HOLLYWOOD PLAYS IT SAFE BY REMAKING OLD CLASSICS
By Jane Robins
From The Independent (London), 10.26.2000
Hollywood studio bosses, worried by the looming screenwriters' strike, are rushing
out a string of big-budget remakes of old movies and sequels in an effort to
guarantee ratings success.
When the studios release their summer gems next year cinema-goers will be treated
to a Tim Burton "reimagining" of Planet of the Apes, along with
an all-star remake of the Rat Pack classic Ocean's 11 and a new version
of the Seventies hit film Rollerball.
And when there are no more remakes to be done and the new ideas bank has run
dry, fans will be offered a sequel. Top of the list is Doctor Doolittle
2, as well as yet another Friday the 13th, Jurassic Park 3 and The
Mummy Returns.
The new Planet of the Apes has started filming with a budget of $100m
(pounds 69m), and is the next project for Burton after directing Batman and Sleepy
Hollow. The British actors Helena Bonham Carter and Tim Roth
play apes, while Perfect Storm star Mark Wahlberg takes the astronaut
role made famous by Charlton Heston. But while Heston tended to take a "get
your stinking paws off me, you damned, dirty ape" approach to hairy primates,
Wahlberg's character will have an intimate emotional relationship with the ape
princess, Bonham Carter.
The Hollywood rumour-mill has it that in an early draft the relationship gets
physical, but that 20th Century Fox executives are unhappy with it, on the grounds
that it is "too weird and unnatural". In any case, the controversy,
as well as the fact that Roth turned down the part of Professor Snape in the
forthcoming Harry Potter movie in order to play an ape, is
encouraging high expectations.
Meanwhile, across town George Clooney is behind the revival of Ocean's
11, a movie attracting some of the biggest names in Hollywood. In the original,
the plot has a group of Second World War army veterans gathering in Las Vegas
to rob the five biggest casinos just after the stroke of midnight on New Year's
Eve 1960. Clooney is to play Frank Sinatra's role of Danny Ocean, and Julia Roberts
has been cast as Danny's wife, Beatrice. The original cast included Dean Martin,
Sammy Davis Jnr and and Peter Lawford, while the Clooney version is said to be
attracting Brad Pitt, Bill Murray and Matt Damon.
MGM has chosen the 1975 futuristic film Rollerball, originally directed
by Norman Jewison and starring James Caan, as its remake and is spending $85m
making sure that the new version is as successful as the first. The original
contained dark messages about corporate power in the United States and violence
in sport, while the remake is expected to be more of a straight action movie.
Chris Klein will star, along with the supermodel Rebecca Romijn-Stamos. Jewison
is an executive producer.
The fashion for reviving old stories extends to smaller-budget directors such
as
Joe Berlinger, who is working on the Blair Witch 2 movie. Berlinger has
expressed an interest in making a version of the 1973 cult classic The Wicker
Man, which featured a naked, romping Britt Ekland and a puritanical policeman
played by Edward Woodward.
Berlinger's movie would move the action from north-west Scotland to the United
States, and have a US cast. Unsurprisingly, fans of the original are voicing
their protests.
Next year's remakes mark the escalation of an established trend. A new version
of the hugely popular 1971 movie Shaft has proved successful at the box
office, partly due to the cult status of the star, Samuel L Jackson. However,
this year's offerings have also included prominent failures--critically and financially.
Harold Ramis's reworking of the Peter Cook and Dudley Moore film Bedazzled with
Liz Hurley as the Devil was panned, for instance, while Sylvester Stallone's
version of the Michael Caine movie Get Carter made just $6m in its opening
weekend.
PLAY IT AGAIN: THREE HITS BEING REVIVED AND REMADE
PLANET OF THE APES
The version by Tim Burton, right, of the hugely successful 1968 film is expected
to be altogether weirder, darker and more mysterious than the original. 20th
Century Fox is spending $100m on it, and expects big rewards.
OCEAN'S 11
George Clooney, right, touted by some as the next Clark Gable, seems to want
to be the next Frank Sinatra instead. He will star in the new version of this
Rat
Pack classic, which is attracting stars, including Julia Roberts.
ROLLERBALL
James Caan reached the height of his Hollywood fame as the Rollerball star
who becomes a threat to the US's corporate rulers. MGM's version will emulate
the action, but not the political sophistication, of the
original.