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Thread: holly wood remaking battle royale

  1. #1
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    holly wood remaking battle royale

    http://www.cinematical.com/2006/07/0...le-remake-news

    say it aint so. but if its true, i want in on it.
    Quote Originally Posted by Psycho Mantis View Post
    Genes too busy rocking the gang and scarfing down bags of cheetos while beating it to nacho ninjettes and laughing at the ridiculous posts on the kfforum. In a horse stance of course.

  2. #2
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    No No No No No No No No No !!!!!!!!!!

  3. #3
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    I feel lost

    I need to watch these flicks like azumi to catch up with you people. I just looked battle royale up on imdb to see what it is about,
    "For someone who's a Shaolin monk, your kung fu's really lousy!"
    "What, you're dead? You die easy!"
    "Hold on now. I said I would forget your doings, but I didn't promise to spare your life. Take his head."
    “I don’t usually smoke this brand, but I’ll do it for you.”
    "When all this is over, Tan Hai Chi, I will kick your head off and put it on my brother's grave!
    "I regard hardships as part of my training. I don't need to relax."

  4. #4
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    Make sure you watch:
    1. Azumi
    2.Battle Royale
    3. Zatocihi (Takeshi Kitano)
    4. Lone Wolf and Cub ( Babycart)
    Also Arahan is excellent, quite amusing!I would avoid Azumi 2 as it really isn't great and the plot is quite questionable, as are the Ninjas!
    I'll be asking questions about all of the above Jethro!

  5. #5
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    I will have to check out BAttle Royale first. I don;t know where I have been

    But I have seen a couple of the baby cart movies. Good stuff.

    "I am the assasin lone wolf and cub, at your service!
    "For someone who's a Shaolin monk, your kung fu's really lousy!"
    "What, you're dead? You die easy!"
    "Hold on now. I said I would forget your doings, but I didn't promise to spare your life. Take his head."
    “I don’t usually smoke this brand, but I’ll do it for you.”
    "When all this is over, Tan Hai Chi, I will kick your head off and put it on my brother's grave!
    "I regard hardships as part of my training. I don't need to relax."

  6. #6
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    I'm not too keen on the the idea of remaking Battle Royale. The original was so ... original. I've seen most of the other Asian remade movies that Roy Lee produced, and I don't really think *any* of them were either better than the originals or even really added anything noteworthy or unique. I would probably go see it just out of curiosity but don't have my hopes up.

    On another note, one of my favorite parts of the original was the video the kids had to watch where the cute-as-a-button girl was explaining the rules and what not ... I liked how she was cheerful and all smiles when you consider what she was telling them -- was strange and condradictory in a very satisfying way somehow.

    -- Li Kao --
    The Eye Half-Shut:
    Part of the Truth Revealed
    http://rubesroost.blogspot.com

  7. #7
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    The Japanese couldn't make a watchable sequel, why do Hollywood think they can do a half decent remake?
    Anyway, Jethro, how can you not have seen BR? It's years old. Oh, and Versus is way better than Azumi.
    "The man who stands for nothing is likely to fall for anything"
    www.swindonkungfu.co.uk

  8. #8
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    i think the directors cut of battle royale is way better then azumi and versus. i didnt mind the 2nd br but it was not as good as the first.

    as for the american remake, i would love to be the crazy guy!!! lol

    maybe the american one will follow the book more? that would be sick!!!
    Quote Originally Posted by Psycho Mantis View Post
    Genes too busy rocking the gang and scarfing down bags of cheetos while beating it to nacho ninjettes and laughing at the ridiculous posts on the kfforum. In a horse stance of course.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ben Gash
    Anyway, Jethro, how can you not have seen BR? It's years old. Oh, and Versus is way better than Azumi.

    I feel worthless not having seen it. But I saw versus, thought it was ok.
    "For someone who's a Shaolin monk, your kung fu's really lousy!"
    "What, you're dead? You die easy!"
    "Hold on now. I said I would forget your doings, but I didn't promise to spare your life. Take his head."
    “I don’t usually smoke this brand, but I’ll do it for you.”
    "When all this is over, Tan Hai Chi, I will kick your head off and put it on my brother's grave!
    "I regard hardships as part of my training. I don't need to relax."

  10. #10
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    After watching Battle Royale again last night I'm really thinking a Hollywood remake would be awful! It really is a great film, and being so forgetful the ending is always a treat!
    Why can't Hollywood leave things alone, they seem to be producing an awful lot of remakes at the moment.
    Kitano really is evil in it! (or just lonely)

  11. #11
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    ttt for the debut of the HUNGER GAMES

    March 23, 2012, 11:56 AM ET
    ‘Hunger Games’ Vs. ‘Battle Royale’
    By Jeff Yang

    Hey, did you know that Suzanne Collins’s apocal-epic YA trilogy “The Hunger Games” is set to hit the big screen this weekend? Not a surprise? Maybe it’s because, you know, it’s all anyone’s been talking about for pretty much forever.

    What’s ironic — and by ironic, we mean “Alanis Morisettian irony,” e.g., not actually ironic — is how saturated the conversation around “Hunger Games” is with the language of one-on-one, winner-take-all violence: “‘The Hunger Games’ vs. ‘Harry Potter’!“ “Can ‘The Hunger Games’ crush ‘Twilight’?” “Imax aims to kill with ‘Hunger Games’!”

    Why, it’s almost as if the movie were…a teenaged contestant in a deadly populist amusement engineered by the leering master of a dystopian future world! Ha ha, that sounds familiar. You know, because it’s exactly the theme of “The Hunger Games” itself? But wait, it’s also eerily reminiscent of another book-turned-movie about kids violently murdering other kids: Japanese cult author Koushun Takami’s “Battle Royale,” which was published as a light novel in 1999, adapted into a hit feature film in 2000 and then turned into several equally popular manga series (the third of which, a two-chapter spinoff titled “Battle Royale: Angels’ Border,” just came out in January).

    After all, “Hunger Games” is about adolescent boys and girls being randomly pulled into a gory deathmatch in an arena filled with natural and artificial hazards. Some of the contestants embrace the opportunity to cause mayhem; others try to navigate the situation with diplomacy, only to be ruthlessly murdered by more vicious players. The story ultimately focuses on a trio of protagonists, one slightly older and embittered by loss; the other two are younger and more innocent, and turn to their more mature peer for guidance and inspiration. “Battle Royale”? Same description. Collins herself has repeatedly denied having ever seen or even heard of “Battle Royale” until she’d already turned in the manuscript of the trilogy’s first novel, at which point she asked her editor if she should read it. “He said: ‘No, I don’t want that world in your head. Just continue with what you’re doing,’” she told the New York Times last April, and claimed to have still never read the book or the movie.

    But that didn’t prevent the similarities from predictably inflaming passions on the Interwebs ever since Collins’s novel first hit bookshelves, generating, well, a battle royale between Hunger’s tweenage girl army and Battle’s manga-nerd suicide commandos. And over the past two weeks, with media hype over the movie blaring, the fracas has extended into the (largely clueless) mainstream, confusing some readers and viewers who still think “manga” is a where the little baby Jesus slept on Christmas day. (Not you! If you’re reading this column, we assume you’re up to speed on the whole manga thing. And if not, just go take a peek at the bookshelves of the nearest 13-year-old.)

    Of course, even if “Hunger Games” isn’t a ripoff of “Battle Royale,” the latter has nevertheless been impacted by its explosive arrival on the pop-culture landscape — the new movie seems destined for a $100 million-dollar-plus opening, maybe even taking away the box-office record from the last installment of “Harry Potter,” which earned $169 million in its first-weekend bow.

    Back in 2006, producer Roy Lee (“The Grudge”; “The Ring”) was attached, along with Neal H. Moritz (“Fast Five”; “21 Jump Street”), to the U.S. remake of “Battle Royale”; the project was already controversial due to the original film’s gleeful depictions of youth-on-youth violence.

    “It was very difficult to get anyone interested in doing the remake,” says Lee. “The studios were very scared of comparisons to the Columbine shootings — if it got linked to something in which a kid killed another kid, and the perpetrator said they were influenced by the movie, that would of course be a disaster.”

    The bloody massacre at Virginia Tech the following year, in which disturbed student Seung-Hui Cho killed 32 and injured 25 of his classmates and teachers before taking his own life, put the project on indefinite life support. But, according to Lee, it was the publication of “The Hunger Games” the following year and its pickup for remake by Lions Gate in 2009 that ultimately pulled its plug.

    “Look, there isn’t a studio out there that would invest the money to do a ‘Battle Royale’ feature film remake now,” he says. “Audiences would see it as just a copy of ‘Games’ — most of them wouldn’t know that ‘Battle Royale’ came first. It’s unfair, but that’s reality.”

    Lee won’t comment on whether he personally thinks “Games” was inspired by “Battle.” “I haven’t read the book, and I haven’t yet seen the movie,” he says. “I just know that the concepts are similar, and I have no claim to understanding why this concept is so much in the moment — but it’s obviously a compelling one.” (Author Takami, who Lee says has been head-down incommunicado for years, writing his followup to “Battle Royale,” has also avoided taking sides, only telling ABC News by email that he appreciated his fans’ support but that “every novel has something to offer.”)

    And Lee has long since moved on to other projects, though his biggest current film is also a remake of a controversial and violent Asian movie: An adaptation of Park Chan-Wook’s brilliant “Oldboy,” to be directed by Spike Lee (no relation) and star Josh Brolin and Elizabeth Olsen. “We’re anticipating starting production this September, and we should be finished by year’s end,” says Lee, saying that the movie should please fans of the original. “Spike was a huge fan of Park’s movie, and came to the project with a vision of what it might look like already in his head.”

    The remake will “definitely be an interpretation, not a straight adaptation” — but, Lee says, “it actually has a darker take on the ending, if you can believe that’s even possible.”

    (It’s very possible, given the off-the-record spoilers Lee provided to Tao Jones. But you’ll have to wait for Summer or Fall 2013 to find out how!)

    Meanwhile, on Tuesday, Anchor Bay Entertainment finally released its official U.S. home-video version of the original film, along with its (inferior) sequel and some interesting behind-the-scenes docs and outtakes, bundled as a four-pack of DVDs or Blu-Rays. Could the resurgent awareness of “Battle Royale” change the landscape for Lee’s suspended remake plans? Lee isn’t sanguine. “Give it ten years,” he says. “Maybe after the cycle of three or four ‘Hunger Games’ movies are over, we can pick up and develop a ‘Battle Royale’ movie for the next generation.”

    But what about other formats — for instance, television? With the example of Anchor Bay jumping on board the massive publicity of “Games” to bring out its home video set, wouldn’t it make sense to pitch a “Battle Royale” television series to the nets — or perhaps to cable, as a more mature and satirical take on the concept?

    Hearing that suggestion, Lee suddenly pauses for reflection. “You know, until you just asked that question, I hadn’t thought of that,” he says. “I’ll have to make some calls.”

    ***

    Tao Jones Index Must-click quick-hits from across Asia and Asian America

    So what’s the real deal behind the numerous parallels between “Hunger Games” and “Battle Royale”? To save you from having to navigate the online firestorm, 90% of which is of the “Hunger Games is just a sucky ripoff of Battle Royale LOLZ”/”No it isn’t Katniss FTW!!!!” variety, here’s a special Tao Jones Index of the Interweb’s best “Hunger Games”/”Battle Royale” comparisons, organized by where they generally stand amid the raging controversy:

    “Hunger Games” = “Battle Royale”

    io9: “It’s undeniable, there are a hell of a lot of similarities between the two….There is no such thing as an original idea in Hollywood,” writes Meredith Woerner.

    ABC News: “The similarities are difficult to ignore. Both evolve around children who are picked at random to take part in a death match. Participants are given duffel bags containing random weapons. The tyrannical government ships them off to a remote location, where they are told to kill and fight for survival,” writes Akiko Fujita.

    Indiewire: “We can certainly trace the line from ‘Battle Royale’ to ‘The Hunger Games’ without too much difficulty, even though ['Battle Royale'] was never released in the U.S. until now. Its influence on Western cinema over the past decade has justified having our own kiddie-porn death-match,” writes Robert Nishimura.
    continued next post
    THG thread
    Batoru Rowaiaru: AKA Battle Royale thread (might merge this one into that someday...)
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  12. #12
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    from previous

    “Hunger Games” <> “Battle Royale”

    Cinema Blend: “There are five very key differences between the two stories that will hopefully convince fans of the Japanese cult classic that the book by Collins and the film from writer/director Gary Ross is, in fact, not a rip off, but simply a different usage of a similar idea,” writes Eric Eisenberg.

    Shock Til You Drop: “There is almost nothing similar about these two stories except the core idea for the plot. But there is a lot more to the stories than simply their plot, as outlined above. Similar stories does not make it a ‘rip-off.’ And what’s so bad about having movies with similar plots anyway?” writes Spencer Perry.

    The Website of Leading SF Publisher Tor.com: “It’s not really helpful to argue about whether Collins was even slightly influenced by Takami or by the film — and she says she wasn’t. It’s more interesting to read them both for their respective central themes, and to note that in both cases, the literal sacrifice of the future leaves the characters — and by extension society at large — with deep psychic wounds that will never really heal,” writes Karin L. Kross.

    What do you think? Leave your thoughts in the comments.

    “Tao Jones” is Jeff Yang’s weekly column for Speakeasy on Asian culture. Tune in Friday for the next installment. Follow him on Twitter at @originalspin.
    Given THG's opening weekend BO, the developers of this remake project are probably facepalming themselves all weekend.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  13. #13
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    i was trying to find the ny times article that all but accused her of plagerism....people were mentioning lord of the flies but im like that book isnt about a televised game fought between teenagers even the premise. in hunger games they fight because there was a uprising...and as punishment they have to play that game...which is the same premise for battle royal...its insane...

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