Edward
Bartender
- Messages
- 25,119
- Location
- London, UK
Around here we're calling the American remake "The Girl With the Temporary Dragon Tattoo." The original trilogy did very very well here, and a lot of people who came to see it were horrified at the thought of a remake -- I think the main purpose of it is as a sop to the philistines who don't like subtitled movies because they "didn't pay $8.50 to sit there and read for two hours."
Heh. It'll be interesting to hear how it does for you by comparison - I'm assuming your venue is the sort of place that draws a regular audience in itself moreso than a big multi-plex which might draw very different audiences for different productions? (Crudely expressed, but do you follow?).
The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo-An Unnecessary Remake?
Yes, strictly speaking it is unnecessary. But you could say the same thing about translating the books from Swedish into English. And you could say the same thing about turning the books into movies in Swedish. I read the books and saw the first set of movies. I liked both the books and the movies, but the books were better. By making the books into movies, the audience for the stories was increased to include people who either aren't readers or who never got around to the books. Likewise, the movies produced in English will increase the audience even more. That's what storytelling and creativity are about. I can't see anything wrong with that. And they'll make some money at it too. I have no problem with that.
But if they do a 3-D animated version in 2013 that will be too much
True, every reinterpretation will take it farther away from the source material..... The difference is of course that while it is necessary to translate the book from Swedish to English for an English speaker who does not understand Swedish, subtitling a Swedish movie will get you closer to the original experience than remaking it in English. Which begs the question: which is closer to the original book experience - an English translation of the printed word, or a Swedish film? Hmmnn.....