Movie summer's (almost) here..
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Topic: Rambling Rumminations
Every year, shortly before the Tony Awards are doing their bit for corporate gloating on Broadway, the press, especially the respectable dailies like the New York Times, offer a little rant about the up and coming summer blockbusters. The annum horribilis of Hollywood, known to you and me simply as 2005, is no different. This year's Time list, lead by the unavoidable "final" episode of Star Wars, however, stands out because of the uncommon number of remakes and sequels being readied for the ever lurking descent into B-Movie territory.
The nature of the movie industry naturally ensures that there will always be films which - despite best efforts by the marketeers and name droppers - respond to the laws of gravity quicker than others. Take, for example, such recent big ticket efforts involving names like Denzel Washington, Tom Cruise, and even the previously unsinkable Tom Hanks. All were hyped with the kind of money the involvement of this superstars demands. Other than on the shelves of Blockbuster, where they are gathering dust, they disappeared from view faster than you can say "DVD".
This summer promises to swell the ranks of galactic failures more than any previous theatre season. Hollywood's moguls apparently think - wrongly, it seems - that the current wave of retro will work at the box office, too. Why else would anyone re-invoke the long exorcised spirit of "Herbie", the formulaic wise-ass Volkswagen? Or conjure up ninety minutes of Jeanie and her hapless husband, straight from the nineteen-sixties boob-tube to tomorrow's DVD Jewel Case? This one starring that Kidman woman, already guilty of messing up another remake: The Stepford Wives", who this time will ride a broom and twitch her nose at a shrinking crowd of cinema goers. In a year that sees two of the top-selling sequel releases, the already mentioned Star Wars and number four in the Harry Potter franchise, that crowd is already unnaturally thin. Adding insult to injury will come in the form of "The Honeymooners", the TV classic made famous by Jacky Gleason. In the 2005 version a nearly all black cast is led by none other than Cedric, the so-called "entertainer" - a misnomer if there ever was one. Where Mr. Gleason was funny, Mr. Entertainer can at best manage pathetic.
It does not end there. Another so-so return to the archives is led by Adam Sandler and Chris Rock, including a seemingly ageless Burt Reynolds who in turn led the 1974 original. It wasn't particularly good then, it hasn't improved during the remake. Following on its heels is Mr. and Mrs. Smith, a badly disguised remake of Prizzy's Honor which in 1985 featured two superstars of the dark comedy genre, Kathleen Turner and Jack Nicholson. Both Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie certainly do not have the necessary charisma to pull off such a feat. And let's not omit the inimitable Johnny Depp who lately had such a great run, career-wise, that time has come for him to participate in a predeterminate failure called Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
The original, based on a book by (and directed by) Roal Dahl, one of the true masters of the absurd children's fantasies, starred Gene Wilder and a cast of unknowns, then with limited success. It went on to become a seasonal TV staple, and a favorite video rental. The remake claiming not to be remake not only stands out because it has been directed by another master of the macabre, Tim Burton, but also because every male leading actor, from Nicholas Cage to Christopher Walken were at one time mentioned as possible leads. Adding to its history of problems were replacements at the screen writing desk, cost overruns (what else is new?), and of course, on-set clashes between actors and Mr. Burton. From what I've seen thus far, the result fits well into the summer's list of wannabe hits - fat chance!
Hollywood, and its outlying satellites New York and London, are seriously running out of ideas. With the industry's outright refusal to make anything but politically correct movies, anyone looking for more than shallow entertainment will have to look abroad for the few morsels distributors will allow into our theaters. Small wonder the so-called art house theaters are thriving. Once the Star Wars mania has passed through town, those movie houses on the periphery are looking awfully good.
Posted by DocRorlach
at 03:04 MEST