07-25-2012, 05:12 PM
DM's review of "Conan" made me think about why I love the 1982 Conan the Barbarian so much.
It was considered a "B" movie at the time. Sword-and-Sorcery flicks were en vogue and it was released along with "Beastmaster", "Sword and the Sorcerer", "Krull" and a hundred others.
The difference was that 'Conan' had Arnie, Max von Sydow, James Earl Jones and the loveable Mako. These fine actors delivered lines like "To crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and to hear the lamentation of their women" as if they were written by Shakespeare. The movie started by making you smirk at the idea of a child growing into a hulking bodybuilder by pushing a mill wheel for twenty years. Then you gradually get drawn into the comic-book narrative until you curse the day Thulsa Doom was born and you celebrate Conan's victory by jumping to your feet and cheering with abandon.
These remakes are trying to modernize the look-and-feel of beloved films for today's audiences without understanding what made them beloved in the first place. People didn't love 'Conan' for the swordfights and special effects. They loved it for the passion everyone involved brought to the screen.
It kills me that there are so many novels, comics and even music albums crying for a movie treatment but instead they are remaking 'Jumanji'.
That reminds me; I have another rant, search for: Paul Williams
It was considered a "B" movie at the time. Sword-and-Sorcery flicks were en vogue and it was released along with "Beastmaster", "Sword and the Sorcerer", "Krull" and a hundred others.
The difference was that 'Conan' had Arnie, Max von Sydow, James Earl Jones and the loveable Mako. These fine actors delivered lines like "To crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and to hear the lamentation of their women" as if they were written by Shakespeare. The movie started by making you smirk at the idea of a child growing into a hulking bodybuilder by pushing a mill wheel for twenty years. Then you gradually get drawn into the comic-book narrative until you curse the day Thulsa Doom was born and you celebrate Conan's victory by jumping to your feet and cheering with abandon.
These remakes are trying to modernize the look-and-feel of beloved films for today's audiences without understanding what made them beloved in the first place. People didn't love 'Conan' for the swordfights and special effects. They loved it for the passion everyone involved brought to the screen.
It kills me that there are so many novels, comics and even music albums crying for a movie treatment but instead they are remaking 'Jumanji'.
That reminds me; I have another rant, search for: Paul Williams