



Varan Bon Ziller wrote:....What ever happened to the innocence of monster banging others brains out...


Tohosaurus wrote:I thought the partial humanization of them made them so engaging.

Gojira1963 wrote:War of the Gargantuas is my favorite Kaiju movie outside of the Godzilla franchise. I would really love to see that movie either remade or have the two featured in another film.

Tohosaurus wrote:Gojira1963 wrote:War of the Gargantuas is my favorite Kaiju movie outside of the Godzilla franchise. I would really love to see that movie either remade or have the two featured in another film.
WotG is my favorite non-Godzilla Toho kaiju film. A remake is something I am cautious of, however.

Gojira1963 wrote:Tohosaurus wrote:Gojira1963 wrote:War of the Gargantuas is my favorite Kaiju movie outside of the Godzilla franchise. I would really love to see that movie either remade or have the two featured in another film.
WotG is my favorite non-Godzilla Toho kaiju film. A remake is something I am cautious of, however.
Why are you cautious? I am too, I wouldn't want a remake to stink but if they got a good script I think it could be done.

Tohosaurus wrote:Well with a remake you always have to ask (just IMO) "How will this be better than the original?" or "Why are we remaking this?".
With regards to WotG, I don't really see the benefits of remaking it. It'll look crisp being filmed with modern techniques and modern effects (even if they use suits and miniatures). But will the actual movie be better? It'd be the same as remaking Godzilla or Star Wars or Scarface (even the 80s Scarface is actually a remake). You can make them look great but would they actually be better? No.
I'm actually not anti-remake, but the remake ought to serve a purpose. For example, I adore the excellent Planet of the Apes. In spite of it being an unquestioned classic, I don't have the problem with the idea of the 2001 remake. The original PotA film didn't follow the novel as closely in some regards on account of a budget issue. The apes in the book were highly advanced beyond even human standards now with hover cars and whatnot. But to clear the budget the 1968 film had to go with a medieval setting. That's one way the big budgeted 2001 remake could've improved on the original AND offered a totally different look and feel to the film. As we all know the remake did none of this and was unimpressive compared to the original, but that's an example.
There are a few Showa movies I would like to see remakes of, though, and I'm not saying your opinion is wrong or anything. We just differ.

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