Home » Does the world need another “Ben-Hur”?

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Does the world need another “Ben-Hur”? — 16 Comments

  1. Poorly done remakes or comic book superheroes; this is what now passes for creativity in Hollywood.

    (Although I must admit I find the remake of True Grit with Jeff Bridges a huge improvement over the John Wayne original—heresy, I know!)

  2. re: sitting in the first row

    I was in a production of “The Royal Hunt of the Sun” sometime circa 1970. One member of the audience in the first row had chosen to lounge in his seat and put his feet up on the stage. Finally one of the actors had had enough. In a scene where the blocking had him deliver his lines right at the front of the stage he punctuated his speech by drawing his sword and bringing it down smartly on the offending ankles.

    Almost everybody loved it.

  3. I quickly lost interest when I read that the director dropped the “revenge” and “miracles” of the 1959 movie for an emphasis upon ‘forgiveness’. Pure political correctness that completely guts the main theme of the movie which is not revenge but justice, not rendered by Ben Hur but by Masala’s evil coming back upon him. And, with Masala’s actions having resulted in Ben Hur’s mother and sister having become lepers, miraculously healed by God’s love.

    BTW, the 1959 Ben Hur in bluray holds up astonishingly well with superlative video reproduction values.

  4. From the Wiki, the director “He was fascinated by the 1959 film but found the focus on revenge rather than forgiveness to be the main problem. And this was the indeed prime difference between the book and the 1959 movie; the book was written about forgiveness, and the movie was about revenge and miracles. Hence, he wanted to stress on themes of forgiveness and love rather then mere vengeance. He found “the most important values of pride, rivalry, power, strength, the dictatorship of power and self-love” that were prominent in the Roman Empire to be passé in the contemporary world of today. Hence, he wanted those themes to be the primary subjects in this version.[36][3] He said that the film is not just about the story of Ben-Hur alone, but rather a shared story of him and his brother, Messala.[4]”

    I will sit well back from the front row.

  5. Nolanimrod Says:
    August 13th, 2016 at 1:36 pm
    re: sitting in the first row

    I was in a production of “The Royal Hunt of the Sun” sometime circa 1970. One member of the audience in the first row had chosen to lounge in his seat and put his feet up on the stage. Finally one of the actors had had enough. In a scene where the blocking had him deliver his lines right at the front of the stage he punctuated his speech by drawing his sword and bringing it down smartly on the offending ankles.

    Almost everybody loved it.

    * *
    What’s not to love 😉

  6. I totally agree with ‘John Houston’s Rule on Remakes’:

    NEVER remake a Classic. Feel free to remake bad movies. Make them better.
    Amen, Mr. Houston!!

    No way on “Ben Hur”. No way on “The Magnificent Seven”. And, no way on “True Grit”.

  7. Of course, “The Magnificent Seven” was itself a remake of “The Seven Samurai”.

  8. To raise a possibly hair-splitting point: Ben Hur existed as a novel before being made into a movie, so the various versions of are different takes on the same source material. “Ghostbusters 2016” is a remake – “Ghostbusters” exists only in movie form.

    And by the way, there was only one “Ghostbusters” movie. 😉

  9. I agree with T completely! I even said that very thing to a coworker the other day. (I left out the “poorly done” part, since I avoid remakes out of principle, so I don’t know how good or bad they are except at second hand.)

    As it happens, I’m listening to the Moonraker soundtrack as I type this. That’s one of the few movies that I think could stand a remake, since the space special effects were pretty bad and some of the fight scenes were uninspiring.

  10. John F. MacM: Yes, but most of us in America had never seen The Seven Samurai. Shirikawa’s kibuki version of Macbeth, “Throne of Blood” is incredible.

  11. Kurosawa’s Ran was a Japanese interpretation of King Lear. It is a superb movie, but so chilling and emotionally traumatic that I’ve never had a desire to see it again.

    Seven Samurai was also excellent and worth seeing again. There are some profound observations of the human condition in it.

  12. Michael Lonie, yes Seven Samurai is one of the rare movies that one can enjoy watching repeatedly.

    Among it’s “…profound observations of the human condition…” is the Old Man’s sublimely cynical answer when one of the villagers protests that they are poor folk, so how can they find samurai to fight for them? He tell them: “Find hungry samurai.”

  13. “KUROSAWA’S, “THRONE OF BLOOD” !!

    SHEEEESH…!!! Sorry, Guys, this old age thing ain’t fer sissies.

  14. “Moonraker” had one of the more mediocre scripts from the Roger Moore era, and the space effects are dated by today’s standards, but the technical achievement (for the time) is quite interesting. They contacted several special effects houses and got bids that were much higher than they could afford for the film, so they wound up doing all their effects shots in-camera. That is, they shot an element with the rest of the picture blocked off, rewound the film, and shot another element with a different portion of the picture blocked off. This technique goes all the way back to Maria’s transformation scene in “Metropolis”. Some shots with a lot of elements required 96 passes through the camera. Rewatch some of the scenes from “Moonraker” with that in mind and marvel at the patience and technical effort that was required to create them.

  15. T:

    I agree with you on “True Grit” with Jeff Bridges. I donate platelets regularly to the Red Cross and watch a movie during the process. I choose what I watch carefully since I don’t want to bother the nurses once everything is “plugged in.” Anyway, there is a lot of depth and message in the film, and have watched it many times.

  16. Brian, that’s quite an interesting point. Maybe I’ll do that some time.

    Really, there are only two reasons that I have a soft spot for Moonraker: (1) about half of the soundtrack, (2) Lois Chiles. The rest I can honestly take or leave.

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