- Joined
- Jun 18, 2019
As a fan of the 1980s remakes of The Thing and The Fly I always meant to check out The Blob because I heard it was another remake in that caliber, sadly I never got around to it and the Re:View gives away pretty much the whole movie, but that's ok, I still want to see the whole thing one day.
Are there any other 1980s remakes of 1950s movies? The only other movie in that vein I can think of are Night of the Comet and Night of The Creeps, but those weren't remakes, just movies made in the spirit of 1950s B movies, both of which would also be great material for Re:Views.
There's also The Stuff which had a 1950s B movie feel, but if there aren't more that's a shame, I wonder what other 1950s B movies would have made for good 1980s remakes? Off the top of my head I feel like 80s remakes of Them! and The Incredible Shrinking Man would have been interesting, yes I know there was Honey I Shrunk The Kids, but I'm talking a horror movie, not a comedy.
Incredible Shrinking Man would have also provided a perfect opportunity for the typical 1980s "gratuitous" (I would say requisite) nudity by having the shrunken man be present while some lady is changing and doesn't realize it.
Also doe anyone remember that trend in the 2000s where they tried remaking 1950s/1960s sci fi movies? What's weird is how closely it followed the 80s trend of horror remakes by year, first you had The Time Machine in 2002 (like The Thing in 1982) followed by War of The Worlds in 2005 (not quite like The Fly in 1986, but still pretty close) and finally The Day The Earth Stood in 2008 like The Blog in 1988.
There was also going to be a remake of When Worlds Collide but it never happened.
Are there any other 1980s remakes of 1950s movies? The only other movie in that vein I can think of are Night of the Comet and Night of The Creeps, but those weren't remakes, just movies made in the spirit of 1950s B movies, both of which would also be great material for Re:Views.
There's also The Stuff which had a 1950s B movie feel, but if there aren't more that's a shame, I wonder what other 1950s B movies would have made for good 1980s remakes? Off the top of my head I feel like 80s remakes of Them! and The Incredible Shrinking Man would have been interesting, yes I know there was Honey I Shrunk The Kids, but I'm talking a horror movie, not a comedy.
Incredible Shrinking Man would have also provided a perfect opportunity for the typical 1980s "gratuitous" (I would say requisite) nudity by having the shrunken man be present while some lady is changing and doesn't realize it.
Also doe anyone remember that trend in the 2000s where they tried remaking 1950s/1960s sci fi movies? What's weird is how closely it followed the 80s trend of horror remakes by year, first you had The Time Machine in 2002 (like The Thing in 1982) followed by War of The Worlds in 2005 (not quite like The Fly in 1986, but still pretty close) and finally The Day The Earth Stood in 2008 like The Blog in 1988.
There was also going to be a remake of When Worlds Collide but it never happened.
They've maintained a consistent output of quality over this last decade, which is really quite amazing, I can't think of another web series that wasn't a bit stale by the time it turned ten but these guys look like they can easily do at least another ten years of videos no problem.I had to rewatch that Wonder Woman 1984 video because it has so many great moments in it. Comic genius. They never lose their touch.
I had the exact same thought, what if you went back and touched up the effects in old movies a bit with CGI? But on the other hand...That was great. I wonder if it'd be possible to digitally touch up just the effects in classic scifi, while avoiding the disgusting results of what Lucas' special editions achieved.
Dated effects of the 1980s definitely have a lot of character and charm, I actually kinda dig those thick black outlines for digital matte effects you see, it's nostalgic if nothing else.I like the crappy practical effects of pre-digital-era movies, it's part of their charm.
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Chuck Russell is a very underrated director though.Ridley Scott did all of that for Blade Runner: The Final Cut. But it's probably easier for investors to back a project like that for Ridley than for Chuck Russell.
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