Last night I heard a rumor that The Seven Samurai is going to be remade. Has anyone else heard about this?
Buffista Movies 5: Development Hell
A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
I threw in Ernie Anderson (aka, Ghoulardi)
Also, IIRC, the father of Paul Thomas Anderson, director of BOOGIE NIGHTS, MAGNOLIA & PUNCH-DRUNK LOVE.
Last night I heard a rumor that The Seven Samurai is going to be remade.
Actually, it's a remake of BATTLE BEYOND THE STARS.
runs away
Last night I heard a rumor that The Seven Samurai is going to be remade. Has anyone else heard about this?
As a teen sex comedy?
As a gay samurai love story musical.
Seven Samurai for Seven Brothers
Or just a gay samurai movie, Budo-kubaku Mountain (Budo Yama)
How do you say "I wish I knew how to quit you?" in Japanese?
In a Western Japanese accent, of course.
Or just a gay samurai movie, Budo-kubaku Mountain (Budo Yama)
Heh, I think they already did that: [link]
Shohei Imamura died. From the Voice obit:
Define the Japanese New Wave however you like—there are innumerable possible launching points, and the name players evident in the '50s and '60s were old, young, and in between—but Shohei Imamura was an unarguable and ambivalent figure in the landscape, an artiste among pulp mavens, a pop comic amid tragedians, a deep-dish cynic and folksy absurdist both. Dead last week at 79, the two-time Palme d'Or winner was one of the last of his slowly dying breed, survived still by Suzuki, Ichikawa, and Oshima.
He may have also been the least categorizable filmmaker of the lot (always a handicap in an auteurist world), careless with genre and frenzied about social critique. The son of a doctor, Imamura began as a studio apprentice with Ozu and quickly established a distaste for his sensei's restraint and quiet eloquence. In fact, Imamura has always seemed a sort of Japanese Sam Fuller, fascinated with working-class ruin and primal impulse. And he could be viciously funny, which alone set him apart from most of his industry's big guns. His first phase, beginning in 1958, was taken up with racy comedies and melodramas and the first, overtly Kabuki, version of The Ballad of Narayama (1958), a savage parable about prescribed death in a hard-luck mountain village that he remade to grimmer and more realistic effect in 1983.
Then came Pigs and Battleships (1961), The Insect Woman (1963), and The Pornographers (1966), a run of international taboo-busters that sensationalized his career and offered up a vision of postwar Japan we hadn't seen before: a rat pit of feral opportunism, debasing American occupation, greed, lust, and violence.
I've never seen any of his movies, but enjoy the idea of a Japanese Sam Fuller.