • http://www.facebook.com/TrumpetboyLarry Larry Magen

    Loved A Star Is Born with Judy Garland.  Also not exactly sure if you want to call it a remake... or a conversion from a drama to a musical... but I would rather watch High Society in 1955 over the Philadelphia Story 1940.  I love the Philadelphia Story... but Sinatra and Crosby singing versus Cary Grant and Jimmy Stewart acting just isn't fair.

    And I love Cary Grant and Jimmy Stewart... and I love Katherine H too!   

  • Dcain29

    I think the miniseries "Pride and Prejudice" with Colin Firth is far superior to the Lawrence Olivier version.

  • kerry

    The most recent production of "Jane Eyre" was amazing.  I was obsessed with it when it was released.  I think it is much better than the Orson Welles version - and  I love Orson Welles.  But my goodness, Michael Fassbender as Rochester!  Also,  that fairly recent version of "Little Women" with Winona Ryder and Susan Sarandon;  doesn't hold a candle to the Kathryn Hepburn version.  (That film is worth watching if only for the scene where Kathryn is showing her sister how to act.  So funny).

  • Shadow0109

    The second remake of "The Maltese Falcon" far superior to both the original and the first remake (with the changed names and attitude. Although the original (1931) with Ricardo Cortez as Sam Spade is closer to the novel (didn't have to deal with "the code") than the second remake with Bogart as Sam (1941), it was blown away by it. The first remake "Satan Met a Lady" does not bear scrutiny.

  • Canatab

    it is hard to put one ahead of the other because both The Thomas Crown Affair with Steve McQueen and the remake with Pierce Bronson were terrific.  i lved the Bolar Hat ending to the remake but i still the way the original ended better.  which is better makes for a lively debate

    BC

  • Dorcare

    k.hepburn's ' little women' far surpasses any later versions....there will never be a version that comes even close

  • Burt

    The Postman Always Rings Twice with Nicholson and Jessica Lange...  which were pretty hot on the kitchen table of the diner. They coundn't do that in Lana Turners version but she was quite claasic.

  • Dawn

    I loved the article and I must say that the remake of Cape Fear is much better in my opinion. That's saying a lot because I'm an old movie buff. There is just no comparrison to Deniros acting in the remake. I also liked the remake of the Fly better. I love Jeff Goldblum and Geena Davis. She helped make that movie what it was. The old one is fun to watch too though and we have to remember that they didn't have the special effects back when it was made that we do now.

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