With the Little Mermaid abortion I ran across an interesting trend for films that is probably going to accelerate quickly: "Reimagining" a film.
For an example I'm going to use Malum (2023)
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt9472334/
Vs Last Shift (2014)
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2965466/?ref_=tt_trv_trv
This is the exact same director, 9 years after making Last Shift he just 'reimagined' it with a black lead instead of the white lead. Basically the same film except a few minor changes, basically all of them for the worse but pushing modern social 'narrative' points.
This is a bizarre trend, especially when it is the exact same person doing both projects. Financing your original film except now blacker should be impossible, at this point it is clear Hollywood is financing special interests and not actual quality. There's no excuse for funding shit like this.
There's a lot of other examples of works being 'reimagined' recently but this one stands out quite a bit, and people are even cheering the 'reimagining' as some sort of progressive stance on their original films.
Who is excited for Cameron to 'reimagine' some of his classics? We may be seeing just the tip of the iceberg for this bullshit. I wonder when they'll just begin removing the originals from streaming options and only keeping the 'reimagined' versions.
Hollywood has been ripping off Asia for the better part of 30 years now and every remake has been atrocious but lauded by woke retards who somehow think Spike Lees Old Boy tragedy was “deeper”.
Well that's because Spike Lee is the token black director who they all bow to. Look at how they actually respect his pretentious "its not a film, its a 'Spike Lee Joint'" labelling.
Every film he ever releases is a profound voice of a generation somehow despite being the most boring, moral grandstanding shit ever.
What is interesting is that I liked the one Spike Lee movie that the critics hated: https://youtube.com/watch?v=_HvcviA45Sw
(The ending 'battle' was a weak point, where our heavily outnumbered group of guys trapped behind enemy lines gets to mow down lots of Germs in the end while being heroically dropped one by one until only one or few survives in a relatively over the top action movie manner, while the rest of the film is pretty realistic.)
And Lucas was heavily inspired by Hidden Fortress. One of my favorite westerns (Magnificent 7) is based on a Japanese story.
Let's not try to pretend the Azns aren't ripping off the West too. Like I thought Taegukgi (https://imdb.com/title/tt0386064/) was a really cool over-the-top war flick (not much realism but also not entirely absurd) and was excited for the writer-director's next film (https://imdb.com/title/tt1606384/), and found it to be a very inept collection of scenes from various American movies AND GAMES.
And when I'm saying "not much realism", I mean stuff like this lol:
That is true. I also know classic American animation inspired Japanese artists